Paul Elias Alexander

Paul Elias Alexander

Paul Elias Alexander is a Canadian health researcher and a former Trump administration official. He attracted attention in 2020 when, as an aide to HHS assistant secretary for public affairs Michael Caputo, he participated in efforts by the administration to control COVID-19 messaging. Within the administration, Alexander advocated for a strategy of mass infection of the public to build herd immunity.

About Paul Elias Alexander in brief

Summary Paul Elias AlexanderPaul Elias Alexander is a Canadian health researcher and a former Trump administration official. He attracted attention in 2020 when, as an aide to HHS assistant secretary for public affairs Michael Caputo, he participated in efforts by the administration to control COVID-19 messaging from federal scientists and public health agencies. Within the administration, Alexander advocated for a strategy of mass infection of the public to build herd immunity. He sought to muzzle federal scientists to prevent them from contradicting the rhetoric coming from the Trump administration. A congressional committee has asked him to testify in September to give information about his interactions with CDC regarding CO VID-19 deaths and infections, hydroxychloroquine as a treatment, and the impact the virus has on children.

He has a bachelor’s degree in epidemiology from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and a master’s degree from Oxford University. In 2015 he earned a PhD degree from McMaster’s Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact. He had a contract role as a part-time assistant professor at McMaster, an \”unpaid position given to scholars working primarily outside the university\” The university issued a statement in September 2020 saying that Alexander \”is not currently teaching\” at the university. From 2017 until December 2019, Alexander was employed by the Washington, D. C. -based Infectious Diseases Society of America where he specialized in systematic reviews. At IDSA, Alexander worked on several clinical practice guidelines.