Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Blacks Hospitalized Much More Than Whites During Omicron Surge In NY
Black New Yorkers were hospitalized at two times the rate of White New Yorkers during the winter omicron surge. It鈥檚 the widest disparity in hospitalizations seen in two years of the pandemic, according to the New York City Health Department. 鈥淭his is a significant inequity 鈥 and a particularly alarming one 鈥 so far into the pandemic,鈥 said Michelle Morse, NYC聽Health鈥檚 chief medical officer. And it came during a time when the dominant variant had a lower risk of hospitalization than its predecessor, delta. (Muller, 3/3)
And nursing facilities are still reeling from covid 鈥
Susy Bogdan didn鈥檛 plan on having her 91-year-old mother as a roommate. The family had paid thousands of dollars so that her mom could live comfortably in a retirement community that would transition her from independent living to skilled nursing care if she ever needed it. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and everything changed. Bogdan, 54, is one of many people who started taking care of their loved ones themselves as a result of COVID-19. A survey published in late 2020 from the collaborative Embracing Carers found 13% of respondents became unpaid caregivers for the first time during the pandemic. (Colombini, 3/3)
When the coronavirus pandemic began back in early 2020, Mary Daniel went from visiting her husband nearly every day to being barred from seeing him. 鈥淥n March the 11th, I went to see him as I do every single night and on the 12th they called me and said, 'you can鈥檛 come back,'鈥 Daniel told a panel of House lawmakers Monday. 鈥淚 panicked. I promised him the day that they told us he had Alzheimer鈥檚 that I wouldn鈥檛 leave his side, that I would be with him every single day and all the sudden I wasn鈥檛 going to be able to do that.鈥 (McCarthy, 3/3)
In other news about the spread of the coronavirus 鈥
Gov. Eric Holcomb signed an executive order ending the COVID-19 public health emergency Thursday night after nearly two years, days before the emergency was poised to expire.聽The House approved a measure Thursday聽allowing for the continuation of enhanced Medicaid and food assistance benefits, as well as enabling children under age 12 to receive a COVID-19 vaccination outside a doctor's office. Previously those provisions were only allowed because of the public health emergency. Holcomb had requested all three provisions before he would commit to ending the emergency.聽(Lange, 3/3)
Indiana employers who want to persuade their employees to get the COVID-19 vaccine now have another tool to help them do so. The Employers鈥 Forum of Indiana, a health care coalition,聽has a聽new聽dashboard聽that aims to聽track聽the number of vaccinated and unvaccinated people hospitalized with the virus. It compiles information from nearly 20 hospitals around the state that the health care facilities have made public that reveals the breakdown of vaccinated vs unvaccinated hospitalized patients. (Rudavsky, 3/4)
The number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in Wisconsin dropped below 500 Thursday for the first time since last August, according to data from the Wisconsin Hospital Association.聽The WHA reported 474聽COVID-19 patients and 83 patients in intensive care. This is the lowest number of intensive care patients since the first week of August. Hospitalization totals聽have been in a steady decline since its record-breaking peak of 2,278 patients on Jan. 12.聽(Bentley, 3/3)
In covid research 鈥
The coronavirus may infect tissue within the male genital tract, new research on rhesus macaques shows. The finding suggests that symptoms like erectile dysfunction reported by some Covid patients may be caused directly by the virus, not by inflammation or fever that often accompany the disease. The research demonstrated that the coronavirus infected the prostate, penis, testicles and surrounding blood vessels in three male rhesus macaques. The monkeys were examined with whole body scans specially designed to detect sites of infection. (Rabin, 3/1)
Eli Lilly & Co. and Incyte Corp.鈥檚 rheumatoid arthritis drug baricitinib reduced the risk of death from Covid-19 in a large U.K. study, bolstering evidence that the class of inflammation-fighting medicines can help infected patients. Adding baricitinib to standard treatments lowered the risk of death among hospitalized Covid patients by 13%, according to results from the U.K. trial, called Recovery, in 8,156 people with the disease. Most of the patients also received steroids, and about one-quarter also got a different type of arthritis drug, Roche Holding AG鈥檚 Actemra.聽(Kresge, 3/3)
People infected with COVID-19 are at risk of having a cardiovascular disease-related incident 30 days after having been infected by the virus, researchers showed in a recent report in the journal Nature Medicine.聽The report found those with COVID-19 are potentially susceptible to developing 20 different heart and vascular diseases including among others: heart failure, pericarditis, myocarditis, stroke, cerebrovascular disorders, and dysrhythmias. Even individuals who were not hospitalized with the infection were found to have developed more cardiovascular disease than those who were never infected, the study said.聽(McGorry, 3/3)