Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'The Death Threats Started Last Month': Public Health Officials Targeted By Some Frustrated Americans
Leaders of local and state health departments have been subject to harassment, personal insults and death threats in recent weeks, a response from a vocal and angry minority of the public who say that mask requirements and restrictions on businesses have gone too far. One top health official, Dr. Barbara Ferrer, the director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, issued a statement on Monday condemning attacks on public health directors and disclosing that she faced repeated threats to her safety. (Bosman, 6/22)
During a live public briefing on Facebook last month, "someone very casually suggested" the Los Angeles County's public health director should be shot, the director said. "I didn't immediately see the message, but my husband did, my children did, and so did my colleagues," Dr. Barbara Ferrer said Monday in a statement. It's just one of the many threats of violence public health workers are facing across the nation "on a regular basis" as the Covid-19 pandemic rages on, Ferrer said. (Mossburg, Waldrop and Thomas, 6/22)
For Lauri Jones, the trouble began in early May. The director of a small public health department in Washington state was working with a family under quarantine because of coronavirus exposure. When she heard one family member had been out in the community, Jones decided to check in.The routine phone call launched a nightmare.鈥淪omeone posted on social media that we had violated their civil liberties [and] named me by name,鈥 Jones recalled. 鈥淭hey said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 post her address. .鈥.鈥. Let鈥檚 start shooting.鈥欌夆 (Weiner and Eunjung Cha, 6/22)
Previous KHN coverage: Public Health Officials Face Wave Of Threats, Pressure Amid Coronavirus Response
Public health experts warned on Sunday that the coronavirus pandemic is not going away anytime soon. They directly contradicted President Trump鈥檚 promise that the disease that has infected more than two million Americans would 鈥渇ade away鈥 and his remarks that disparaged the value of evidence from coronavirus tests. A day after Mr. Trump told a largely maskless audience at an indoor rally in Tulsa, Okla., that he had asked to 鈥渟low down the testing鈥 because it inevitably increased the number of confirmed coronavirus cases, infectious disease experts countered that the latest rise of infections in the United States is real, the country鈥檚 response to the pandemic is not working and rallies like the president鈥檚 risk becoming major spreading events. (Gorman, 6/21)
In other news on people on the front-lines of the pandemic 鈥
Kaiser Health News/The Guardian: Lost On The Frontline
A nursing home certified medication aide who was Navajo and could speak to residents in their Indigenous language. A travel nurse from Tennessee who felt obliged to serve when he heard New York was short-staffed in the pandemic. These are the people just added to 鈥淟ost on the Frontline,鈥 a special series from The Guardian and KHN that profiles health care workers who died of COVID-19. (6/23)
Mental health and addiction treatment centers and counselors have been overwhelmed with work during the coronavirus pandemic and economic crash. But many are struggling to stay afloat amid confusion and delays over the federal bailout for the health care industry. Some have waited months for the release of promised aid. Others held out and didn't apply, believing they'd get a better deal in a future round of funding aimed at centers that see mostly low-income patients. As a result, nearly a third haven't received any of the $175 billion HHS is doling out to hospitals and other health providers on the front lines of the coronavirus response. And now, they鈥檙e appealing to the government for help. (Roubein and Ehley, 6/22)