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Wednesday, Jul 22 2020

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Lessons On The Complete Failure Of Testing, High Cost Of Treatments

Opinion writers weigh in on these health care topics and others.

Many of the recent stories are familiar, but still distressing and perplexing. There was the gentleman in Tucson who waited 27 days to get results from a Covid-19 test, only to discover he didn鈥檛 have the virus and the two weeks he spent in quarantine had been pointless. There was the nonprofit nursing home chain in the Phoenix area that waited five days for test results, only to learn that several staff members and residents had the coronavirus; the asymptomatic staffers had roamed freely until the results arrived. And there have been many tales of Arizona residents waiting a week, on average, to get test results 鈥 and sometimes much longer 鈥 even though their state has been a coronavirus hotspot for more than a month. Texas, Florida, California and many other newly resurgent corona-states have similar stories. (Timothy L. O'Brien, 7/22)

The Rockefeller Foundation makes an essential point in a new report about the coronavirus pandemic. 鈥淭esting is the only way out of our present disaster,鈥 the research organization says, recommending a $75鈥塨illion crash program to ramp up diagnostic testing across the country so that the sick are identified and the healthy can return to work and school. Then there is President Trump. Asked about testing in a Fox News interview broadcast Sunday, he said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e finding 鈥 in a way, we鈥檙e creating trouble. Certainly, we are creating trouble for the fake news to come along and say, 鈥極h, we have more cases.鈥欌夆 (7/21)

As recently as May, President Donald Trump boasted of how his administration would embark on 鈥渢he most advanced and robust testing system anywhere in the world, by far.鈥 鈥淢y administration鈥 he said, 鈥渕arshaled every resource at our nation鈥檚 disposal: public, private, military, economic, scientific, and industrial聽鈥 all at your disposal.聽 We launched the largest manufacturing ramp-up since the Second World War. There鈥檚 been nothing like it since.鈥 Today, America's ability to test聽for COVID-19聽is well below what is needed.聽In fact, in some places it is failing miserably.聽 (7/21)

As coronavirus cases have spread through the South and West, the good news is the lower death toll than in New York and East Coast states in the spring. One reason is better treatments such as Gilead鈥檚 anti-viral drug remdesivir, but powerful progressives now want the government to set prices for and even confiscate the Covid-19 treatment. Six Senate Democrats including Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders said in a letter last week to Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar that the Trump Administration 鈥渁cquired its supply of remdesivir at an exorbitant cost鈥 in a deal that allows Gilead Sciences to reap 鈥渨indfall revenues鈥 that are paid 鈥渂y increased premiums for American families.鈥 (7/21)

It鈥檚 hard to imagine more depressing news than some recent studies showing that antibodies to Covid-19 fade within a few weeks 鈥斅燼 blow to any hopes for a vaccine, or for any chance of getting out of the pandemic without years of hardship.Don鈥檛 let it raise your blood pressure. (Faye Flam, 7/21)

At least two Americans will die of covid-19 in the time it takes to read this op-ed. The mortality rate is climbing in 13 states as infections rise in more than 30 states. As the pandemic surges, policymakers are asking how they can stop this explosive spread. I see three scenarios for what happens next: 1. Status quo. Texas, Florida and Arizona are among the states already on the brink of overwhelming their health-care systems. More and more intensive-care units will reach and exceed capacity. Arizona has already implemented 鈥渃risis standards of care鈥 to ration its increasingly scarce resources. (Leana S. Wen, 7/21)

A growing body of research is showing that Black people are being hit disproportionately hard by the COVID-19 pandemic, but a lack of LGBTQ-inclusive data designed to capture the experiences of people who are both racial and sexual minorities renders many of us invisible 鈥 and puts us at even greater risk of harm.聽There鈥檚 growing reason to worry that the pandemic is also particularly dangerous for diverse members of the LGTBQ and same gender loving (SGL), the affirming term some members of the Black community use to define themselves, particularly if they鈥檙e older. (David Johns and Earl Fowlkes Jr., 7/21)

Eight is thought to be a lucky number in China because in Chinese it sounds like the word for 鈥渇ortune鈥; 444 is a bad number because it rings like 鈥渄eath鈥; 520 sounds like 鈥淚 love you.鈥 Having always disliked superstition, I was dismayed to receive a message by WeChat at 4:44 p.m. on May 20, Beijing time, informing me that my uncle Eric, who lived in New York, had died from Covid-19. He was 74. Uncle Eric was a pharmacist, so presumably he contracted the virus from a patient who had visited his shop in Queens. (Yi Rao, 7/22)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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