Barbot was the
Commissioner of Health of the City of New York, a position she was appointed to in December 2018 by Mayor
Bill de Blasio, succeeding
Mary T. Bassett. She was the first
Latina to head the Health Department.
Measles outbreak On April 9, 2019, Barbot, along with de Blasio, declared a public health emergency as the city faced
the largest measles outbreak since 1991, requiring residents and workers in the most-affected neighborhoods to be vaccinated against measles or face possible fines. In a press conference that day, Barbot stated that 21 people were hospitalized and five were admitted to an intensive care unit out of the 285 reported cases. Barbot and de Blasio announced the end to the measles public health emergency on September 3, 2019.
Coronavirus pandemic Barbot led New York City through the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, "when the state was seeing almost 1,000 daily deaths", in her role as the city's Health Commissioner. In mid-February 2020, as the disease was spreading from China but before any cases were confirmed in New York, Barbot joined city leaders in urging residents not to stigmatize New York's Chinatowns, saying: "There is no reason to avoid public settings, including subways and—most of all—our city's famous Chinese restaurants and small businesses." Over the next two weeks, as superspreading events proliferated around the world with limited testing, she turned more cautious. As she later told
CNBC: "It was apparent by late February that the coronavirus had the potential to become catastrophic." In mid-March 2020, Barbot denied a
New York City Police Department (NYPD) request for 500,000
surgical masks. In a "heated exchange" for which she soon apologized, she told NYPD Chief of Department
Terence Monahan she could only provide 50,000, insisting "I need them for others", referring to the doctors and nurses on the front lines and then added “I don’t give two rats’ asses about your cops.” The
Detectives' Endowment Association,
Sergeants Benevolent Association, and
Police Benevolent Association called for her to be fired, as did
Democratic Representative
Max Rose. Ultimately, citing her "deep disappointment" with the mayor's limited use of the health department's expertise, Barbot resigned on August 4, 2020. In a
BBC documentary released in March 2021, Barbot stated that her early warnings to de Blasio were largely ignored, and that New York City's delayed decisions to close schools and mandate lockdowns "cost thousands of lives." In July 2021, Barbot signed on to a letter opposing de Blasio's decision to move the city's homeless population out of city hotels, due to the risk of spreading COVID-19. Barbot's predecessor as health commissioner,
Mary T. Bassett, also signed on to the letter. == References ==