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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Aug 20 2020

Full Issue

Viewpoints: All Schools, Students Must Try To Stop The Pandemic; Lessons On Opioid-Related Mortalities

Opinion writers weigh in on these pandemic issues and others.

The Washington Post: To Save Education, We Must Fight The Broader Pandemic

Today, there are about 56.6 million primary and secondary school students in the United States, and about 20 million students are enrolled in colleges and universities. As the fall semester begins, they all stand at a precipice. We share the conviction of many educators, parents and public health experts that education must not be allowed to fall apart during the pandemic. But hopes are fast colliding with reality. Outbreaks at several universities suggest that schools everywhere must use extreme caution before going ahead with in-classroom schooling. The experience of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is instructive. The university, with nearly 30,000 students, started classes Aug. 10. (8/19)

Charlotte Observer: Political Meddling Caused A COVID Mess At UNC

Kevin Guskiewicz, chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, appeared on the CBS news show “60 Minutes” in June to discuss the university’s plan to bring thousands of undergraduates back to campus amid a pandemic. “There certainly is some risk,” he said, “but we believe we’re putting in place the right measures to mitigate that risk.” It was a plan as ambitious as it was naive. Only a week into the start of the school year, Guskiewicz – confronted with clusters of coronavirus infections in student residence halls and a rising mutiny among faculty – on Monday announced that most students living on campus would be sent home and the rest of the fall semester would be conducted with remote instruction. The chancellor is the face of the decision, but it was the UNC Board of Governors that is to blame for the turmoil caused by the abrupt reversal. (8/18)

The Virginian-Pilot: Students Share Responsibility For College’s COVID Fate 

That students arrived in Chapel Hill with a less-than-perfect understanding of the world-as-it-is says something and it’s disheartening to ponder what that “something” might be. Maybe they all took a six-month trip to another planet, is that possible? Students, faculty and administrators fail to acquire “situational awareness” at great peril. The business model for all these colleges and universities is grounded in the word, “residential.” You can temporarily make it work otherwise, but you must account for an on-line half-life. (8/19)

Des Moines Register: Iowa State Student Parties In Ames Threaten To Spread COVID-19

It looks to me like parallel universes exist among ISU students. Up on campus, we have people in masks, people keeping their distance from each other, people all concerned about the virus. But as soon as they get off campus, down on Welch, on a warm day … watch out. All that teaching and those warnings are for naught. (Dick Haws, 8/18)

Detroit News: COVID-19 Pandemic Despair Fuels Opioid Epidemic In Appalachia

Long before the pandemic came along, the nation, especially Appalachia, was in the throes of a deadly epidemic: opioid and meth addiction. It was a crisis that tore apart families, devastated communities and destroyed lives. As the pandemic continues, so does the opioid epidemic, with the pandemic's widespread effects causing opioid addiction to escalate at alarming numbers. The Overdose Data Mapping Application Program report published in May showed fatal overdoses rose by almost 11.4% from January to April, compared with the same period last year. In July, the American Medical Association warned about an increase of reports from across the country showing a dramatic increase in opioid-related mortality during the pandemic. (Salena Zito, 8/19)

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Feeling Off? Some Tips To Take Care Of Your Mental Health

It was heartening to learn that rapper and now presidential candidate Kanye West suffers from bipolar disorder because finally there was a way to explain his behavior.At the same time, I was saddened for him, for his family. Coping with mental illness can be hard for a lot of reasons. There’s always the nagging question of why me? The fear of what it means. And the biggie ― the unwarranted shame one may feel. (Gracie Bonds Staples, 8/20)

Los Angeles Times: Mentally Ill People Often Don't Get Treatment Because Of An Antiquated Law 

You can’t spend time on the streets of any large city in California and not ask this question: Why do so many of our most vulnerable, severely mentally ill Californians not get the care they so urgently need? We hoped this critically important public policy question, and others, would be answered when we asked California’s state auditor last year to closely examine the laws governing involuntary treatment of those with a serious mental illness. Jonathan Sherin and Darrell Steinberg, 8/20)

Bloomberg: Do I Need To Wear A Mask Outside? Biden's Confusing Covid Mask Mandate

Depending on where you live, you might be seeing masked joggers and cyclists on the streets of your neighborhood. Or you might have gone for a run yourself, mask-free, and been heckled to mask up. At this point, most thoughtful people wear masks indoors in public and outdoors in crowded situations, but wearing a mask when you’re outdoors and alone — or far away from anyone else — has become a frontier of intense debate.Presidential candidate Joe Biden added to the confusion when he called for a national mask mandate last week. In no uncertain terms, he said it could save 40,000 lives over the next three months if everyone wore a mask “outside.” But that’s not what the experts say. (Faye Flam, 8/19)

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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