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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Sep 10 2020

Full Issue

Postal Changes Led To 'Significant' Delays Of Medications, Senate Report Finds

Four pharmacies told senators that mail-order delivery of prescriptions drugs have been impacted by recent decisions made by U.S. Postal Service leaders.

Patients who rely on the U.S. Postal Service for their prescription drugs may have experienced 鈥渟ignificant鈥 delays in their deliveries, according to a Senate report released Wednesday, which accused Postmaster General Louis DeJoy of jeopardizing the 鈥渉ealth of millions of Americans. 鈥漇everal major U.S. pharmacies told the two Democratic senators leading the investigation 鈥 Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) and Robert P. Casey Jr. (Pa.) 鈥 that average delivery times have ticked up since the spring, leading to a flood of angry calls from customers and costly requests to resend their medications. (Romm, 9/9)

Prescription drug orders filled by mail have risen by one-fifth during the coronavirus pandemic, the report found, and delivery times for medications generally increased by as much as one-third. That means deliveries that previously took two days or three days now take an extra day, the report said. Some delays were much longer. One mail-order pharmacy, not identified in the report, said there was 鈥渁 marked increase in July in the number of patients experiencing shipment delays of seven days or more.鈥 A different pharmacy reported that orders taking over five days have 鈥渞isen dramatically.鈥 (Daly and Izaguirre, 9/9)

In updates about the COVID-relief bill 鈥

With the coronavirus pandemic still battering the United States, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell asked his fellow senators on Wednesday whether they 鈥渨ant to do something? Or do you want to do nothing?鈥 The answer looks to be 鈥 nothing. (Bresnahan, Levine and Desiderio, 9/9)

With the Senate poised to vote Thursday on a slender GOP coronavirus relief bill that鈥檚 certain to fail, chances for a bipartisan deal on new economic stimulus look more remote than ever. This impasse has prompted top White House officials to consider a new round of executive actions that they hope could direct funding to certain groups amid fears that the nascent economic recovery could fail to gain momentum. White House officials have discussed efforts to unilaterally provide support for the flagging airline industry while also bolstering unemployment benefits, according to two people aware of the deliberations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share internal policy discussions. (Werner and Stein, 9/9)

Lawmakers are growing increasingly pessimistic about the chances of passing another coronavirus relief package, warning they don鈥檛 believe there will be a deal in the final weeks before the election. The dimming hopes for a sweeping agreement come even as Senate Republicans plan to vote Thursday on their slimmed-down bill, which won鈥檛 garner the 60 votes needed to advance, and as stalled talks between congressional Democrats and the White House show no signs of a breakthrough. (Carney, 9/9)

Also 鈥

San Francisco hair salon owner Erica Kious is shutting her doors for good after controversy over a visit by聽House Speaker Nancy Pelosi聽last week destroyed her business, she told 鈥淭ucker Carlson Tonight" Wednesday. 鈥淚 am actually done in San Francisco and closing my doors, unfortunately,鈥 she announced. (Stabile, 9/9)

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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