Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Covid Made Anti-Vax Movement Worse; Tackling Exorbitant Prescription Drug Costs
Conspiracy theorists鈥 disinformation has led to the deaths of thousands of Americans every week by discouraging COVID-19 vaccinations. That toll will end up being a tiny fraction of the anti-vax movement鈥檚 body count. Even when this pandemic is over, an energized base of anti-vaxxers will lead to more deaths for years to come. The uptake of standard childhood vaccines was already declining before COVID-19 hit, leaving more and more children vulnerable to diseases like diphtheria, measles, rubella, smallpox, mumps, tetanus and whooping cough. Since the pandemic began, we鈥檙e also seeing more politics-driven attacks on state mandates for pre-school vaccination. Long-vanquished child-killing diseases will rise again, just because parents have been fooled into rejecting safe, long-proven vaccines. (John P. Moore, 2/25)
In the pandemic鈥檚 third year, we are beginning to discern the total picture of Covid-19鈥檚 damage. Beneath the coronavirus鈥檚 own staggering death toll and the suffering it has inflicted lie many layers of collateral damage. One of the largest of these is Covid鈥檚 disruption to cancer prevention and聽care. (Lisa Jarvis, 2/24)
Also 鈥
Nearly 2 billion people worldwide lack consistent access to the medicines they need to treat diabetes, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other life-threatening illnesses. They are 鈥渕edicine insecure,鈥 meaning they don鈥檛 have reliable, equitable access to the medicine and supplies they need. (Julie Varughese, 2/24)
It happened at the supermarket a few years ago, as I stood in the checkout line: My breathing became labored and my vision blurred. My throat felt parched. I became fatigued and so irritable that I snapped at my daughter, who had accompanied me to the store. I knew what was happening: These were the effects of insulin rationing. I had only taken half my prescribed dose of insulin and my blood sugar was spiking. I hadn't been able to pay for a prescription refill, and had taken less than a full dose of insulin, so that the supply I had could tide me over until payday. I knew I could be risking my kidneys, my eyesight, or possibly death. However, I had to pay the mortgage, keep food on the table and the electricity on. (Mindy Salango, 2/24)
Recently, out of curiosity, I showed a pharmacist a GoodRx discount card I had in my pocket and the price of my medicine of $105 was reduced to $16. I was stunned! I started thinking how GoodRx makes a profit, and why would a pharmacy discount their price so much just because you show them a plastic card sent to you? I wanted to know how much the drug price varied at different pharmacies, so I did a small survey. All the pharmacies I visited couldn鈥檛 give me a price because they needed a prescription. But the fact that the same drug can cost up to five times more in one pharmacy than another 鈥 and with the use of a discount card you can get up to an 85% reduction in costs shows how distorted and dysfunctional drug pricing is. (Dave Lieber, 2/24)