Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Vaccine Hesitancy--And Barriers--Persist
According to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, the vaccine is supposed to be free to everyone, whether they鈥檙e insured or not. And the Biden administration has directed all vaccination sites to accept undocumented immigrants as a 鈥渕oral and public health imperative.鈥 But this promise has not always been fulfilled, ProPublica has found. At vaccination sites around the country, people have been turned away after being asked for documentation that they shouldn鈥檛 need to provide, or asked to pay when they owed nothing. (Chen and Jameel, 4/1)
Federal health agencies need to be more transparent about critical Covid-19 data, particularly on race and ethnicity and infections at nursing homes, the Government Accountability Office said Wednesday. The watchdog recommended those steps as part of its call for a sweeping overhaul of federal data on Covid-19, based on its probe of efforts to collect and analyze pandemic statistics across agencies. (Owermohle, 3/31)
A new look at the data from our most recent Axios-Ipsos poll shows a strong correlation between the people who are influenced by COVID vaccine misinformation and those who are unlikely to get the vaccine. As this graphic shows, Americans who either believed misinformation or were unsure whether it was true or false were less likely to get the vaccine than those who knew that it was false. (Nather, 4/1)
Seeking to overcome vaccine hesitancy, the Biden administration is unveiling a coalition of community, religious and celebrity partners to promote COVID-19 shots. The Department of Health and Human Services鈥 鈥淲e Can Do This鈥 campaign features television and social media ads, but it also relies on a community corps of public health, athletic, faith and other groups to spread the word about the safety and efficacy of the three approved vaccines. The campaign comes amid worries that reluctance to get vaccinated will delay the nation鈥檚 recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. (Miller, 4/1)
KHN: 鈥業t Didn鈥檛 Really Stick With Me鈥: Understanding The Rural Shrug Over Covid And Vaccines
At 70, Linda Findley has long been active in her small town of Fort Scott, Kansas, which sits more than an hour away from any major city. Findley, whose husband died in an accident just after the local hospital closed, helps with the Elks and fundraising, and 鈥 like many people in this part of the country 鈥 doesn鈥檛 think covid-19 is that dangerous. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 even know what I think about it,鈥 Findley said recently. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I trust the testing because it鈥檚 so messed up or 鈥 I鈥檝e had nieces and nephews, that鈥檝e had it. I鈥檝e lost good friends to it, or supposedly it鈥檚 to that.鈥 (Jane Tribble, 4/1)
Jill Biden, the first lady, traveled to California on Wednesday to visit a pop-up vaccination site for farmworkers who have lobbied for priority access to shots during the pandemic. In remarks to about 100 farmworkers and local politicians who had gathered to mark the birthday of C茅sar Ch谩vez, the labor organizer who formed the country鈥檚 first successful farmworkers鈥 union, Dr. Biden told them that their work 鈥 and their health 鈥 had been essential to a nation crippled by the coronavirus. (Rogers, 3/31)
Can I still spread the coronavirus after I鈥檓 vaccinated? It鈥檚 possible. Experts say the risk is low, but are still studying how well the shots blunt the spread of the virus. The current vaccines are highly effective at preventing people from getting seriously sick with COVID-19. But even if vaccinated people don鈥檛 get sick, they might still get infected without showing any symptoms. Experts think the vaccine would also curb the chances of those people spreading the virus. (Renault, 4/1)