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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Oct 20 2020

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Perspectives: Dangers Of 'Herd Immunity' Strategy; Battling COVID Fatigue; Safe Vaccine Needed

Opinion writers weigh in on these pandemic topics and others.

There鈥檚 a mistaken and dangerous idea spreading like a virus 鈥 that we can let COVID spread among young, healthy people as long as we protect the vulnerable.The idea is appealing but it would backfire. In fact, following this advice would lead to more Americans being killed by COVID than were killed in all the wars of the 20th Century. (Ex-CDC Chief Tom Frieden, 10/19)

So the idea of returning to something akin to normal 鈥 releasing everyone from a kind of jail 鈥 is attractive, even seductive. It becomes less seductive when one examines three enormously important omissions in the declaration. First, it makes no mention of harm to infected people in low-risk groups, yet many people recover very slowly. More serious, a significant number, including those with no symptoms, suffer damage to their heart and lungs. One recent study of 100 recovered adults found that 78 of them showed signs of heart damage. We have no idea whether this damage will cut years from their lives or affect their quality of life. (John M. Barry, 10/19)

Winter is coming and we are headed towards the feared intersection of COVID-19 and flu season. Yet already the coronavirus is surging across the world and the United States, the global leader in聽number of coronavirus deaths, is moving closer to a quarter-million fatalities. Our medical system could be overwhelmed if聽hospitalizations increase. This is why I am concerned about the reports that some officials and policymakers in the White House are considering 鈥渉erd immunity鈥 as a strategy to combat the pandemic. This is dangerous, callous聽and flawed thinking. (Dr. Thomas Ken Lew, 10/20)

Of course we are tired of covid. More than 8 million Americans have been infected by the novel coronavirus and at least 219,000 have died, more than in any other country. Some number of those deaths can be attributed to Mr. Trump鈥檚 adoption of wishful thinking as policy. He has resisted a national testing plan and a national public health strategy, and he continually encourages reckless behavior and mocks prudence. The result is more unemployment, more illness, more misery. (10/19)

President Donald Trump's election endgame argument, far from bristling with new solutions to a pandemic that has killed 220,000 Americans, on Monday devolved into a campaign of insults against Dr. Anthony Fauci -- for telling the truth about the disease. Trump ridiculed Fauci as a "disaster" and an "idiot" who has been around for "500 years" -- trashing one of the nation's best hopes of easing the pandemic along with his recommendations to quell an alarming Covid-19 surge. (Stephen Collinson, 10/20)

When the Food and Drug Administration ran into White House resistance to its proposed vaccine safety standards in early October, the agency took a bold step: It published the guidance on its Web site. The public could now see what vaccine manufacturers and the FDA鈥檚 own independent advisory panel would require to ensure a longer, scientifically rigorous process. (Julie Morita and Edward Belongia, 10/19)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are reportedly locked in talks about another round of pandemic-related economic relief. The economy鈥檚 continuing weakness means that another stimulus bill is inevitable, whether it arrives before or after the election. That means it鈥檚 crucial for policymakers of both parties to understand the uniqueness of this recession, and how that means a relief package must be crafted differently from traditional models if it is to have the most impact. (Henry Olsen, 10/19)

President Donald Trump and the pandemic he is supposed to be fighting are running out of control with the two weeks until Election Day shaping up as among the most ugly and divisive periods ever ahead of a presidential vote. He's on a fresh collision course with Dr. Anthony Fauci, who's publicly questioning why Trump thinks mask wearing is weak after a wild weekend that saw the President, who's trailing former Vice President Joe Biden in the polls and still playing to his base, pack swing state rallies that flouted his government's Covid-19 protocols. (Stephen Collinson, 10/19)

Recent聽analysis聽of federal data suggests that isolation has contributed to 13,200 excess dementia deaths since the pandemic鈥檚 start. To prevent COVID outbreaks, nursing homes have curtailed family visits and social activities, such as group classes and shared meals, that help stimulate the mind and blunt dementia鈥檚 ravages. (Stacy Torres, 10/20)

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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