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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Oct 5 2020

Full Issue

'Discovered Very Early': Son Of Texas Pastor Confirms Father's Positive Test

Media outlets report on news about the 80-year-old founder of a megachurch, infections in the NFL, nasal swabs, repeat infections, a Texas family's losses, masks, vaccines, flu, and more.

John Hagee, Founder and Senior Pastor of Cornerstone Church has reportedly been diagnosed with the coronavirus. Hagee's son, Matt made the announcement Sunday morning during a livestreamed service on Facebook, saying doctors informed them Friday of the diagnosis. 鈥淧astor Hagee has been diligent throughout this entire COVID pandemic to monitor his health. And this past Friday, he was informed by his doctors that he did test positive for COVID,鈥 Matt Hagee said. "It was one, discovered very early and two, his medical team has him under watchful care and three, he's feeling well enough to be frustrated by anyone in a white coat with a stethoscope." (Sharma, 10/4)

The National Football League鈥檚 coronavirus problems widened on Saturday, as one of the game鈥檚 biggest stars鈥擭ew England Patriots quarterback Cam Newton鈥攖ested positive for Covid-19, an outbreak on the Tennessee Titans grew and a member of the Kansas City Chiefs received a positive test. The Patriots鈥 game scheduled for Sunday against the Chiefs, a marquee matchup featuring the reigning Super Bowl champions, will be postponed until Monday or Tuesday, the NFL said. It wasn鈥檛 immediately clear who tested positive with the Chiefs. (Beaton, 10/3)

A COVID-19 test reportedly led to a life-threatening infection for a woman with a rare, undiagnosed health condition. The woman, in her 40s, received a nasal swab test that was said to聽have punctured her brain lining, causing fluid to leak from her nose and putting her in danger of an infection that could have been deadly, Jarret Walsh, an otolaryngologist, reported in the medical journal JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery,聽according to AFP.聽 (Settembre, 10/2)

Covid-19 first struck Jordan Josey around St. Patrick's Day, right as social distancing guidelines were rolling out across the country. The 29-year-old lawyer from Macon, Georgia, was sick through Easter, before eventually clearing the coronavirus, developing antibodies and gradually building up his stamina again by early May. He donated convalescent plasma on May 18 and received a letter two weeks later confirming that he was positive for coronavirus antibodies. A swab test around that time came back negative for the virus itself. (Prior, 10/5)

The coronavirus had already killed Nieves Salas Solis' mother and brother when he called his daughter from a hospital bed with a chilling message: "I'm next." Nieves, 62, who grew up in Dallas and in recent years lived in a Mexican border town doing community outreach, had a high fever and shortness of breath. It was mid-August, and he had managed to drive himself to a hospital in Harlingen, Texas, where doctors confirmed that he had Covid-19. But their efforts to clear his lungs were not working, said his daughter, Ana Alonso. (Chuck, 10/4)

Kaiser Health News: Wear A Mask. If Only It Were That Simple.聽

Nils Hase, a retiree who lives in Tarpon Springs, Florida, is wearing a mask and loading his Home Depot haul into his car on a recent weekday afternoon. In the store, because Home Depot insists customers and staff across the country wear masks, most faces were covered. But out here in the parking lot, in a state with a serious infection rate but no mask mandate, plenty of those masks hang down around people鈥檚 chins. 鈥淚t bothers me. They are being defiant,鈥 Hase said. 鈥淎nd most of the people I see that walk in without a mask are just looking for a fight. They are asking you to 鈥楯ust ask me. Just give me a reason to yell at you.鈥 I just stay away from them and keep on with my own life.鈥 (McAuliff, Ochoa, Fortier and Farmer, 10/2)

Kaiser Health News: 5 Things To Know About A COVID Vaccine: It Won鈥檛 Be A 鈥楳agic Wand鈥櫬

President Donald Trump makes no secret he would like a COVID-19 vaccine to be available before the election. But it鈥檚 doubtful that will happen and, even after a vaccine wins FDA approval, there would be a long wait before it鈥檚 time to declare victory over the virus. Dozens of vaccine candidates are in various testing stages around the world, with 11 in the last stage of preapproval clinical trials 鈥 including four in the U.S. One or more may prove safe and effective and enter the market in the coming months. What then? (Appleby, 10/5)

In news about the flu 鈥

As influenza season approaches, some Americans, and especially parents, are worried that, if they or their children should become ill, it may not be easy to know which disease they have 鈥 the flu or Covid-19. They are correct. Most symptoms of the two diseases are so similar that, short of a test 鈥 or two or three tests 鈥 it won鈥檛 be possible to know for sure. But there are some clues. (And it is possible to have both infections at the same time; some patients in China this year were found to have both.) (McNeil Jr., 10/3)

You might have hoped the coronavirus pandemic would cancel what we doctors usually think of as "sick season," but as cool weather signals the annual arrival of autumn allergies, colds and flu in the U.S., sick season is still right on schedule. In my clinic, that means a flurry of visits and calls from patients worried about their runny noses, coughs and sore throats. Before the emergence of COVID-19, it was already tough for patients to know how seriously to take those common symptoms. Allergies and colds are mostly just a nuisance, but a severe case of the flu can kill. (Kendrick, 10/4)

On September 18 Orianna Carvalho woke up at 3 A.M. with a sore throat and the sniffles. At first, she thought her symptoms were caused by allergies. But as the minutes ticked by, she began to worry they were caused by COVID-19. The following morning, Carvalho got tested at the University of Rhode Island, where she is a first-year doctoral student. Over the next few hours she developed a fever, and the catastrophizing began in earnest. When Carvalho finally learned that the cause of her misery was not COVID but the common cold, she was relieved but also surprised. 鈥淚 have been so careful鈥攚earing a mask every time I go somewhere, keeping at least six feet away from other people, using hand sanitizer and washing my hands,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how I got sick.鈥 (Broadfoot, 10/2)

In 1918, as World War I crawled to its finish, the world faced down another sinister enemy with the spread of H1N1 influenza. During the influenza pandemic, about one-third of the world was infected and at least 50 million died. But why was the pandemic so deadly? Research finds clues in climate. In a paper published last month in the journal GeoHealth, scientists analyzed the effects of an extreme weather anomaly they said set the stage for increased casualties during World War I and the spread and intensity of the flu afterward. (Blakemore, 10/3)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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