Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Georgia's Health Officials, Medical Advisers Blindsided By Governor's Decision To Reopen
Governors preparing to roll back restrictions put in place to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus are in some cases acting without the input and against the wishes of their own medical and emergency management staff. Georgia鈥檚 Republican governor, Brian Kemp, announced he would let tattoo parlors, hair salons and bowling alleys reopen without receiving guidance from the panel of doctors tapped to advise him and without giving advance notice to regional health departments responsible for carrying out his orders, according to physicians and state officials. (Stanley-Becker and Weiner, 4/23)
Georgia's confirmed coronavirus cases and deaths from COVID-19 are still steadily rising, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (which happens to be based in Atlanta) describes community spread coronavirus as "widespread" in the state. That goes against all the principles laid out in the guidelines. Measured against other states, Georgia is nowhere near the bottom for cases 鈥 it has actually had the 12th most over the past three weeks. (Montanaro, 4/24)
Undeterred by a barrage of criticism, Georgia is moving ahead with its plan to reopen some nonessential businesses despite an increase in coronavirus deaths statewide. Gov. Brian Kemp was one of the last state leaders to issue a stay-at-home order effective April 3 to combat the spread of the deadly coronavirus. This week, he became one of the nation's first governors to ease those restrictions after he allowed businesses such as gyms, barber shops, hair salons, tattoo parlors and bowling alleys to reopen Friday. (Karimi, 4/24)
As Gov. Brian Kemp moves to聽re-open the economy, researchers and ordinary Georgians are turning to the state Department of Public Health鈥檚 published data on coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths to draw their own conclusions on if it鈥檚 safe to return to barber shops and restaurants. ...Wednesday鈥檚 DPH count shows that new confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus jumped by more than 900 in a single day. Another count it released at the same time used a different method and showed they only rose by 31. (Mariano, 4/23)
Brooks Robinson got a phone call from his cousin Jennifer. She couldn鈥檛 stop screaming. 鈥淪he鈥檚 gone. She鈥檚 gone,鈥 she yelled into the phone. Jennifer was calling to tell him their 34-year-old cousin Santayana Harris had just died of pneumonia, a symptom of COVID-19. He couldn鈥檛 believe it. Just a day earlier, he鈥檇 lost another cousin, Flora Robinson, to the same virus. It was a second blow, but not the last. (McGrady, 4/23)
Nearly a quarter of a million more Georgians filed jobless claims last week, the state聽Department of Labor聽said Thursday, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the economy. That brings the total number of workers in the state who have filed for unemployment benefits to about 1.1 million over the past month, more than 1 in 5 Georgia workers. (Kanell, 4/23)
The Trump administration laid out a three-phase plan for reopening the country, and states such as Georgia, Texas and Ohio have moved to loosen restrictions. But lifting lockdowns too early will bring the coronavirus roaring back, health experts say. The country still lacks a number of measures that must be in place before it is safe to go back to some new version of normal, experts say. These include enough testing to identify new cases quickly, an army of public-health workers to find and help those who have come into contact with the new cases, and places to quarantine new cases to choke off nascent outbreaks as restrictions lift. (McKay and Abbott, 4/23)
An array of U.S. merchants in Georgia and other states prepared on Thursday to reopen for the first time in a month under newly relaxed coronavirus restrictions, as another week of massive unemployment claims highlighted the grim economic toll of the pandemic. (McKay, 4/23)
Houston health leaders are putting in place a nuanced coronavirus reopening strategy that probably points to sometime in mid-May as a realistic commencement, roughly 10 days later than the start date Gov. Greg Abbott is expected to announce Monday. The leaders pointedly dismissed talk of dates, instead emphasizing certain benchmarks 鈥 the number of coronavirus cases, the availability of diagnostic tests and the capacity to conduct contact tracing 鈥 that need to improve significantly before the Houston region would be able to manage continuing cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus. (Ackerman, 4/24)