Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Future With Long Covid Isn't Promising; Should Americans Start Masking Again?
Covid-19 has killed more than 6 million people worldwide but will also leave a lasting scar on hundreds of millions who have survived. The disease can trigger cardiovascular, gastrointestinal and neurological symptoms; it can affect the skin, kidneys, liver, the endocrine organs and the eyes. Moreover, the damage to the body may linger long after the initial sickness. Much about this phenomenon of 鈥渓ong covid鈥 is still unclear, but evidence is accumulating that populations will be struggling for years to come. (5/22)
The United States has passed聽1 million COVID-19 deaths, more than any other nation, according to data from the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center. As we headed toward聽this tragic milestone (and the uptick in cases that has聽accompanied it), state mask mandates across the nation have dropped.聽(5/22)
A million Americans have been lost to the pandemic, according to the federal government鈥檚 official count, making this a disaster that defies most comparisons. And yet it鈥檚 so much worse. By the time the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that the nation had reached the bleak crossroads the month, it was in all likelihood old news and a gross underestimate. (Josh Gohlke, 5/20)
"No thanks,鈥 my patient said to me. 鈥淭wo is enough.鈥 I was caught off guard the first time I recommended a COVID booster shot and heard that response. 鈥淲hat do you mean, it鈥檚 enough? Do you toss out half of your cardiac meds? Do you say, 鈥楨h, that seems like enough鈥 partway through your hernia operation?鈥 I鈥檝e been receiving that response more and more these days. 鈥淭wo is about right.鈥 鈥淚鈥檒l stick with two.鈥 These folks are not vaccine skeptics. I work at a public hospital in New York City and my patients come from communities that were pummeled by the coronavirus; most lined up for the shots as soon as they became available in early 2021, undeterred by logistical barriers or social-media rumors. A year later, despite cases rising sharply due to the BA.2 variant, they鈥攍ike most Americans鈥攕eem to have moved on. (Danielle Ofri, 5/22)
Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, there鈥檚 been a refrain among infectious disease experts: you may be done with the virus, but the virus is not done with you. Like everyone else, health officials and providers wish the epidemic would end. At the same time, we must live in a parallel universe in which preventing and managing Covid-19 remains a daily focus when everyone else seems to have moved on. This is fundamentally what it means for a disease to becomes endemic: People with power, privilege and resources no longer view themselves at risk and consider it a problem primarily of 鈥渧ulnerable populations.鈥 (Jay K. Varma, 5/23)
For two years, it seemed as though China鈥檚 ruthless COVID-19 policy had paid off. After stumbling in its initial efforts to stem the pandemic, China鈥檚 rulers fixed a simple numeric target 鈥 zero COVID cases 鈥 and made sure everyone knew they had to reach it. The results looked severe to Western eyes, but they stopped the virus鈥 spread. They also gave China a propaganda victory, emboldening their claims that authoritarian governments could solve social problems better than liberal democracies, which in worrying too much about people鈥檚 civil rights, ended up killing them instead. (Jeremy L. Wallace, 5/21)
Whether it was conducting groundbreaking research, completing clinical studies, manufacturing Covid-19 vaccines or distributing and administering billions of doses, scientists, public health officials, doctors and countless others have taken on the Herculean task of protecting people around the world from the novel coronavirus with vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics. While we -- the world's largest manufacturer of vaccines by volume -- recognize the innovation and effort the global community undertook in the past two years, we also acknowledge that there is more to do. As world leaders come together at the World Economic Forum this week, I hope that they collectively work toward a healthy and safe future for the generations to come. Developing vaccines or treatments that can actually prevent transmission of disease, not just hospitalizations and deaths, would help control the virus. And there needs to be multilateral cooperation from countries to provide equitable access to vaccines and therapeutics to all. (Adar Poonawalla, 5/23)