Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Doctors In Congress Influence Health Policy
In one moment, Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.), an anesthesiologist, is holding a news conference advising people to get vaccinated. He鈥檚 even helped administer COVID-19 shots in his eastern Maryland district. But in another moment, Harris is on the radio talking about his disappointment that he couldn鈥檛 find a pharmacy that would fill a prescription he wrote for ivermectin鈥攁n antiparasitic鈥攖o treat a patient with COVID-19, a viral infection. (Hellman, 11/16)
KHN: Congressional Doctors Lead Bipartisan Revolt Over Policy On Surprise Medical Bills
The detente that allowed Congress to pass a law curbing surprise medical bills has disintegrated, with a bipartisan group of 152 lawmakers assailing the administration鈥檚 plan to regulate the law and medical providers warning of grim consequences for underserved patients. For years, people have faced these massive, unexpected bills when they get treatment from hospitals or doctors outside their insurance company鈥檚 network. It often happens when patients seek care at an in-network hospital but a physician such as an emergency room doctor or anesthesiologist who treats the patient is not covered by the insurance plan. The insurer would pay only a small part of the bill, and the unsuspecting patient would be responsible for the balance. (McAuliff, 11/17)
On covid 鈥
Andy Harris, a Maryland congressman and anesthesiologist, says a complaint has been filed against him with a physicians board for prescribing ivermectin to treat COVID-19. Ivermectin is used to treat parasites in humans but is not authorized for treating COVID-19 by the Food and Drug Administration, which says the medication can be dangerous in large doses. Often citing its use overseas, ivermectin supporters have pushed the drug as an inexpensive treatment for COVID. But researchers so far have been unable to prove the drug is effective. (Barker, 11/16)
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said Tuesday that she has accumulated $63,000 in fines for refusing to wear a mask on the House floor, with additional fines likely to be imposed as she continues to defy the chamber's mask requirement during the COVID-19 pandemic.聽"I'm up to $63,000," Greene told The Hill outside the House chamber while not wearing a mask and confirmed that the fines are automatically "deducted out of my check." Greene also volunteered that she is not vaccinated against COVID-19 after declining to disclose her vaccination status for months. (Marcos, 11/16)
Anthony Fauci, the country鈥檚 top infectious disease expert who himself has become something of a Rorschach test for people鈥檚 views on the pandemic, warned that the politicization of the Covid-19 response threatens the country鈥檚 ability to withstand future health emergencies, even at a time of great scientific progress. 鈥淗ow do you change a mindset in a country that is completely antithetical to a response to an outbreak?鈥 Fauci said Tuesday at the STAT Summit. 鈥淚f ever there was any phenomenon that required people pulling together in a society, it鈥檚 an outbreak that鈥檚 killing hundreds of thousands of people. I don鈥檛 know how we鈥檙e going to get that divisiveness behind us.鈥 (Joseph, 11/16)
And in other health care news from the Hill 鈥
The bipartisan infrastructure package signed Monday by President Biden contains a bill streamlining funding for water infrastructure projects, a provision that its sponsor, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), hopes will mean 鈥渁 difference made in people鈥檚 lives every day.鈥 In an interview with The Hill Tuesday, Duckworth called the measure in question, the Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Act of 2021, 鈥渢he backbone of all the water infrastructure in this larger bill.鈥 The provision includes $15 billion in direct payments to the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund for Lead Service Line Replacement, which Duckworth told The Hill is 鈥渉istoric.鈥 (Budryk, 11/16)