Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: CDC Worsens Covid Confusion; Is Religion Really A Barrier To Polio Shots?
鈥淲e have been waiting for three summers for some higher authority to tell us how to navigate Covid. There is none,鈥 wrote the directors of an overnight camp one of our children attended. 鈥淭here is no local, state or federal authority mandating that we do anything in terms of Covid and our unique congregate-living environment. ...We鈥檝e been left to our own devices.鈥 (Wendy Netter Epstein and Daniel Goldberg, 8/17)
Polio has re-emerged in New York. The virus was identified in late July in an unvaccinated Rockland County man and has since been detected in wastewater samples in at least two counties. It鈥檚 too early to tell whether a limited outbreak 鈥 or worse, a full-blown epidemic 鈥 is brewing, but experts have been concerned about the virus spreading in communities with low vaccination rates. (Jeneen Interlandi, 8/17)
Like so many others, the exorbitant cost of my medications and health care has pushed my family into poverty and, at times, endangered my life. I have several serious health conditions that require medication, including an irregular heartbeat due to聽atrial fibrillation. I also have high blood pressure, irritable bowel syndrome聽and gastroesophageal reflux disease.聽(Angelina Scott, 8/16)
On February 7, 2018, my son Jesse Lutgen, 32, was found dead in his home. Unbeknownst to me, he'd been rationing his insulin, after losing his full-time job and health insurance the previous November. Jesse had looked into Obamacare marketplace health plans for coverage, but he simply could not afford a policy on his part-time pay from a local YMCA. (Janelle Lutgen, 8/16)
Increasing the diversity of America鈥檚 professional workforce is becoming more important in all industries, but especially so in healthcare, where having employees who better reflect the population can improve care outcomes. I am encouraged to see the progress that health systems are making on this front, but there is still much more work to do. (Sherri Neal, 8/16)
Dire as it has been, the pandemic brought an unexpected paradigm shift: States suspended malpractice liability. Doctors could say aloud, 鈥淚 think this treatment hurt my patient鈥 without shame or fear. (Antonio Dajer, Christie Lech and Lucy Willis, 8/17)