Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Psychologists Seeing Mental Health, Behavioral Issues Caused By Pandemic
The Covid-19 pandemic has had a major impact on Americans' mental health since the first cases were recorded at the beginning of last year. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey from December found 42 percent of Americans reported experiencing symptoms of anxiety or depression, a major increase from the 11 percent聽 who reported experiencing those symptoms prior to the pandemic.聽Psychologists are worried about the ramifications, and some say there could be a connection between these mental health issues and behavioral changes that are starting to manifest across the country. (Benson, 6/22)
As cases continue to drop in the United States, Americans are less anxious about COVID-19 affecting their family members, according to a new Monmouth University poll. Only 23% of Americans said they were 鈥渧ery concerned鈥 about a family member experiencing severe illness due to COVID-19, compared to 60% in January, according to the poll published Monday. Another finding: Four in 10 Americans haven鈥檛 changed their mask-wearing habits since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dropped mask requirements for vaccinated people in mid-May. (Avery, 6/23)
In travel news 鈥
Cruise operators, whose U.S. operations have been suspended for more than a year amid the Covid-19 pandemic, are betting on technology to help keep passengers safe when they finally start leaving U.S. ports this summer. Royal Caribbean Group, MSC Cruises and Virgin Voyages are among the cruise companies looking to smartphone apps, wearable devices, artificial intelligence and other technologies to keep passengers distanced, which lessens the chance of airborne transmission of the virus, and to provide contact-tracing if anyone does get sick. (McCormick, 6/21)
Royal Caribbean is waiting for feedback from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention after a simulated voyage of its Freedom of the Seas cruise ship, the company said. CEO Michael Bayley wrote on social media that the ship returned Tuesday morning to PortMiami after three days and two nights at sea testing CDC safety and health protocols put in place due to the COVID pandemic. (6/23)
A JetBlue Airways flight bound for New York returned to the Dominican Republic in early February after a passenger allegedly refused to wear a facemask, threw an empty alcohol bottle and food, struck the arm of one flight attendant, and grabbed the arm of another. The Federal Aviation Administration, which detailed the incident in a report, slapped the passenger with a $32,750 fine. (Josephs, 6/22)
Also 鈥
One of the most explosive details in Britney Spears鈥檚 testimony on Wednesday came when she said that the people who control her affairs had refused to allow her to get her IUD removed so that she could try to have a third child. ... She told the court that she wanted to remove the birth control device 鈥渟o I could start trying to have another baby, but this so-called team won鈥檛 let me go to the doctor to take it out because they don鈥檛 want me to have children, any more children.鈥 ... Alexis McGill Johnson, president and chief executive of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, weighed in on Twitter, calling Ms. Spears鈥檚 account 鈥渞eproductive coercion.鈥 (Jacobs, 6/23)
KHN: Calming Computer Jitters: Help For Seniors Who Aren鈥檛 Tech-Savvy
Six months ago, Cindy Sanders, 68, bought a computer so she could learn how to email and have Zoom chats with her great-grandchildren. It鈥檚 still sitting in a box, unopened. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know how to set it up or how to get help,鈥 said Sanders, who lives in Philadelphia and has been extremely careful during the coronavirus pandemic. (Graham, 6/24)