Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: Walmart's Secret To Persuading The Vaccine-Hesitant; The Future With Omicron
Nearly a year into the largest vaccine rollout in history, the U.S.'s efforts have yielded among the lowest inoculation rates of any industrialized democracy on the globe. Our media and politicians all too often blame the unvaccinated for their hesitancy, casting them as unreachable Trump voting conspiracy theorists who will refuse to accept the facts. It's a view popularized by many who鈥攏ot coincidentally鈥攁dvocate for "mandate or bust" approaches. But is this perspective really born out by the data? Our data suggests that the unvaccinated鈥攅ven in red states鈥攃an be reached. (Adam Sohn and Joel Finkelstein, 1/4)
My first mental model of this pandemic took shape on February 24, 2020, when James Hamblin published 鈥淵ou鈥檙e Likely to Get the Coronavirus.鈥 At the time, there were fewer than 100 known cases in the United States. Yet in his telling, 40 to 70 percent of humans would eventually get infected. Slowing COVID鈥檚 spread still made sense, to avoid overwhelming hospitals, but were countermeasures warranted beyond what was necessary to avoid swamping caregivers? (Conor Friedersdorf, 1/5)
With rapid testing becoming a key tool in the fight against Covid-19, in a mid-October call with the White House I offered to sell my Covid testing company 鈥 recently valued at $99.8 million 鈥 to the government for just $1. As an alternative, I also offered to sell the government our test at cost. My company, Global Diagnostic Systems, had just completed clinical trials showing our rapid Covid-19 home test had 100% sensitivity (meaning no false negatives) and 95% specificity (meaning just 5% false positives). On hearing about this performance, a senior White House official told me, 鈥淎pply to the FDA ASAP.鈥 (Elliott J. Millenson, 1/6)
Under well-established law, the Biden administration鈥檚 vaccination mandates are clearly legal. But the politicization of the pandemic and vaccines makes it doubtful whether the Supreme Court will uphold them. Cases involving two regulations that impose vaccination requirements on workers will go before the court on Friday. (Erwin Chemerinsky, 1/5)
The Omicron variant is spreading widely and infecting large numbers of people, including the vaccinated and those previously infected with the virus. While spikes in cases have been the norm for the past two years, there are clear indications this wave will differ substantially from previous ones. The record number of cases in the United States and globally is largely because Omicron is more contagious than other variants and has a greater ability to evade immunity to infection. (Jeffrey Shaman, 1/6)
In December, as COVID-19 cases spiked in Connecticut, Gov. Ned Lamont launched an initiative to provide masks for all Connecticut residents. While the program itself is newsworthy, Lamont鈥檚 focus on not just the quantity but also the quality of masks being distributed is especially worth noting. (Richard Boykin, 1/5)