Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Biden Kicks Off Federal Strategy To Fight Covid With 'Wartime' Urgency, Warnings
President Biden on Thursday unveiled a comprehensive strategy to address the coronavirus pandemic while warning that it would take months for his administration鈥檚 actions to significantly alter the trajectory of the pandemic.聽Biden,聽seeking to manage expectations as the United States confronts a dire period of infections,聽said that the COVID-19 death toll would likely top 500,000 in February and that it would take months to get Americans vaccinated against the virus. (Hellmann and Chalfant, 1/21)
A new federal strategy to tame the coronavirus pandemic focuses on trying to make tests and vaccines more abundant, schools and travel safer, and states better able to afford their role in the long road back to normal life. The plan and 10 executive orders that President Biden issued Thursday include the creation of a Pandemic Testing Board that can spur a 鈥渟urge鈥 in the capacity for coronavirus tests. Other orders will foster research into new treatments for covid-19, the disease caused by the virus; strengthen the collection and analysis of data to shape the government鈥檚 response to the crisis; and direct the federal occupational safety agency to release and enforce guidelines to protect workers from getting infected. (Goldstein, Stanley-Becker and Meckler, 1/21)
President Joe Biden signed 10 more executive orders on Thursday, invoking the Defense Production Act in a "wartime undertaking" to boost production of vaccine supplies while also requiring travelers to the U.S. to get a test before flying. After assailing Donald Trump's coronavirus response as a candidate and throughout the transition, Biden laid out in more detail what he'll do differently as cases and hospitalizations continue to rise, with the U.S. death toll expected to reach half a million people within weeks. Biden said that the worst of the pandemic is yet to come and that it will take time for progress to be measurable. (Ollstein and Leonard, 1/21)
With a burst of executive orders, President Joe Biden served notice Thursday that America鈥檚 war on COVID-19 is under new command, promising an anxious nation progress to reduce infections and lift the siege it has endured for nearly a year. At the same time, he tried to manage expectations in his second day in office, saying despite the best intentions 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to face setbacks.鈥 He brushed off a reporter鈥檚 question on whether his goal of 100 million coronavirus shots in 100 days should be more ambitious, a point pressed by some public health experts. (Alonso-Zaldivar and Miller, 1/21)
President Joe Biden launched a comprehensive federal plan on Thursday to rein in the raging COVID-19 pandemic. (Bose, 1/21)
The White House early Thursday released the Biden administration's National Strategy for the COVID-19 Response and Pandemic Preparedness. Officials said the聽coordinated pandemic response will聽improve the effectiveness of聽the fight against COVID-19,聽and help聽"restore trust, accountability and a sense of common purpose in our government." (1/21/21)
More on Biden's health agenda 鈥
President Biden raced Thursday to show he was addressing the array of crises awaiting him on his first day in office, issuing executive orders aimed at combating the coronavirus and preparing measures to take on the struggling economy and other problems. Biden and his team found themselves immediately on what the president called a 鈥渨artime鈥 footing, describing fighting the coronavirus as 鈥渁 national emergency.鈥 Against an already calamitous backdrop of a pandemic that has left more than 408,000 Americans dead, an additional 900,000 people filed new unemployment claims last week, underlining a devastated job market. (Parker and Viser, 1/21)
KHN: KHN鈥檚 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: The Biden Health Agenda聽
President Joe Biden wasted no time getting down to work. Among the raft of executive orders he signed on Inauguration Day were several aimed at curtailing the covid crisis, including one requiring mask-wearing by federal employees and anyone on federal property for the next 100 days. Meanwhile, with the inauguration of Vice President Kamala Harris and the swearing-in of two new Democratic senators from Georgia, Democrats took over the majority in the Senate, albeit with a 50-50 tie. That leaves Democrats in charge of both the legislative and executive branches for the first time since 2010, but with such narrow majorities it could be difficult to advance many of Biden鈥檚 top health agenda items, starting with an expansion of the Affordable Care Act. (1/21)