Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Reopening Texas Too Soon Will Only Cause More Suffering; Bold Steps Needed Now To Help Our Kids
The governor of Texas, Greg Abbott (R), is gambling with the health of his state and beyond. He announced plans on Tuesday to completely open establishments next week and lift a face mask mandate for public areas, retreating from the vital measures needed to fight the coronavirus pandemic. While everyone is eager for a break from restrictions, Mr. Abbott鈥檚 decision is premature and reckless. On Monday, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rochelle Walensky, warned that the recent declines in daily new infections and deaths had stalled, a worrisome sign just as new virus variants are spreading. The number of new cases per day has been stuck nationwide at about 70,000 on a rolling average for a week, she noted, expressing concern that 鈥渕ore states are rolling back the exact public health measures we have recommended to protect people from covid-19.鈥 (3/2)
The governor says it, so it must be true. Texans, in the words of Gov. Greg Abbott Tuesday, have 鈥渕astered鈥 the safe daily habits that prevent the contraction and spread of COVID-19. Through Texans鈥 tireless efforts to obey public health guidelines and follow the governor鈥檚 statewide mask mandate, the pandemic is abating in the state, saving not only lives, but also allowing Abbott to slip the onerous bonds of responsibility and leave the fate of millions of our fellow Texans in the capable hands of the vigilant citizens of Texas. 鈥淭exans have wrestled with COVID, and they have learned best how to conduct their own lives,鈥 Abbott said in a press conference in Lubbock. 鈥淪tate mandates are no longer needed.鈥 (3/2)
The hospital where I work is now treating fewer people with Covid-19, after enduring a deadly resurgence of the coronavirus this year. In the United States, the number of people hospitalized with Covid-19 has dropped 29 percent in the past two weeks, most likely thanks to rising immunity resulting from vaccinations and prior infections, as well as the success of government-imposed restrictions. It feels as if we can begin to exhale. But the situation remains delicate. The number of new Covid-19 cases reported each day has declined substantially since the peak in early January, but more recently the rate has stabilized as new variants of the virus threaten to reverse our modest progress. Some of these new variants are more transmissible and may be more virulent. They may also be less susceptible to some vaccines than the previously dominant lineages of the coronavirus. A variant discovered in Brazil infected people who already had some immunity to Covid-19 because of previous infections. (Abraar Karan, 3/3)
Almost a year into the pandemic, what began as a public health emergency is turning into a mental health crisis among our nation's children and adolescents as they struggle with social isolation, grief, and the switch to remote learning. It is becoming increasingly clear that this crisis will endure well beyond the pandemic. (Lee Savio Beers, 3/2)
Medical schools teach students a four-part 鈥渧irtuous cycle鈥 in which one step positively reinforces the next: Assess the patient. Implement a therapeutic plan. Assess the patient鈥檚 response. Revise the therapeutic plan as needed. (Isaac S. Kohane and Jonathan Zittrain, 3/2)
What if another devastating pandemic came on the heels of Covid-19? Unfortunately, that looks increasingly possible. For years, the antibiotics used to fight various bacterial infections have grown gradually less effective. If current trends continue, these antibiotics could stop working altogether in the near future, leaving humanity vulnerable to deadly, drug-resistant 鈥渟uperbugs. 鈥漃reventing this public health threat will require an aggressive, federally backed effort to develop new and more potent antibiotics. As the Biden administration begins thinking about pandemic preparedness, it should focus on jump-starting innovation in developing new antimicrobial drugs. (Michelle McMurry-Heath, 3/3)
When the coronavirus hit U.S. shores in January 2020, few people, including President Donald Trump and top health officials in the federal government, began to prepare for a worst-case scenario 鈥 or any scenario. Even as the second U.S. infection of a Chicago woman returning from Wuhan, China, was confirmed in late January, Chicago health officials said risk to the general public 鈥渞emains low. 鈥漌e now know how wrong those early assessments were. We now know that nursing homes would be hit especially hard by the virus, accounting for roughly 40% of deaths nationwide. And we now know that nursing homes and their employees are dealing with an additional complication due to the pandemic 鈥 the threat of mass litigation. (3/2)