Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Some States Get Serious About Thanksgiving Travelers
New York City will add COVID-19 checkpoints at certain bridges and聽crossings to enforce quarantine restrictions ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Sheriff Joseph Fucito said Tuesday that among the聽actions authorities will聽take is conducting spot checks on passengers stepping off out-of-state buses. (Deese, 11/24)
El Paso County, Texas, has ordered a new curfew starting Thanksgiving eve as it continues to grapple with rising Covid-19 cases and so many deaths that 10 additional morgue units have been brought in to accommodate the surge. The situation is so dire that 1,500 additional medical professionals and the National Guard have been deployed to help. Even inmates have been enlisted to assist in morgue operations as the death toll grows. (Razek and Silverman, 11/25)
A dozen people are gathered around a Thanksgiving table. A turkey has been carved, wine glasses held up to toast the holiday. A group is preparing to take a selfie. 鈥淓verybody say, 鈥業 was just exposed to COVID!'" reads a text bubble. This is the hypothetical scene portrayed in a Monday evening Facebook and Twitter post by the Salt Lake County Health Department, which urges people to avoid gatherings to help curb the surge in coronavirus cases. It鈥檚 the latest in a series of posts from the department in Utah that officials hope will provide a reality check about the risks associated with gathering for the holiday as the pandemic rages. (Firozi, 11/24)
Just two weeks ago, Dena Nihart finalized plans to meet dozens of relatives for Thanksgiving dinner beneath a tent in North Carolina鈥檚 Outer Banks. They agreed to quarantine for 14 days before the holiday and rent 10 tables so they could separate by household during the big meal. But then, last Monday, Nihart鈥檚 body began to ache. By Wednesday, she could barely hold up her head. And by Friday, as Nihart waited for her coronavirus test results with cases surging around her, her family had canceled Thanksgiving altogether. (Davies, 11/24)
Millions of Americans will stay close to home this Thanksgiving weekend as coronavirus cases spike nationally and public officials plead with people not to travel. The American Automobile Association predicts that 50.6 million people in the U.S. will travel from Wednesday to Monday, almost 10 percent fewer than during the same days in 2019. In Texas, AAA predicts that 3.9 million people will travel from Wednesday to Sunday, almost 5 percent fewer than in 2019. (Takahashi, 11/24)
Public health officials have been pleading with Americans to stay home this year for Thanksgiving. And, despite busy airports this past weekend, most people plan to follow their advice, according to a huge survey asking Americans about their holiday plans. (Katz, Quealy and Sanger-Katz, 11/24)
Also 鈥
President Donald Trump hasn鈥檛 been leading on the coronavirus and governors are again in charge of the nation鈥檚 response. They鈥檙e reacting with a patchwork policy that鈥檚 unlikely to head off the long-warned 鈥渄ark winter鈥 in America. Governors are balancing rising case numbers and pressure to keep schools, restaurants and bars at least partially open. They鈥檙e employing loosely defined 鈥渃urfews鈥 on all but essential workers, admonishments over holding Thanksgiving dinners and reductions in capacity limits on indoor spaces 鈥 and a growing number of Republicans are mandating masks. (Roubein and Kapos, 11/25)