Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
White House Diverted Hospital-Helping Covid Funds To Vaccine Drive
The Biden administration quietly took nearly $7 billion from a fund meant to help hospitals and clinics affected by the pandemic and used it to buy Covid-19 vaccines and therapeutics, according to a document obtained by STAT. The move is similar to the Trump administration鈥檚 decision to divert $10 billion from the same fund to Operation Warp Speed, which STAT reported exclusively in March. (Cohrs, 1/26)
In news about worker burnout 鈥
Two months after the omicron variant of the coronavirus slammed hospitals with unvaccinated patients, Gov. Tom Wolf signed fast-tracked legislation Wednesday to help keep burned-out health care workers on board during a staffing crisis. The House unanimously approved the bill earlier Wednesday just before Wolf signed it. It authorizes $225 million, mostly for hospitals to give workers retention and recruitment payments. (1/26)
Amid a nationwide nursing shortage and burnout crisis, tech companies say they could be part of the solution by allowing nurses to essentially join the gig economy. Demand is accelerating for tools that help hospitals more efficiently fill shifts, while also offering an exhausted workforce more flexibility. "We're trying to keep these people in the industry," Will Patterson, CEO of CareRev, a health care staffing platform, told Axios. (Reed, 1/26)
Also 鈥
While public-health officials are still urging all Americans to be cautious with so much of the virus around, guidance for people who have already recovered from COVID this winter is sorely lacking. That has left Omicron survivors to deal with a confusing question: What now? I reached out to a handful of epidemiologists, and they all agreed that getting Omicron isn鈥檛 a golden ticket to normalcy. However, the immune boost from an Omicron infection can still be paired with other precautions to safely go about many activities. Keeping a few pandemic principles in mind can help make everyday decisions a little less fraught. (Tayag, 1/26)
About two weeks ago, as Utah鈥檚 testing sites were overrun with patients amid a statewide proliferation of coronavirus cases, legislators suspended school testing requirements and Gov. Spencer Cox called on most Utahns to stop getting tested for COVID-19, even if they had symptoms. With up to 50,000 Utahns getting tested each day and testing staff also falling ill, the state had maxed out its testing capacity. Supplies needed to be saved for patients with health risks or those who were likely to expose vulnerable people, state officials said. (Alberty, 1/26)
So you鈥檝e just tested positive for COVID 鈥 what now? If you are immunocompromised, older or otherwise vulnerable, you may feel overwhelmed or scared about seeking care in a moment when U.S. case counts remain sky-high and hospitals are at their breaking point. Omicron鈥檚 ability to infect others with rapid speed means that more people in general are more vulnerable to infection, including those whose age or medical conditions make them more at risk for serious outcomes. While omicron appears to cause less severe illness compared to prior variants, models project the country will still see between 50,000 and 300,000 additional COVID-19 deaths by early spring. So the talk about 鈥渕ild infection鈥 may offer little reassurance to individuals and families in those circumstances. (Isaacs-Thomas, 1/26)
Ten-year-old Chase and 11-year-old Carson have alert minds and radiant smiles, but very uncooperative bodies. The two brothers have a rare genetic disorder called MEPAN syndrome. They can't sit, stand, walk or talk. For their parents, Danny and Nikki Miller, this means wheelchairs, electric lifts, diaper changes and spoon-feeding. Before the coronavirus pandemic, the Marin, Calif., family relied heavily on several types of therapists and individual aides 鈥 and the boys' skills were slowly improving. But when COVID-19 struck, all that support went online or stopped entirely. The parents struggled to balance their own careers with home schooling their boys. (McClurg, 1/26)
Many Americans agree that they鈥檙e going to 鈥渂e stuck with it forever鈥 鈥 or, at the least, for a long time. A poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows that few 鈥 just 15% 鈥 say they鈥檒l consider the pandemic over only when COVID-19 is largely eliminated. By contrast, 83% say they鈥檒l feel the pandemic is over when it鈥檚 largely a mild illness. (Brumback, Ellgren and Noveck, 1/27)
In celebrity news 鈥
According to Rolling Stone, Young's letter, which was addressed to his manager and an executive at Warner Music Group, read in part: "I am doing this because Spotify is spreading fake information about vaccines 鈥 potentially causing death to those who believe the disinformation being spread by them ... They can have Rogan or Young. Not both." The letter was quickly removed from Young's website. Spotify's scrubbing of Young from its service was first reported on Wednesday afternoon by The Wall Street Journal. His removal from the streaming platform makes him one of the most popular musical artists not to appear on Spotify, where his songs have garnered hundreds of millions of streams. (Tsioulcas, 1/26)
Google-owned YouTube said it had permanently banned prominent conservative media figure Don Bongino from its site after he repeatedly broke its rules on posting coronavirus misinformation. Bongino, who hosts a show on Fox News in addition to talk radio shows and online broadcasts, had been given a strike and a week-long suspension from YouTube earlier in January for saying in one of his videos that masks were useless. He uploaded another video later in the month that also broke the platform鈥檚 rules on coronavirus misinformation. When he tried to upload a third video, the company banned him permanently. (De Vynck, 1/26)