Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Other Nations Can Learn From Japan's Covid Response; Congress Must Help ACA Do Most Good
Shanghai is locked down and some of its residents are聽running out聽of food. As China battles its largest-ever Covid outbreak, the discourse swings between two extremes: The country must accept Covid Zero and sporadic, disruptive lockdowns;聽or it must live with the virus western-style 鈥斅 and endure all deaths that ensue.聽For Chinese authorities, the former may no longer work but the latter is unacceptable.聽But there鈥檚 an alternative: China should look to what can be learned from its neighbor Japan. (Gearoid Reidy, 4/10)
In recent days, Matthew Broderick has become infected with COVID-19. So has Sarah Jessica Parker. And Daniel Craig. Those star names all are appearing in Broadway shows at present and their cases are illuminating not just due to their celebrity but because they are working in rigorously tested environments where infections are detected fast and public disclosures made. (4/8)
Doomed from the start. That phrase neatly describes the Apollo 13 mission, which launched this day in 1970, and the ongoing Covid-19 vaccination effort in the U.S. Yet both can be seen as 鈥渟uccessful failures.鈥 When astronauts James Lovell, John 鈥淛ack鈥 Swigert, and Fred Haise blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center, they were anticipating mankind鈥檚 third trip to the surface of the moon. Two days into the mission, a defective oxygen tank exploded when they were some 200,000 miles away from Earth, imperiling their lives and making it impossible to complete their mission. Around-the-clock efforts by teams on the ground, imbued with NASA ingenuity, helped the astronauts return safely to Earth in what was nothing short of a miracle. 鈥淥ur mission was a failure,鈥 Lovell wrote later, 鈥渂ut I like to think it was a successful failure.鈥 (Christopher M. Worsham and Anupam B. Jena, 4/11)
Also 鈥
The Biden administration is proposing a rule that would fix the so-called family glitch, an obscure issue of wording buried deep in the law鈥檚 text that prevents a shockingly large number of people from getting cheaper health premiums. The law provides people government subsidies for health insurance plans, but only if their employers do not offer them affordable health coverage. The law deems an employer-sponsored plan unaffordable if premiums would top about 10 percent of an employee鈥檚 household income. So, if workers would have to pay sky-high premiums for their employer-sponsored plan, they could always seek coverage on the Obamacare marketplaces and receive assistance from government subsidies. (4/9)
I'd never cried in a doctor's office. But there I was, a few weeks back, sobbing in the exam room.As a new resident of Fort Myers, Florida, I was trying to establish a relationship with a local primary care physician. From the start, the doctor's focus was her computer, not me. She stared at a screen, while I stared off into space (Christine Bechtel, 4/10)
Mass General Brigham didn鈥檛 become the medical behemoth it is today by not knowing the first rule of health care poker 鈥 know when to fold 鈥檈m. Faced with a wall of opposition to its proposed three new suburban outpatient surgical centers 鈥 not the least of which included a critical staff report by the Department of Public Health 鈥 the organization formerly known as Partners HeathCare cut its losses. In the end, MGB settled for partial wins on expansion plans on the main Mass General campus and at its Brigham and Women鈥檚 Faulkner Hospital. (4/11)