Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Magical Thinking, Fear, Self-Promotion Won't Save Lives
Ten months into the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, there is mounting frustration that life is not back to 鈥渘ormal.鈥 Many U.S. schools and businesses remain closed, people are hesitant to fly and enjoy vacations, and in many places, restaurants and indoor activities are sharply limited, with severe economic consequences. With patience wearing thin, it may be tempting to consider policies that give us a return to normalcy, whatever the consequences. (Gigi Kwik Gronvall and Rachel West, 10/16)
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo likes to say that his virus policies, including a strict, prolonged lockdown of New York City, are based on science. Well, he finally revealed the truth when he told Jewish leaders last week that he is locking down their communities again due to public fear.Cases in Brooklyn, Queens and some New York City suburbs have been rising, and Mr. Cuomo blames orthodox Jewish communities not adhering to his rules. Last week he shut down nonessential businesses and schools in these communities and limited gatherings at houses of worship to 10 people. (10/15)
In mid-May I sat in the backyard of my family鈥檚 home in Newport News, Va., garbed in graduation regalia and, via Zoom, joined my medical school classmates to read these words of the Hippocratic oath: 鈥渢hat into whatsoever house I shall enter, it shall be for the good of the sick.鈥 When President Trump held a mass campaign rally in Newport News at the end of September, he did so against the explicit warning of local public health officials. He was entering this community 鈥 our house 鈥 not for the good of the sick but to promote himself. (Zach Nayer, 10/16)
Of all the many ways President Trump mishandled his covid-19 diagnosis and recovery, the worst is what he鈥檚 doing now: facilitating superspreader events while the United States is undergoing a surge in coronavirus cases. It鈥檚 not just the supremely reckless 鈥 and unnecessary 鈥 assembling of thousands of people, in close quarters and many of them maskless; it鈥檚 his overall unmistakable message of contempt for public health and disregard of others鈥 welfare. (Leana S. Wen, 10/15)
"We're rounding the turn on the pandemic." Donald Trump said that three times Tuesday to a packed rally of supporters (many without face masks) in Johnstown, Pa.聽But if America is turning a corner on the coronavirus, it's in the wrong direction.聽When Trump began聽floating his rounding-the-turn mantra聽weeks ago, the number of coronavirus infections, hospitalizations and deaths had, indeed, been declining聽since early summer. But that has聽changed. There were more than 50,000 new infections in the U.S. during a recent 24-hour period (with a seven-day average of nearly 47,000). That's at least double the daily infections of any other country in the world with the exception of India, which has four times the population of the United States.聽America already has more COVID-19 deaths 鈥斅爉ore than 217,000 鈥斅爐han any other country.聽 (10/15)
We are three physicians who share an apartment in Boston, and after months of wondering where we might catch Covid-19 鈥 the crowded grocery store checkout line? the gas station? 鈥 we found out: at work. (Kathryn Holroyd, Neha Limaye and Hallie Rozansky, 10/16)
Where we age shapes how we age. What neighborhood we live in can predict everything from life expectancy to likelihood of having a limb amputated to whether we spend our last years in a nursing home.聽The swath of devastation COVID-19 is cutting through communities is the latest evidence. (Nina A. Kohn and Jennifer Goldberg, 10/15)
Around the world, researchers are working tirelessly to develop a safe and effective coronavirus vaccine. At the same time, governments, businesses and civil society organizations are preparing massive production and distribution efforts so that when a vaccine candidate 鈥 or candidates 鈥 is cleared for use, it can be administered around the world as soon as possible. Whether we will eventually get a vaccine isn鈥檛 in question. What is in question is who will have access to it, and when? (David Moscrop, 10/15)