Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Hospitals Ask HHS For More Time To Spend Covid Relief Funds
Some lawmakers and healthcare providers are calling on the Biden administration to extend a deadline for hospitals to spend emergency coronavirus funding, with more than $30 billion remaining to be distributed out of about $187 billion Congress approved. The money is intended to help hospitals cover losses related to the Covid-19 pandemic, but delays have dogged the program. Hospitals must spend the money by June 30 or return it, but many say they need more time because they are still feeling the financial sting from the pandemic. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said his agency was reviewing the extension requests. (Armour and Evans, 5/21)
Traditional Medicare has spent $16.6 billion on Covid-19 hospitalizations for more than 691,000 beneficiaries since 2020, an average of about $24,000 per patient, according to government data released Thursday. The total taxpayer toll, however, is likely much higher because those figures don鈥檛 include spending for the more than 450,000 Covid-19 hospitalizations among beneficiaries in private Medicare Advantage plans. (Pugh, 5/20)
Other Biden administration news 鈥
President Biden repeats the phrase frequently. 鈥淲e follow the science,鈥 he pledged on a visit to the National Institutes of Health. 鈥淔ollow the science,鈥 he told staff at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 鈥淭his administration will follow the science,鈥 he said during a White House event announcing the 50聽millionth vaccine shot delivered to an American. A week ago, the president did just that 鈥 strolling to the Rose Garden to trumpet new guidance from the CDC that fully vaccinated Americans no longer need to wear masks or socially distance in most instances. But in following that scientific advice, the administration left out nearly everyone else 鈥 local and state health departments, labor unions, governors and numerous other public officials, many of whom were caught off guard by one of the most significant developments of the coronavirus pandemic. (Linskey, Abutaleb, Sun and Pager, 5/21)
Andrea Palm has gotten something in Washington, D.C., that she never got in Wisconsin: a confirmation. Palm, who led Wisconsin's response to the COVID-19 pandemic during the two years she spent聽as secretary-designee of the state聽Department of Health Services, was never confirmed by the Republican-controlled Legislature. (Spicuzza, 5/20)
From the borders 鈥
Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra told the Congressional Hispanic Caucus this week he's prepared, if needed, to double the capacity for underage migrants at Fort Bliss, Texas, Axios has learned. (Goba and Nichols, 5/20)
Immigration advocates credit the Biden administration with acting quickly to move tens of thousands of migrant children out of jail-like detention facilities on the U.S. southern border and into safer emergency shelters. But the advocates are now growing increasingly concerned about the conditions in the mass shelters, such as a military base in El Paso, Texas. (Ordo帽ez, 5/21)
The U.S. will continue to enforce coronavirus-related restrictions on nonessential travel across U.S. land borders through June 21, the Biden administration announced on Thursday. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working closely with Canada & Mexico to safely ease restrictions as conditions improve,鈥 the Department of Homeland Security said on Twitter. (Brueninger, 5/20)