Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Daily Briefings Need To Be About Pandemic, Not The President; Lessons On States Taking The Lead
Our Thursday editorial offering some friendly advice on how to make the daily White House coronavirus briefings more informative for the American people seems to have caught Presidentās Trump attention. The President took to his favorite communication venue to tweet: āThe Wall Street Journal always āforgetsā to mention that the ratings for the White House Press Briefings are āthrough the roofā (Monday Night Football, Bachelor Finale, according to @nytimes) & is only way for me to escape the Fake News & get my views across. WSJ is Fake News!ā Thanks for reading, sir, and we agree the briefings are an excellent way to communicate directly with Americans. Our point was about the way Mr. Trump is communicating about a subject that is literally a life and death matter. Thatās the reason theyāre a ratings hit, not because people enjoy Donald Trump sparring with the White House press corps like a Packers-Bears game. (4/9)
There is only one logical reason President Trump is so desperately trying to cast doubt on the outcome of an election thatās still seven months away: He knows he is likely to lose.To use a football analogy, itās not even halftime and Trump is already throwing Hail Marys. In recent days, he has used his coronavirus updates to rail against mail-in voting, which will probably be the way more Americans cast their ballots in November than ever before. āMail ballots, they cheat,ā he claimed Tuesday. Fact check: They donāt. From Trumpās point of view, something that must look like a worst-case scenario is coming into focus. (Eugene Robinson, 4/9)
President Donald Trump says America does not need and will never have mass coronavirus testing, despite warnings by experts that a comprehensive program is vital to getting life back to normal. The inadequacy of testing for the virus has been a constant deficiency of the government's handling of the pandemic from the start. (Stephen Collinson, 4/10)
California this week declared its independence from the federal governmentās feeble efforts to fight Covid-19 āĀ and perhaps from a bit more. The consequences for the fight against the pandemic are almost certainly positive. The implications for the brewing civil war between TrumpismĀ and Americaās budding 21st-century majority, embodied by Californiaās multiracial liberal electorate, are less clear.Speaking on MSNBC, Governor Gavin Newsom said that he would use the bulk purchasing power of California āas a nation-stateā to acquire the hospital supplies that the federal government has failed to provide. If all goes according to plan, Newsom said, California might even āexport some of those supplies to states in need.āāNation-state.ā āExport.ā (Francis Wilkinson, 4/9)
For months, the White House has been sending an implicit but unmistakable message to state governors: When it comes to handling the coronavirus pandemic, youāre pretty much on your own. āWeāre not a shipping clerk,ā President Trump grumbled to reporters last month as an explanation of why he has ignored pleas from states for help obtaining ventilators, N95 masks and crucial medical equipment. (4/9)
The Supreme Courtās intervention in the Wisconsin election this week ā last-minute, avoidable and slapdash ā was disquieting, not least as a sign of the courtās potential role in the upcoming presidential election. The unsigned opinion on behalf of the five-justice conservative majority evoked future dangers, but it also harked back to the past, specifically to the infamous opinion in Bush vs. Gore, which wrestled the 2000 presidential election to the ground. (Harry Litman, 4/9)
Hong Kong led the world in adopting helicopter money. Now the cityāsĀ long-term wage subsidiesĀ have again put it at the forefront of global efforts to blunt the impact of the coronavirus. Other economies should pay attention. The government said this week that it will fund 50% of affected workersā salaries for six months, capped at the equivalent of $1,160Ā a month. With the exception of Australia, most countries have offered shorter-term relief. Hong Kongās spending package reflects recognition that the economy will need support for longer than initially thought. (Nisha Gopalan, 4/9)
A once-in-a-century public health crisis is unfolding, and the richest country in the world is struggling to mount an effective response. Hospitals donāt have enough gowns or masks to protect doctors and nurses, nor enough intensive care beds to treat the surge of patients. Laboratories donāt have the equipment to diagnose cases quickly or in bulk, and state and local health departments across the country donāt have the manpower to track the diseaseās spread. Perhaps worst of all, urgent messages about the importance of social distancing and the need for temporary shutdowns have been muddied by politics. (Jeneen Interlandi, 4/9)
Itās clear in this unprecedented health crisis that the healthcare delivery system is not really a system at all and one of the glaring issues is that of licensure to practice. There are medical professionals who are sitting on the sidelines when their expertise and clinical skills could be put to work. Our objective in writing this column is to point out the difficulties facing physicians who would like to contribute but cannot because of the antiquated guild system of state medical licensure. It needs to be replaced with one similar to that of the Federal Aviation Administration for pilotsāuniversal and focused on standard skills and safety. (Katherine A. Schneider and Mary P. Davis, 4/9)