Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Perspectives: Do Vaccine Incentives Work?; Pandemic Challenges Faced By Rookie Doctors
Jonathan Carlyle of Toledo, Ohio, had every intention of getting a COVID-19 shot 鈥 someday. The Amazon delivery driver was so busy that he kept putting it off. Then he learned that his state was launching a weekly lottery that would award $1 million to some lucky person just for getting vaccinated. 鈥淎s soon as I heard that, I was like, 鈥榊es, I need to go do this now,鈥欌 he said Thursday during a press conference with Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine. Carlyle received the one-dose Johnson & Johnson COVID shot two days after learning about the incentive, and it was a good thing he didn鈥檛 wait. On Wednesday Carlyle found out he was the second winner of Ohio鈥檚 鈥淰ax-a-Million鈥 lottery. (6/4)
Iris had been a doctor for all of six days. Her long white coat still felt almost like a costume. Her patient had a severe case of Covid-19. She wanted to put him on the phone with his family, but first she had to ask him the essential question: Did he know how he wanted to die? In the hospital lexicon, this became: Did he want to get chest compressions if his heart stopped? Or a tube down his throat if he was struggling for breath? (Emma Goldberg, 6/4)
Most people spent the past year at home, working from the couch and doing meetings in pajamas. Kelvin Craig didn't have a home to go to. Couch surfing with random friends and begging for odd jobs like yard work to make money were the only options for Craig, a 23-year-old former foster kid with no family, education or job to turn to when the pandemic hit, who dropped out of technical school because he couldn't afford tuition or to pay student loans. Craig is not much different than the tens of thousands of young adults who have recently aged out of the foster care system across this country and been forced into homelessness because they do not have relationships with biological parents or other family. Every year, 20,000 young people age out of the foster care system, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources, and many join the more than 700,000 unaccompanied minors experiencing homelessness across the country. (Richard L. Jackson, 6/3)
As negotiations grind on between the White House and Senate Republicans, the prospects for a big, bold infrastructure deal look bleak. President Biden鈥檚 $2 trillion American Jobs Plan 鈥 the first of a two-part package 鈥 is being picked apart by Republican lawmakers. They object to its price tag. They object to funding it by rolling back some of the 2017 tax cuts. And they vehemently object to the White House鈥檚 redefinition of infrastructure to encompass things like roads, ports, broadband, community colleges, electric-vehicle charging stations and elder care. Republicans have countered with a radically reduced plan stripped of provisions they do not consider infrastructure. Their biggest target for elimination: Mr. Biden鈥檚 call to invest $400 billion in community-based and in-home care for older and disabled people. Characterized as 鈥渋nfrastructure of care鈥 by the White House, the provision accounts for nearly 20 percent of the total cost of the president鈥檚 plan. Republican lawmakers are having none of it. (Michelle Cottle, 6/4)