Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Shared Homes: Younger Family Members Are Infecting Older Ones
As the death toll escalates in coronavirus hot spots, evidence is growing that young people who work outside the home, or who surged into bars and restaurants when states relaxed shutdowns, are infecting their more vulnerable elders, especially family members. Front-line caregivers, elected officials and experts in Houston, South Florida and elsewhere say they are seeing patterns of hospitalization and death that confirm fears this would happen, which were first raised in May and June. That was when Florida, Texas, Arizona, California and other states reopened in efforts to revive their flagging economies. (Bernstein, 7/29)
Delta Air Lines on Wednesday began requiring passengers to complete health acknowledgment forms attesting that they have not been diagnosed with COVID-19, or had symptoms of the virus in the 14 days prior to their flight. The Atlanta-based airline says that customers also will be required to answer questions about whether they might have been exposed to the virus in the days leading up to travel. (Yamanouchi, 7/29)
Before this week, residents struggling with homelessness in Gwinnett County have been largely on their own when it came to finding shelter. While organizations like United Way or the Gwinnett Coalition for Health and Human Services have lists of agencies that could help find temporary or permanent housing, it鈥檚 been up to the person in need of a place to sleep to reach out to each agency individually. No more. (Kass, 7/29)
Harris County Commissioners Court on Tuesday unanimously agreed to add $10 million to the county鈥檚 rental assistance program for tenants harmed by the COVID-19 pandemic and increased the maximum award to $1,200. Precinct 2 Commissioner Adrian Garcia, who pitched the idea, estimated the additional funds would help the now-$25 million program assist an additional 6,000 renters. The money comes from federal CARES Act funds awarded to the county. (Despart, 7/29)
Though there generally is adherence to public health guidelines like mask-wearing in an effort to suppress the spread of COVID-19, there are indications the perception of risk may be changing. The number of people who say they always wear masks in public has gone down slightly recently in countries like Spain, the United Kingdom, France and the U.S., according to polling by market research company YouGov. (Kossakovski, 7/29)
During the first weeks of the coronavirus聽outbreak, when Gov. Eric Holcomb imposed a stay-at-home order and implored Hoosiers to 鈥渉unker down鈥 to slow the virus鈥 spread, some of the strictest guidance was issued for senior citizens, who are considered high-risk and have been most affected by the virus.聽But while they've been hunkering down at home, some of Indiana's seniors may be struggling with feelings of isolation. (Hays, 7/29)
In sports news 鈥
Officials at IU Health, the state's largest healthcare system, told IndyStar on Wednesday聽it opposes Indianapolis Motor Speedway's plan聽to run the Indianapolis 500 with fans next month. "Until we sustain better control of this virus and its spread," IU Health said in a statement, "we strongly encourage IMS to consider an alternative to running the Indy 500 with fans in August." (Hunsinger Benbow, 7/29)
As NBA players are preparing to restart a season shut down by coronavirus, Sacramento Kings forward Harrison Barnes had a powerful message for Americans after his own experience with the virus. "Everyone thinks that it will happen to somebody else or, 'If I get it, hopefully I'll be asymptomatic,' but we had three people in my house who all contracted it and each of us had a different experience," he told CNN Wednesday night. "So I would definitely encourage people to be safe." (Maxouris, 7/30)