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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Oct 23 2020

Full Issue

Customer Safety?: Southwest To Fill Middle Seats; Target To Offer Shopping Appointments

The Southwest policy goes into effect after Thanksgiving -- and will offer passengers a chance to rebook. Target seems to be pulling out all the stops during the holiday shopping season, including letting customers make reservations. News is on the difficulties faced by amputee veterans, the challenges of trick-or-treating, and more, as well.

Low-cost carrier Southwest Airlines, which has been limiting the number of seats sold on its flights since May, announced in its third-quarter earnings report today that it will halt the practice beginning Dec. 1. The policy will go into effect after Thanksgiving, which typically brings the busiest air travel day of the year. (McMahon, 10/22)

At a time when the thought of holiday crowds might be more frightening than festive, Target is introducing a new safety measure: reservations. ... During the holidays, shoppers can visit Target.com/line to see if there is a line outside their local store and reserve a spot. They鈥檒l be notified when it鈥檚 their turn to shop. (Telford, 10/22)

As coronavirus restrictions unfurled a dangerous mix of depression and anxiety, the scourge of suicide cut through a tiny community of amputee veterans in recent months, claiming at least three in a group where isolation is already a potent risk factor. (Horton, 10/22)

Halloween is on the horizon and many families are wrestling with the idea of letting their kids deck themselves out in costumes and go trick-or-treating. Pandemic fatigue has set in at many households, making many nostalgic for the days when the little kids could parade around as little Elsas, fearless Spidermen, witches, ghosts or Avengers on a mission to collect candy at every door. (Blythe, 10/22)

KHN: Travel On Thanksgiving? Pass The COVID

Molly Wiese was truly stumped. Her parents and siblings live in Southern California, and Wiese, a 35-year-old lawyer, has returned home every Christmas since she moved to Minnesota in 2007. Because of the pandemic, Wiese thought it would be wiser to stay put for once. But in June, Wiese鈥檚 father was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer, and they feared this could be his final holiday season. (Almendrala, 10/23)

KHN: Workers Fired, Penalized For Reporting COVID Safety Violations

When COVID-19 began making headlines in March, Charles Collins pulled out a protective face mask from the supply at the manufacturing company in Rockaway, New Jersey, where he was the shop foreman and put it on. The dozen or so other workers at the facility followed suit. There was no way to maintain a safe distance from one another on the shop floor, where they made safety mats for machines, and a few of the men had been out sick with flu-like symptoms. Better safe than sorry. Management was not pleased. Collins got a text message from one of his supervisors saying masks were to be used to protect workers from wood chips, metal particles and other occupational safety hazards. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 provide or for that matter have enough masks to protect anybody from CORVID-19 [sic]!鈥 If workers didn鈥檛 stop using the masks for that purpose, the supervisor texted, 鈥渨e鈥檒l have to store them away just like the candy!鈥 鈥淚 was shocked,鈥 said Collins, 38. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 taking it seriously.鈥 (Andrews, 10/23)

In school news 鈥

Months into the school year, school reopenings across the United States remain a patchwork of plans: in-person, remote and hybrid; masked and not; socially distanced and not. But amid this jumble, one clear pattern is emerging. So far, schools do not seem to be stoking community transmission of the coronavirus, according to data emerging from random testing in the United States and Britain. Elementary schools especially seem to seed remarkably few infections. (Mandavilli, 10/22)

Marci Barenburg's 8-year-old son, Eric Cardenas, is deaf and attends the Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind's Phoenix campus. Eric has been with the same cohort of kids since kindergarten, forming "really tight" bonds that Barenburg doesn't believe would be as plentiful in a school not specifically designed for kids like him. She said all students and staff on campus know sign language. ... Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. The school sent kids home and went fully remote on March 16. "He went from being the kid whose favorite thing in the world was school to ... absolutely hating school," she said. "He would beg not to do schoolwork and do online school. He would do it, but it would take a lot of work and he would have a lot of fits." (Frank, 10/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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