Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Ignoring Long Covid Is Dangerous; Omicron Infection Does Not Protect Against Variants
Public health messaging about Covid-19 has focused almost exclusively on hospitalizations and deaths. The omission of long Covid, which may affect between 8 million and 23 million Americans, deprives the public of the knowledge necessary to understand the risks of various activities, make informed decisions about risk-taking, and understand what is happening to them if they feel sick for an extended period. (Danielle Wenner and Gabriela Arguedas Ramirez, 5/17)
A silver lining to the inconvenience of a mild Covid-19 infection is that for most people it is followed by a honeymoon period 鈥 an idyllic time when the immune system is firing on all cylinders and preventing reinfection. But all good things must come to an end. At some point, the surge of protective antibodies wanes. (Lisa Jarvis, 5/16)
Back when we all agreed the Covid pandemic was over, somebody made a big mistake and forgot to let Covid know. So it鈥檚 surging for the fifth time in the greater New York City metropolitan area, meaning it will probably be hitting the rest of the country soon. Countless person-hours of productivity are once again being lit on fire by the process of procuring and taking Covid tests, sweating out the results, and then canceling or postponing plans based on them.聽(Mark Gongloff, 5/16)
The United States has reached聽the grimmest of milestones 鈥 1 million dead from COVID-19.聽Even if you believe half of those deaths are 鈥渇rom鈥 versus 鈥渨ith鈥 COVID,聽it would still represent more Americans dead than if a Sept.聽11聽attack had occurred every week since the pandemic began. And for the record, I and many other experts believe we鈥檝e greatly underestimated聽versus聽overestimated deaths from the coronavirus. (Dr. Jerome Adams, 5/16)
The magnitude of loss from Covid-19 鈥 1 million-plus deaths, many millions more grieving loved ones who have died, the country鈥檚 social fabric in tatters 鈥 is incomprehensible. Life expectancy in the U.S. has fallen by two years since the beginning of the pandemic. This is the largest decline in almost a century, driven mainly by deaths among people under age 60. Many of these can be classified as 鈥渂ad deaths.鈥 As a physician who advocates for better end-of-life experiences, I wonder how the pandemic has changed our relationship with death. (Shoshana Ungerleider, 5/16)