Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Rationing Of Care Worsens In Alaska
A second hospital in Alaska is beginning to ration health care as the state deals with a spike in coronavirus cases. Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corp. in Bethel announced the move Wednesday as it reported it is operating at capacity. Rationing of care had already been imposed by Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage, which is the state鈥檚 largest hospital. (9/30)
Idaho鈥檚 unchecked spread of the highly contagious delta variant is sending more kids and babies to hospitals with complications from COVID-19, state health care professionals said Wednesday. Major hospitals and health care clinics in southwestern Idaho are seeing more premature babies born to COVID-19-positive mothers, more children requiring hospitalization and more kids of all ages experiencing mental health problems because of the pandemic, several doctors from Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center, St. Luke鈥檚 Health System, Primary Health Group and Mountain States Neonatology said during a news conference. (Boone, 9/29)
An increasing number of fully vaccinated people in Maine with COVID-19 are filling ICU beds across the state. Yet those numbers are more representative of Maine鈥檚 high vaccination rate than the ineffectiveness of the vaccine, according to health officials. About 30 percent of those with the coronavirus being treated in the ICU at Northern Light鈥檚 10 hospitals were vaccinated as of Tuesday morning. Four out of 13 patients on ventilators were also vaccinated 鈥 about 30 percent. While waning immunity could play a role, the far more significant reason for the number of vaccinated patients appears to be the numerical reality of聽Maine鈥檚 high vaccination rate, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention Director Nirav Shah said Wednesday. Maine has the third highest rate of fully vaccinated people聽in the country, a factor that is undoubtedly leading to more hospitalized vaccinated people. (Marino Jr., 9/30)
COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are coming down in Oklahoma after the state鈥檚 rapid, delta-variant fueled spike over the summer.聽On Tuesday, Oklahoma鈥檚 seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases reported was 1,690, down from a peak of just over 2,800 at the end of August. Hospitalizations, which had topped 1,500 in August, were still over 1,000 on Tuesday across the state. 鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful that our state will continue to see positive progress in our pandemic response,鈥 Health Commissioner Dr. Lance Frye said in a statement Monday. 鈥淲e are cautiously optimistic about this downward trend and are thankful for the hard work of Oklahomans across the state that got us here." (Branham, 9/29)
For the first time since June, the rate of new Covid-19 deaths in the US is expected to decrease over the next four weeks, according to an ensemble forecast from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). And for the third week in a row, Wednesday's CDC forecast predicted that hospitalizations will decrease as well -- a bit of hope as the more transmissible Delta variant continues to spread. (Holcombe, 9/30)
KHN: Covid Is Killing Rural Americans At Twice The Rate Of Urbanites聽
Rural Americans are dying of covid at more than twice the rate of their urban counterparts 鈥 a divide that health experts say is likely to widen as access to medical care shrinks for a population that tends to be older, sicker, heavier, poorer and less vaccinated. While the initial surge of covid-19 deaths skipped over much of rural America, where roughly 15% of Americans live, nonmetropolitan mortality rates quickly started to outpace those of metropolitan areas as the virus spread nationwide before vaccinations became available, according to data from the Rural Policy Research Institute. (Weber, 9/30)
In other news about the spread of the coronavirus 鈥
The hit Broadway show 鈥淎laddin鈥 was canceled Wednesday night when breakthrough COVID-19 cases were reported within the musical鈥檚 company, a day after the show reopened following some 18 months of being shuttered due to the pandemic. It was a worrying sign for Broadway鈥檚 recovery. 鈥淭hrough our rigorous testing protocols, breakthrough COVID-19 cases have been detected within the company of 鈥楢laddin鈥 at the New Amsterdam Theatre,鈥 the show announced on social media. 鈥淏ecause the wellness and safety of our guests, cast and crew are our top priority, tonight鈥檚 performance, Wednesday, Sept. 29 , is canceled.鈥 (Kennedy, 9/30)
The Pennsylvania legislature unanimously voted Wednesday to extend dozens of regulatory waivers put into place last year to help health-care providers fight COVID-19. Without action, the waivers would have expired Thursday, potentially exacerbating ongoing staffing crises in hospitals and long-term care institutions, which are again facing rising COVID-19 cases. Health-care workers and their advocates had warned any lapse in the relaxed rules would have renewed administrative burdens and made fighting the ongoing pandemic more difficult. Wednesday鈥檚 action will keep the waivers in place until March 2022 while the legislature considers a number of bills that would make the regulatory suspensions permanent. Gov. Tom Wolf will sign the bill. (Ohl, 9/29)
Big data is making a big difference in the fight against COVID-19 in Dallas, and the potential promise goes well beyond the pandemic. Parkland Center for Clinical Innovation, a nonprofit research and data analytics company, is helping providers target their outreach efforts to the most vulnerable residents. PCCI tracks real-time data on vaccinations and COVID-19 cases, and overlays it against underlying health conditions and socioeconomic factors. That creates 鈥渁 vulnerability index鈥 and other tools that allow officials to assess which areas face the greatest risks 鈥 not just at the ZIP code level but in areas as small as census blocks. (Schnurman, 9/29)
KHN: A Covid Test Costing More Than A Tesla? It Happened In Texas
When covid-19 struck last year, Travis Warner鈥檚 company became busier than ever. He installs internet and video systems, and with people suddenly working from home, service calls surged. He and his employees took precautions like wearing masks and physically distancing, but visiting clients鈥 homes daily meant a high risk of covid exposure. 鈥淚t was just like dodging bullets every week,鈥 Warner said. (Pattani, 9/30)