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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Oct 29 2020

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Policy Can't Stop This Virus; Delusions Don't Concern Trump's Supporters

Editorial pages focus on these pandemic topics and others.

Keep in mind that continental Europe was supposed to have done everything right to prevent another infection surge. The first lockdowns were extensive and prolonged. Governments mandated masks and social distancing. The new surges are due to the insidious nature of the virus, not to policy mistakes. That鈥檚 a lesson for Democrats who blame every new American infection on Donald Trump. The reality became clear months ago that the virus can鈥檛 be banished on government orders, especially as citizens suffer and chafe under the pain of lockdowns. Targeted closures that protect the vulnerable are better policy responses until better treatments and a vaccine arrive or some broader immunity is reached. U.S. policy makers should do their best to avoid following Europe into another tragic shutdown. (10/28)

Ninety-nine percent. This was the number I heard repeatedly from those at President Trump鈥檚 campaign rally Monday in Allentown, Pa. As in, 99 percent of people who get COVID-19 don鈥檛 die from it. Never mind that the number is wrong and that the US mortality rate is estimated at 2.6 percent, according to Johns Hopkins University. Even if most people who test positive for the coronavirus survive, that ignores the fact that more than 227,000 people in the United States have died from COVID-19 in the past seven months. Nearly 9 million have contracted the virus, and many are suffering long-term health consequences. (Michael Cohen, 10/28)

The failed bet laid by President Donald Trump to ignore science and prioritize his political goals early in the pandemic, revealed Wednesday in fresh detail by new Jared Kushner tapes, is backfiring in devastating fashion at the critical moment of his reelection bid. Dark warnings by scientists and new data showing a nationwide explosion in a virus Trump says is going away, crashing stock markets and real-time examples of the White House's delusions about its failed response are consuming the President as tens of millions of early voters cast judgment. (Stephen Collinson, 10/29)

A hallmark of Covid-19 pandemic policy has been the failure of political leaders and health officials to anticipate the unintended consequences of their actions. This tendency has haunted many decisions, from lockdowns that triggered enormous unemployment and increased alcohol and drug abuse, to school closures that are widening educational disparities between rich and poor families. Mask mandates may also have unintended consequences that outweigh the benefits. (Joseph A. Ladapo, 10/28)

As the country and the world eagerly await vaccines to curb the Covid-19 pandemic and allow us to return to normal social and economic activities, preparing to monitor these vaccines for safety is a critical task. Safety is a key consideration for any medical product that will be administered to millions of healthy people. To ensure that vaccines against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, are very safe and that the public trusts the vaccine program, the U.S. needs a safety monitoring system that is rigorous, rapid, objective, and transparent. (Daniel Salmon and Joshua M. Sharfstein, 10/29)

President Trump鈥檚 brief hospitalization earlier this month for COVID-19 treatment spawned a flurry of 鈥渨hat if鈥 discussions that, incongruously enough, proved to be a good thing for the country. How? By spotlighting how poorly prepared we are for some worst-case electoral scenarios, and in particular, what happens if a presidential candidate dies before election day, or if the apparent winner dies after the votes have been counted but before the electoral college meets? (10/29)

As Gov. Baker suggests, the positive experience of the parochial schools in handling Covid-19 while reopening their classrooms clearly shows the unions have been wrong to fight school re-openings. But they get away with it because the public schools answer mostly to them and not to the families they are supposed to serve. More school choice is as much a public-health fix as it is an education reform. (10/28)

Multiple聽news stories聽recount the same sad story. Lockdowns and social distancing are necessary public health interventions to prevent widespread COVID-19 infections that would overwhelm hospitals and run-up a sad tally of dead and disabled Americans. But these interventions mean America鈥檚 families struggle to balance multiple commitments: care for sick or disabled relatives, raise and educate children, and work. (Jason Karlawish, 10/28)

Justin Turner finally got his World Series title and Major League Baseball got its postseason TV riches, so to hell with everybody else. That鈥檚 how we鈥檙e doing it, right? Personal satisfaction and happiness over the collective good, science and common sense be damned. The appalling flouting of COVID-19 protocols at the World Series on Tuesday night might as well be a microcosm of the United States, bringing into sharp focus why this country has lost almost 230,000 of its mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, grandparents and friends in the past seven months. (Nancy Armour, 10/28)

Public health is not just on the ballot. It is the ballot. Many of us in the field are very anxious about the coming election and its outcome. What will it mean to the communities we love, live in, and serve? As public health educators, we know that in a true democracy, politics reflect the values of the community and society. However, as public health researchers, we also know too well that true equality for individuals, and their voices, is still lacking in our city, region, and country, tied to an overall lack of equity in the policies and approaches of our governments. (Priya E. Mammen, Christen J. Rexing, and Rosemary Frasso, 10/28)

Scientists and doctors warned it was coming if stronger action wasn鈥檛 taken and here it is 鈥 another wave of coronavirus cases. And this one, coming as colder weather keeps more people indoors, could exceed the spike of midsummer. North Carolina reported a record high of 2,716 new COVID-19 cases Friday. The numbers have averaged above 2,000 cases a day for much of the past two weeks. Hospitalizations are rising and positive tests are at 7.2 percent, above the 5 percent target level for controlling the spread. Nationally, new coronavirus cases are averaging 71,000 a day during the past week, the highest level of the pandemic. (10/28)

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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