Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Immigrants Can't Harm Public Health In U.S., So Why The Distraction?; Testing Plan Needs To Surface Before Economy Reopens
President Trump wants the U.S. economy to reopen soon and take off 鈥渓ike a rocket ship.鈥 Yet now he plans to reduce the human capital necessary for a strong recovery by suspending even more immigration to the U.S. 鈥淚n light of the attack from the Invisible Enemy, as well as the need to protect the jobs of our GREAT American Citizens, I will be signing an Executive Order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States!鈥 Mr. Trump tweeted Monday. On Tuesday he said it will last 60 days. The order鈥檚 details haven鈥檛 been disclosed, but this looks like a political distraction that could become a major restraint on economic growth if it lasts for any length of time. One question is why this is necessary even for public-health reasons. (4/21)
Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York offered a blunt and troubling summary of America鈥檚 coronavirus predicament on Friday. To revive the economy, he said, 鈥淵ou have to develop a testing capacity that does not now exist.鈥 There are promising signs that the spread of the virus is slowing, at least across large chunks of the United States. But that fragile victory has been won only by placing much of the nation in suspended animation, at great expense. Widespread testing is critical to allow a sustainable resumption of economic activity. (4/21)
President Trump has chosen his pandemic re-election strategy. He is set on unifying and reinvigorating the groups that were crucial to his 2016 victory: racially resentful whites, evangelical Christians, gun activists, anti-vaxxers and wealthy conservatives. Tying his re-election to the growing anti-lockdown movement, Trump is encouraging a resurgence of what Ed Kilgore, in New York magazine, calls 鈥渢he angry anti-government strain of right-wing political activity that broke out in the tea-party movement鈥 鈥 a movement now focused on ending the virus-imposed restrictions on many aspects of American life. (Thomas B. Edsall, 4/22)
Gov. Brian Kemp鈥檚 order to begin reopening a state economy battered by the coronavirus is set to take effect Friday, the same day that Operation Gridlock, a Fox News-endorsed protest against shelter-in-place policies, intends to wrap its arms around the state Capitol. The vehicle-based parade鈥 call it a white version of Freaknik -- now has an opportunity to become a victory celebration by a group of (presumed) voters whom Georgia Republicans will need in November. (Jim Galloway, 4/21)
How do you explain the utter idiocy of what we're seeing in the US? While the Covid-19 pandemic has ripped through country after country, the United States government stands out for seeming one of the least interested in actually fighting it -- particularly during the critical first few weeks of its spread. (Jill Filipovic, 4/21)
As COVID-19 cases worldwide soar past the 2 million mark, every health leader is calling for the same three things: increased testing, contact tracing and quarantining of those who鈥檝e been exposed. Alongside their clear necessity for reducing disease spread, these steps are critical to our ability to reopen the economy and keep it open once we do. But one key question remains unanswered: Who is going to put this plan into action?聽(Jody Heymann and Aleta Sprague, 4/21)
The US Department of Health and Human Services recently announced that social workers need not see children being monitored in foster care in person, as required by federal law, but can instead use video conferences to reduce the risk of COVID-19. It鈥檚 more troubling that social workers are making increasing use of video conferences for children living with the parents who have subjected them to maltreatment, resulting in heightened danger for children. (Elizabeth Bartholet, 4/21)
The U.S. government is investigating whether the Covid-19 virus came from a government laboratory in Wuhan, China. The Chinese Communist Party denies the possibility. 鈥淭here is no way this virus came from us,鈥 claimed Yuan Zhiming over the weekend. Mr. Yuan is a top researcher at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which studies some of the world鈥檚 deadliest pathogens. He is also secretary of the lab鈥檚 Communist Party committee. He accuses me of 鈥渄eliberately trying to mislead people鈥 for suggesting his laboratory as a possible origin for the pandemic. (U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas)
A year ago, when Mayor Eric Garcetti unveiled his budget for the 2019-20 year, Los Angeles was flush with cash from a strong economy and planning to spend big. The mayor wanted to spend the extra money to fix more sidewalks, fill more potholes and make city streets safer for pedestrians and cyclists. City workers were going to plant more trees and coat the streets in 鈥渃ool pavement鈥 to lower the amount of heat they radiated. And the city was increasing the amount of funding available to build homeless shelters and offer services to get people off the streets.Today? Amid a pandemic that has triggered an economic crisis, the city鈥檚 outlook couldn鈥檛 look more different. (4/21)