The CDC was restricting access to tests until fairly recently and, as far as I know, only recently state, local, private, etc labs are testing. Even then, they're reporting back to the CDC and positives are only "presumptive positive" until confirmed. Do you think there are a significant of tests being performed and not reported to the CDC?
What you're basically saying is that your opinion is set not in the absence of information, but without regard for the information that is available. That doesn't seem like a very good approach to me.
Professionals in the field can only do so much. I mean, what can a doc do? Test for flu...tell people to go home and rest, take plenty of fluids, and acetaminophen or ibuprofen if the fever gets too high. The role of the health organizations in these isn't related to direct patient care but trying to coordinate activity to shift or offset the peak caseload of an epidemic. That means information spread, testing and testing guidelines, tracing contacts, and coordinating quarantines. Physicians can be doing great, and the CDC can also be doing poorly.