Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Perspectives: Anti-Vaxxers, Unusual Covid Cases, Childbirth Complications, Vaping
It鈥檚 getting harder and harder to remember the height of the pandemic, when some 4,000 Americans were dying every day. At the time, the overwhelmed hospitals, the lockdown, the unemployment, the closed schools, the grounded planes seemed unforgettable. It was staggering, surreal; it would stay with us forever.But in this 鈥渧accine summer,鈥 we seem to be celebrating our relative freedom with amnesia. (Virginia Heffernan, 7/12)
Here is perhaps the most important medical and political fact of our time: 99.5 percent of all covid-19-related deaths in the United States occur among unvaccinated people; 0.5 percent of covid deaths occur among vaccinated people. If you tell people not to be vaccinated, you add to the former category. In this light, the recent outbreak of applause at the Conservative Political Action Conference for the United States鈥 failure to meet its vaccination target was macabre. Here were political activists 鈥 many of whom would call themselves 鈥減ro-life鈥 鈥 cheering for the advance of death. How did we get to such a strange, desperate place? (Michael Gerson, 7/12)
First, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.,聽compared mask requirements聽to 鈥済old stars鈥 from the Holocaust. Then Gigi Gaskins, a store owner in Nashville, Tennessee, advertised anti-vaccination patches modeled on the yellow Stars of David that Nazis forced Jews to wear.聽And then Washington State Rep. Jim Walsh wore a yellow star as an anti-vaxxer stunt just before Independence Day.聽Now, just weeks after she聽visited the U.S.聽Holocaust Museum, Greene, a QAnon conspiracy theorist, has doubled down on the antisemitism by calling those leading the federal effort for COVID vaccinations 鈥渕edical brown shirts,鈥 a reference to the paramilitary operation that helped Adolf Hitler take power. (Imran Ahmed, 7/12)
Like many people around the world and in Brazil where she lives, Parouhi Darakjian Kouyoumdjian became infected with the coronavirus last year; she had mild symptoms and recovered. But her case is remarkable: Ms. Kouyoumdjian is a centenarian. Still, while the elderly are more likely to suffer severe and fatal cases of Covid-19, Ms. Kouyoumdjian is not alone. She is part of a study led by Mayana Zatz, director of the Human Genome Research Center at the University of S茫o Paulo, to understand how very old people who became infected with SARS-CoV-2 can emerge unscathed. (Roxanne Khamsi, 7/12)
The coronavirus has reliably disregarded all hopes that it would observe human holidays, deadlines or elections. Across California, evidence is once again accumulating that it responds only to caution and consistency. Despite high vaccination rates and low case numbers, the Bay Area saw infections rise quickly enough in recent weeks to rank on a federal list of viral hot spots. Alameda County has seen new cases more than double to over 70 a day during the past month. Los Angeles County鈥檚 cases grew at a rate of more than 1,000 a day over the weekend. (7/12)
The coronavirus pandemic brought the importance of public health to the forefront of national attention. While the Covid-19-related shutdowns at first significantly slowed the number of births in the U.S., the birth rate is expected to surge later this year. There will likely be close to 4 million births in the U.S. in 2021, the vast majority of which will be safe for both mother and child. More than 700 mothers, however, die each year in the U.S. from pregnancy- and birth-related complications 鈥 and an astonishing two-thirds of these deaths are preventable. (Alissa Erogbogbo, 7/13)
Maki Inada is juggling a lot these days. She鈥檚 a biology professor at upstate New York鈥檚 Ithaca College, where she balances teaching and research on messenger RNA (suddenly a topic of global interest). She is a mother of a vivacious 10-year-old who just finished fourth grade, and that means lots of driving back and forth to gymnastics and swimming practice. And she has lung cancer. In April, after years of clean scans, the cancer was back. She just had major surgery and is starting chemotherapy again. She has a lot of appointments with her local oncologist and her oncology team at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. One silver lining of the pandemic for Ms. Inada was that she didn鈥檛 have to drive to Boston for her appointments. She began having video calls with her doctors and planned to conduct many of her postoperative and oncology appointments via telemedicine. But regulatory changes in the past month have thrown a wrench in those plans. Dana-Farber told Ms. Inada she鈥檒l have to be physically located in Massachusetts for a visit. She doesn鈥檛 have to go all the way to the doctor鈥檚 office, a 5陆-hour drive each way. She can drive 3陆 hours, cross the border into Massachusetts, pull over, and have a telemedicine visit in the car. (Ateev Mehrotra and Barak Richman, 7/12)
When my eldest son started high school, our whole family looked forward to the new experiences he had ahead of him. Imagine our disappointment and concern when he told us that his first three weeks of high school had been marked by numerous invitations to vape with some of his new classmates. Unfortunately, this experience is not uncommon across our country. E-cigarettes, or 鈥渧apes鈥 as they are known, are the most commonly used tobacco products among young people. Currently, nearly 4 million of them are vaping, including 1 out of every 5 U.S. high school students. (Raja Krishnamoorthi, 7/12)
The sporting experience can be pernicious for the mental health of an athlete. A toxic synergy of rigorous training methods, intensity of competition, injury, isolation, travel and pressure to excel commonly breed dangerous psychiatric diseases like anxiety and depression. As a British Journal of Sports Medicine analysis in 2019 showed, between roughly a quarter and a third of current and former elite athletes grapple with mental health symptoms and disorders. (Dr. Jalal Baig, 7/11)