- KFF Health News Original Stories 6
- Organ Transplant Patient Dies After Receiving Covid-Infected Lungs
- Feds OK’d Export of Millions of N95 Masks as U.S. Workers Cried for More
- Countless Homebound Patients Still Wait for Covid Vaccine Despite Seniors’ Priority
- The Do’s and Don’ts on Social Media for Vaccine Haves and Have-Nots
- New Single-Payer Bill Intensifies Newsom’s Political Peril
- First-Person Tales: In Search of the Shot
- Political Cartoon: 'Too Many Minerals?'
- Covid-19 4
- US Nears Harrowing Moment Of Pandemic: 500,000 Americans Dead
- Is The Winter Surge Over? Covid Infections And Deaths Are Slowing
- Prepare Yourself For Another Year Of Masking, Fauci Predicts
- First US Case Confirmed Of Coronavirus Transmitted Through Organ Transplant
- Administration News 2
- Feds Digging Out From Vaccine Setbacks Created By Winter Weather
- Vaccination Access Is Key Part Of Debate Over Reopening Schools
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Organ Transplant Patient Dies After Receiving Covid-Infected Lungs
The first confirmed U.S. case of SARS-CoV-2 being transmitted through an organ transplant has prompted calls for updated transplant protocols and additional testing of samples from deep within donor lungs. (JoNel Aleccia, )
Feds OK’d Export of Millions of N95 Masks as U.S. Workers Cried for More
In the hours before President Joe Biden was inaugurated, the Federal Emergency Management Agency allowed a Texas mask maker to ship the high-quality masks overseas. (Christina Jewett, )
Countless Homebound Patients Still Wait for Covid Vaccine Despite Seniors’ Priority
Health organizations have begun sending doctors and nurses to apartment buildings and private homes to vaccinate homebound seniors, but the efforts are slow and spotty. (Judith Graham, )
The Do’s and Don’ts on Social Media for Vaccine Haves and Have-Nots
In the thick of a global pandemic, and with a vaccine rollout that has been less than optimal, it's no surprise that selfies featuring the coveted covid shot surface on social media timelines. But is posting a vaccine selfie on your social media account a faux pas or a needed encouragement for others to get the shot? (Chaseedaw Giles, )
New Single-Payer Bill Intensifies Newsom’s Political Peril
With the introduction of a single-payer bill Friday, a group of California Democratic lawmakers set the terms of the health care debate in the Capitol this year. The move puts Gov. Gavin Newsom in a delicate political position, threatening to alienate voters as he faces a likely recall election. (Angela Hart and Rachel Bluth, )
First-Person Tales: In Search of the Shot
KHN readers detail their frustrations and successes as they hunt for a scarce covid-19 vaccine. ( )
Political Cartoon: 'Too Many Minerals?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Too Many Minerals?'" by John Deering.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
FINDING GOLD IN VACCINES
Senior living boom
Vaccine as marketing tool
Benefit or ploy?
- Kathleen Walsh
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
US Nears Harrowing Moment Of Pandemic: 500,000 Americans Dead
President Joe Biden will commemorate the tragic milestone during a memorial ceremony as the nation struggles to fathom covid's toll.
AP:
US Coronavirus Death Toll Approaches Milestone Of 500,000
The U.S. stood Sunday at the brink of a once-unthinkable tally: 500,000 people lost to the coronavirus. A year into the pandemic, the running total of lives lost was about 498,000 — roughly the population of Kansas City, Missouri, and just shy of the size of Atlanta. The figure compiled by Johns Hopkins University surpasses the number of people who died in 2019 of chronic lower respiratory diseases, stroke, Alzheimer’s, flu and pneumonia combined. “It’s nothing like we have ever been through in the last 102 years, since the 1918 influenza pandemic,” the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” (Raby, 2/22)
AP:
Biden To Mark 500,000 Lives Lost With Ceremony
President Joe Biden will mark the U.S. crossing 500,000 lives lost from COVID-19 with a moment of silence and candle lighting ceremony at the White House. The nation is expected to pass the grim milestone on Monday, just over a year after the first confirmed U.S. fatality due to the novel coronavirus. (2/22)
The Washington Post:
500,000 Coronavirus Deaths Visualized: A Number Almost Too Large To Grasp
A year ago, covid-19 had killed just a handful of people in the United States. Now, the pandemic’s official death toll equals the size of a major city, more than the population of Kansas City, Mo., and nearly as many as Atlanta or Sacramento. It can be hard to grasp the enormity — almost half a million people, gone. What if we imagined them traveling as one group? Or killed in action? Or all buried together? (Galocha and Berkowitz, 2/21)
The New York Times:
A Ripple Effect Of Loss: U.S. Covid Deaths Approach 500,000
Each death has left untold numbers of mourners, a ripple effect of loss that has swept over towns and cities. Each death has left an empty space in communities across America: a bar stool where a regular used to sit, one side of a bed unslept in, a home kitchen without its cook. The living find themselves amid vacant places once occupied by their spouses, parents, neighbors and friends — the nearly 500,000 coronavirus dead. (Bosman, 2/21)
Also —
The Washington Post:
Child Covid Deaths Leave Devastated Families As US Reaches 500,000 Deaths Mark
As the nation reaches the milestone of a half-million deaths about a year after the first American succumbed to the coronavirus, the number of children killed by the disease remains relatively small. ... Each death represents a shattered family and a trauma deepened, parents say, by the rampant belief that kids can’t get covid, or that it doesn’t much harm them when they do. (Fisher, Cha, Gowen, Hernandez and Rozsa, 2/21)
CIDRAP:
More Than 20.5 Million Years Of Life Lost During COVID-19
More than 20.5 million years of life may have been lost during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a Scientific Reports study published yesterday. The study also reports that, compared with the median mortality rate of the seasonal flu, COVID-19 deaths may be two to nine times higher. The researchers looked at mortality and life expectancy data in 81 countries through Jan 6, 2021, focusing on both COVID-related deaths and excess deaths. By analyzing 1,279,866 deaths, they found that 20,507,518 years of life were lost over the study period. While this averages out to be about 16 years per death, years of life lost (YLL) were distributed unevenly across age groups. (2/19)
Politico:
Fauci Calls 500,000 Coronavirus Deaths 'Terrible'
Dr. Anthony Fauci called the United States' approach of half a million deaths due to Covid-19 "terrible," "really horrible" and "historic" Sunday. "It's nothing like we've ever been through in the last 102 years since the 1918 influenza pandemic," he told host Dana Bash on CNN's "State of the Union." "People decades from now are going to be talking about this as a terribly historic milestone in the history of this country." (Mueller, 2/21)
Is The Winter Surge Over? Covid Infections And Deaths Are Slowing
The coronavirus infection rate has plummeted to levels not seen since the fall, with a seven-day rolling average under 65,000, The Washington Post reports. Despite the encouraging news, the pandemic continues to take a crushing toll on young adults' mental health.
The Washington Post:
U.S. New Cases Dropping As Country Hits Half Million Deaths
After hitting almost unimaginable highs of hundreds of thousands of new cases a day over the winter holidays, the infection rate in the United States has plummeted to levels not seen since the fall, with a seven-day rolling average of under 65,000. The good news, possibly due to rising vaccinations, seasonal virus patterns or increased respect for restrictions, however, pales in comparison to the grim toll of the pandemic that will hit 500,000 deaths on Monday. Yet deaths too are falling, with numbers almost 30 percent lower this week than last week and hospitalizations down 15 percent. The brutal winter surge may be slowing and vaccinations gaining pace, but the experts warn there is still a long way to go in the fight. Top infectious-disease expert Anthony S. Fauci warned that we might still be seeing masks in 2022 and refused to predict when “normal” would return. (Cunningham and Schemm, 2/22)
CNN:
US Coronavirus: Officials Are Hopeful The US Is Getting Closer To The End Of The Pandemic. But There Are Road Bumps Ahead
As the US prepares to hit a devastating new milestone -- half a million Covid-19 deaths -- officials say the country is also edging closer to the end of its brutal battle against the virus. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced Sunday Covid-19 hospitalizations dropped below 1,000 for the first time since November 16 and are now down by more than half from their January peak. (Maxouris, 2/22)
Albuquerque Journal:
UNM Researchers Discover New Mutation Of Coronavirus
Two University of New Mexico scientists have discovered a new mutation in the virus that causes COVID-19, but they say there is no indication that the variant makes the virus any more dangerous – at least not yet.“ There is no evidence that the mutation makes the virus more virulent, more transmissible, causes more severe disease or makes current vaccines any less effective,” said Daryl Domman, an assistant professor in UNM’s Center for Global Health. (Nathanson, 2/21)
In related news about the effects of covid —
CIDRAP:
Mental Anguish In COVID-19 Survivors, Young US Adults
Two new studies reveal high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicidal thoughts in adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. A research letter by Italian investigators published yesterday in JAMA Psychiatry details a study of 381 patients in Rome who had sought emergency care for COVID-19 and were given a psychiatric assessment 1 to 4 months after recovery, from Apr 21 to Oct 15, 2020. (Van Beusekom, 2/19)
ABC News:
Pandemic's Mental Health Burden Heaviest Among Young Adults
The pandemic has closed schools, offices, sports arenas and limited social interaction for millions of people -- perhaps an even bigger struggle for young people more used to being active. In a recent survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 63% of 18- to-24-year-olds reported symptoms of anxiety or depression, with 25% reporting increased substance use to deal with that stress and 25% saying they'd seriously considered suicide. (Alkhouri, 2/21)
Also —
ABC News:
COVID-19 Is Circulating In Some Animals. What Does That Mean For Us?
Last month, the nation watched as Winston the gorilla came down with COVID-19 and then recovered. So far, the virus has been detected in zoo animals like Winston, domestic animals like cats and dogs, and most worryingly, in farmed and wild animals like mink and ferrets. Now, animal experts are warning that if the virus is circulating freely in wild animals, it might develop mutations and evolve into a new version – one that is capable of jumping back into humans. (Chan, 2/21)
Philadelphia Inquirer:
COVID-19 Led To A Drop In Heart Surgery, With Grim Consequences
At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, heart surgeons warned that fewer people were coming in for bypass operations, valve replacements, and other cardiac procedures, in some cases dying as a result. In a new nationwide analysis, researchers determined that the consequences may have been even worse than many realized — particularly in hard-hit hot spots in New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. During April, the number of heart surgeries plunged by 71% in those three states and by 53% in the country as a whole, when compared with monthly averages in 2019. (Avril, 2/21)
Prepare Yourself For Another Year Of Masking, Fauci Predicts
"A significant degree of normality" should return by the fall, Dr. Anthony Fauci says, but Americans will need to continue taking precautions like wearing masks for some time into 2022.
The New York Times:
Fauci Warns Americans Might Need To Wear Masks For Another Year
Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser for Covid-19, said on Sunday that Americans may still be wearing masks outside their homes a year from now, even as he predicted the country would return to “a significant degree of normality” by fall. “I want it to keep going down to a baseline that’s so low there is virtually no threat,” Dr. Fauci said on the CNN program “State of the Union,” referring to the number of cases nationally that would make him comfortable enough to stop recommending universal masking. “If you combine getting most of the people in the country vaccinated with getting the level of virus in the community very, very low, then I believe you’re going to be able to say, for the most part, we don’t necessarily have to wear masks.” (Goodnough, 2/22)
The Washington Post:
When Will Things Be Normal Again? Fauci Says Americans May Still Need Masks In 2022
Pandemic-weary Americans have employed a particular dependent clause so often that it has become a cliche: “When things are back to normal ...” Kids back to school. Parents back at work. Bars. Gyms. Concerts. Travel. Dinner parties. It is a phrase as optimistic as it is anticipatory. But it hides a burning question: When will things be normal again? (Thebault, 2/21)
And Dr. Fauci says he lacked direction from the Trump administration —
The Hill:
Fauci: Scientists Lacked 'Any Direction' From Trump In Last Days Of Presidency
Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, said scientists lacked “any direction” during the last days of former President Trump’s time in office. In an interview with The Telegraph published on Friday, Fauci said that scientists were “acting alone” trying to protect the nation from the pandemic during the last two months of Trump’s presidency. (Williams, 2/19)
HuffPost:
Dr. Fauci: Trump Let 'Terrible Things' Happen After Our COVID-19 Disagreements
Dr. Anthony Fauci continues to open up about his experiences working under the Trump administration, revealing the moment he began to lose influence with former President Donald Trump. In a wide-ranging interview with The Telegraph, the infectious disease specialist recalled a marked shift in his professional relationship with Trump in April or May of last year, once the president began to publicly side with anti-lockdown protesters and back states’ efforts to lift stay-at-home orders. (Wong, 2/19)
First US Case Confirmed Of Coronavirus Transmitted Through Organ Transplant
The incident appears to be isolated — the only confirmed case among nearly 40,000 transplants in 2020. But it has led to calls for more thorough testing of lung transplant donors.
KHN:
Organ Transplant Patient Dies After Receiving Covid-Infected Lungs
Doctors say a woman in Michigan contracted covid-19 and died last fall two months after receiving a tainted double-lung transplant from a donor who turned out to harbor the virus that causes the disease — despite showing no signs of illness and initially testing negative. Officials at the University of Michigan Medical School suggested it may be the first proven case of covid in the U.S. in which the virus was transmitted via an organ transplant. A surgeon who handled the donor lungs was also infected with the virus and fell ill but later recovered. (Aleccia, 2/22)
New York Post:
Michigan Woman Dies From COVID-19 After Lung Transplant
The incident may be the first proven case in the U.S. in which the coronavirus was transmitted through an organ transplant, researchers say in a report published by the American Journal of Transplantation. “We would absolutely not have used the lungs if we’d had a positive COVID test,” Dr. Daniel Kaul, director of the Transplant Infectious Disease Service at the University of Michigan Medical School and one of the co-authors of the study, told Kaiser Health News. (Elizalde, 2/21)
HuffPost:
Organ Transplant Patient Dies After Receiving COVID-Infected Lungs
The woman who received the transplant was a chronic obstructive lung disease patient at University Hospital in Ann Arbor. She tested negative for COVID-19 several hours before the transplant procedure. Three days after the surgery, the patient developed worsening fever, low blood pressure and respiratory problems. Doctors decided to test samples collected from the patient’s nose and throat as well as her lower respiratory system for COVID-19 after she developed septic shock and heart function problems. The nose and throat sample came back negative but the lower respiratory sample tested positive. (Miller, 2/21)
Environmental Health And Storms
About A Third Of Texans Still Have Unsafe Drinking Water Issues
The state is trying to distribute millions of bottles of water and bring in extra plumbers to fix broken pipes from an arctic blast that has left nearly 60 people dead in the region.
NBC News:
Millions Of Texans Wake Up Without Safe Drinking Water After Winter Storm
An estimated 10 million Texans were waking up without safe drinking water Monday as state officials sought to ramp up bottled water distribution and calm residents whose electricity bills have spiked after a severe winter storm battered the state. Boil-water notices were lifted for about 5 million of the 14.9 million people who were told that their water wasn't safe to drink two days ago, Toby Baker, executive director of the state Commission on Environmental Quality, said in a news conference Sunday. (Stelloh, 2/21)
CNN:
About A Third Of Texans Still Have Issues With Their Water Supply
Water service remained disrupted for nearly a third of Texas residents Sunday evening, a lingering consequence of the widespread power outages from devastating winter weather and an unprepared infrastructure. While that number decreased by several million over the course of the day, more than 1,200 public water systems still reported disruptions in service, with many leading to boil-water notices, according to Gary Rasp, media specialist for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (Levenson, 2/21)
AP:
Hospitals Confront Water Shortages In Winter Storm Aftermath
Hospitals across the South grappled with water shortages Sunday in the wake of a devastating winter storm as the region carried on with recovery efforts and the weather offered a balmy respite — temperatures as high as the mid-60s.At the height of last week’s storm, hospitals scrambled to care for patients amid record cold temperatures, snow and ice that battered parts of the country more accustomed to going through winter with light jackets and short sleeves. The icy blast ruptured water mains, knocked out power to millions of utility customers and contributed to at least 76 deaths — half of which occurred in Texas. At least seven people died in Tennessee and four in Portland, Oregon. (Lozano, Mattise and Sainz, 2/21)
The Washington Post:
Winter Storm Death Toll: At Least 58 People Have Died In Texas, Tennessee And Other States
The cold has killed the young and the old. It has claimed lives from southern Texas to northern Ohio. And authorities expect the toll to rise in the coming days, with frigid weather lingering, hundreds of thousands without electricity and millions without clean water. The two major winter storms that have plunged most of the United States into an Arctic chill have killed at least 58 people since Sunday, according to data compiled by The Washington Post. More than half of them — 32 — lived in Texas, where persistent power outages have exposed residents to bitter temperatures. (Thebault, Firozi and Shammas, 2/21)
Fox News:
Matthew McConaughey Working On Virtual Benefit To Help Texas And Winter Storm Victims
Texas native Matthew McConaughey announced Sunday plans to help those impacted by the brutal winter weather in Texas that left millions without power amid freezing temperatures, and dozens dead. "As most of you know my home state of Texas was just hit with the worst winter storm it's had in the last 70 years. It left a whole lot of people without power, without water, and without a whole lot of basic necessities," McConaughey said on Instagram. (Aaro, 2/22)
Feds Digging Out From Vaccine Setbacks Created By Winter Weather
The Biden administration predicts that shipping of covid vaccine doses should be back on track nationally by the middle of this week and that it will still exceed its 100-million-shots-in-first-100-days goal.
The Hill:
Six Million COVID-19 Vaccine Doses Delayed By Winter Storms: White House
The White House said Friday that winter storms have caused a backlog of 6 million COVID-19 vaccine doses, about three days worth of shipments, but they expect to clear the backlog within a week. (Sullivan, 2/19)
NBC News:
Fauci: Vaccine Distribution Should Be Back On Track By Midweek After Storm Delays
The severe winter storms that have devastated Texas and surrounding states have delayed the distribution of 6 million Covid-19 vaccine doses, but Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday that it's only a "temporary setback" that will be fixed by the middle of the week. "Obviously, it is a setback, because you'd like to see the steady flow of vaccine getting out there to get into people's arms. But we can play pretty good catch-up," Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in an interview on NBC News' "Meet the Press." (Kamisar, 2/21)
AP:
Beyond 100M: Biden Team Aiming For Bigger Vaccine Numbers
It sounded so ambitious at first blush: 100 million vaccination shots in 100 days. Now, one month into his presidency, Joe Biden is on a glide path to attain that goal and pitching well beyond it to the far more ambitious and daunting mission of vaccinating all eligible adults against the coronavirus by the end of the summer. (Miller, 2/21)
The Hill:
Biden Visits Pfizer Vaccine Manufacturing Plant In Michigan
President Biden on Friday toured a Pfizer manufacturing plant in Michigan, seeking to highlight efforts to mass produce a coronavirus vaccine as his administration looks for ways to increase supply and streamline distribution. Biden visited a factory in Kalamazoo, where he met with lab workers and learned about the process behind creating one of the two COVID-19 vaccines that is being widely used across the country to inoculate Americans. (Samuels and Sullivan, 2/19)
In other news about President Biden's administration —
The Hill:
Biden Pick For Surgeon General Made Over $2M On COVID-19 Consultations And Speaking Events: Report
President Biden’s pick for surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, was paid more than $2 million last year for coronavirus-related consulting and speeches, according to ethics documents filed this month obtained by The Washington Post. According to the financial disclosures, Murthy received hundreds of thousands of dollars each in consulting fees from companies such as Netflix, Airbnb and Carnival Cruise Line, among others. (Castronuovo, 2/20)
The New York Times:
Who Will Be The Next F.D.A. Chief?
One month into his presidency, President Biden still has not named a candidate to head the Food and Drug Administration, a critical position at a time when new vaccines and coronavirus treatments are under the agency’s review. The glaring vacancy lags behind the president’s selections of most other top government health posts, and has spurred a public lobbying campaign by supporters of the two apparent front-runners, Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, a former high-ranking F.D.A. official and Dr. Janet Woodcock, the acting commissioner. (Kaplan, 2/20)
Vaccination Access Is Key Part Of Debate Over Reopening Schools
The White House stance that vaccinations of all teachers are not a prerequisite for in-person learning puts the Biden administration at odds with some teachers unions.
The Washington Post:
White House Reiterates Teacher Vaccinations ‘Not A Prerequisite’ To Reopening Schools
The White House on Sunday reiterated that teachers do not need to be vaccinated against the coronavirus before schools can reopen, a stance Biden administration officials say is in line with scientific guidelines but that puts them at odds with some teachers unions that have insisted members will not return to the classroom until they receive the vaccine. Whether teachers must be vaccinated before in-person lessons resume has become another inflection point in heated debates about when and how schools should safely reopen, as the United States nears its one-year mark grappling with the pandemic that has killed more than 500,000 people here. (Wang and Whoriskey, 2/21)
Politico:
Teachers Union Leader On Reopening Schools: 'If The NFL Could Figure Out How To Do This, Let's Do It'
American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said Sunday that U.S. schools need to "actually try to get as much in person as possible right now." "I want to debunk this myth that teacher unions, at least our union, doesn't want to reopen schools," Weingarten told host Chuck Todd on NBC's "Meet the Press." "Teachers know that in-person education is really important. We would have said that pre-pandemic. We knew remote education is not a good substitute." (Mueller, 2/21)
In updates from California —
NPR:
California Will Begin Setting Aside 10% Of COVID-19 Vaccine Doses For Teachers
California is planning to start setting aside 10% of the COVID-19 vaccine the state receives each week to vaccinate teachers, day care workers and other school employees in the hopes of getting more students back in the classroom. "It must be done, and it must be done much sooner than the current path we are on. And we believe this will advance that cause," Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday as he announced the plan at an Oakland vaccination site. The plan will begin March 1 by setting aside about 75,000 vaccine doses from the state's current weekly allotment, Newsom said. (Stein, 2/20)
ABC News:
California Gov. Gavin Newsom On Reopening Schools, 'We Can Do This Now'
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has said he supported schools safely reopening, advocated for doors opening immediately during an interview with ABC News Sunday, saying, “At the end of the day, we can do this now as we administer more doses. Yes, prioritizing our teachers, more vaccines in people’s arms.” (Shah, 2/22)
In related news about school reopenings —
The Hill:
Teachers Are Leaving Schools Due To Stress — And Many Say They Won't Be Back Next Year
American teachers are stressed, and more of them are leaving the profession because they’re not getting paid enough to put up with it — especially in a pandemic. “Different COVID-19 stressors affected pandemic teachers differently,” said Melissa Diliberti, lead author of a new report and an assistant policy researcher at RAND, in a statement. “Insufficient pay and childcare responsibilities drove out younger teachers under 40, while older teachers were more likely to say health conditions made them leave.” (Srikanth, 2/19)
Detroit Free Press:
As Classrooms Reopen, Stagnant Water Pipes Pose A Health Risk
Water safety experts say thousands of students returning to Michigan schools that have been closed for months are potentially walking into a health hazard. Water left stagnant in school plumbing systems during COVID-19-related shutdowns could contain dangerous bacteria or elevated lead levels, potentially posing a threat to students and staff. Schools can eliminate the danger by flushing plumbing systems with fresh water, a process most districts complete after summer breaks. But experts say schools may need to take extra precautions now, because COVID-19-related closures have stretched to 11 months in some communities — ample time for bacteria to grow and for lead to leach out of pipes. (Levin, 2/21)
Pfizer Now Says Covid Vaccine Doesn't Have To Be Kept Ultra-Cold
Pfizer said Friday that it submitted data to the FDA showing its vaccine is stable when stored between minus 13 degrees and 5 degrees Fahrenheit, temperatures common for pharmaceutical freezers and refrigerators, The Hill reports.
The Hill:
Pfizer Says Vaccine Can Be Stored In Normal Freezers
The Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine does not need to be stored in expensive deep freezers that have posed challenges to the vaccination campaign, the company announced Friday. Pfizer submitted data to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) showing the vaccine is stable when stored between minus 13 degrees and 5 degrees Fahrenheit, temperatures commonly found in pharmaceutical freezers and refrigerators. (Hellmann, 2/19)
Fox News:
Pfizer Files To Ease COVID-19 Vaccine Temperature Storage Requirements
Pfizer has submitted data to potentially ease storage requirements for its COVID-19 vaccine. The company said the vaccine has demonstrated stability when stored at -25 degrees Celsius to -15 degrees Celsius, which is commonly found in pharmaceutical freezers and refrigerators. Pfizer said it submitted the data to the FDA to support a proposed update to prescribing information, which would allow the vials to be stored at these temperatures for up to two weeks as an alternative or complement to using the ultra-low temperature freezer. (Hein, 2/20)
In other news about vaccine development —
USA Today:
One COVID Shot May Provide Protection, But US Stays Firm On Two Doses
A new study out of Israel reignited the public debate Friday about the spacing between the two doses of COVID-19 vaccine, but the U.S. government isn't budging in its commitment to the original schedule. The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine might be just as effective if the gap between doses is wider than the recommended 21 days, according to the new study from Israel. If the doses could be given further apart, more people could be protected faster. Vaccine supplies, which remain quite limited now, are expected to ramp up in late spring. (Weintraub, 2/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
For Covid-19 Survivors, One Shot May Be Enough, Preliminary Studies Show
Covid-19 survivors who have gotten a first dose of Covid-19 vaccine are generating immune responses that might render a second shot unnecessary, potentially freeing up limited vaccine supply for more people, several new research papers suggest. The research, while preliminary, found that the previously infected people generated protection against the disease quickly and at dramatically higher levels after a first shot of the current two-shot regimens when compared with people who were vaccinated but hadn’t been sick. (Hopkins, 2/21)
Idaho Statesman:
The CDC Released Data About COVID-19 Vaccine Side Effects
Fewer than 7,000 people reported having side effects from COVID-19 vaccines after the first 13.7 million doses were administered in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday. Of the 6,994 people who said they had side effects between Dec. 14 and Jan. 13, 640 were considered serious, the CDC said. The findings were reported in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report and were monitored by a system that records submitted side effects of the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines. The most common side effects were headache (22.4%), fatigue (16.5%) and dizziness (16.5%), according to the CDC. It said 113 deaths were reported, including 78 individuals who lived in long-term care facilities. (Stunson, 2/19)
Truckers Who Deliver Covid Shots Say They Should Be At Top Of List, Too
But the scenario is logistically complicated for America's 550,000 for-hire long-haul truck drivers. “A driver can’t just pull an 18-wheeler into a CVS parking lot, get the shot, and by the way come back three weeks later to get the second shot,” said Dan Horvath of the American Trucking Associations.
The Wall Street Journal:
Trucking, Freight Industry Seek Faster Route To Covid-19 Vaccinations
As the U.S. vaccine rollout accelerates, freight operators and transportation groups are pushing to get their workforce better access to vaccinations, arguing their operations are crucial to keep the economy running. That is thrusting truck drivers, parcel carriers and dockworkers into a heated national debate over who should get priority for the shots, as teachers, public-transit workers and other essential workers jockey for a place in vaccination lines defined by national and regional priorities. (Smith, 2/19)
AP:
Caregivers Of Frail Tennessee Kids Get Vaccine Priority
The upcoming vaccine priority group in Tennessee includes people who live with or care for children younger than 16 who have any number of medical frailties, ranging from those receiving chemotherapy to children who use a wheelchair because of high-risk conditions. They might have to wait more than a month and a half to be eligible, under state Health Commissioner Lisa Piercey’s recent conservative timeline. But the national vaccine landscape is constantly shifting, with President Joe Biden saying there will be enough doses for 300 million Americans by the end of July. (Mattise, 2/21)
The Hill:
Publix Offers Employees Who Get COVID-19 Vaccine A $125 Store Gift Card
Publix will give employees a $125 gift card to the store if they get a COVID-19 vaccine, the grocery store announced last week. “We care about our associates and customers and believe getting vaccinated can help us take one step closer to getting back to normal,” Publix CEO Todd Jones said in a Friday statement. “We’re encouraging our associates to get vaccinated when they become eligible and doses are available.” (Pitofsky, 2/21)
Philadelphia Inquirer:
For Philly Hospitals, Phone Calls More Effective Than Digital Platforms At Registering Seniors For COVID-19 Vaccines
Temple University Hospital System’s offer of COVID-19 shots to 10,000 older and medically at-risk patients prompted a low response rate — just 15% — from the people who should be most concerned about getting the virus. But after those initial invitations to register through TempleHealth, its online patient portal, the hospital system followed up with phone calls. The acceptance rate jumped to about 80%. “We knew this was going to be a lot of manual phone calls in our population,” said Tony Reed, chief medical officer at Temple University Health System. “We’re afraid that the people who need it aren’t going to get it if we don’t make it a personal touch." (Laughlin and McDaniel, 2/21)
Georgia Health News:
State Eases Penalty On Elbert Medical Practice, Sets Vaccine Policy
An Elbert County physician office that was penalized for giving COVID-19 vaccine to teachers has seen its controversial suspension shortened by state health officials. An agreement Thursday between the state and the Medical Center of Elberton came a day after the Department of Public Health set out the penalties for vaccine providers who give shots to people not on the priority list. The list currently includes health care workers, residents and staff of long-term care facilities, and Georgians 65 and older. (Miller, 2/19)
Anchorage Daily News:
Behind Alaska’s Low ‘Wasted’ Vaccine Numbers, A Combination Of Diligence And Last-Minute Random Calls
Similar narratives are emerging around the country of leftover vaccines going to “random people” to avoid throwing them away. The two vaccines currently being used need to be administered within six hours after vials are taken out of cold storage and opened. If the vaccines are not used within that period, they need to be tossed.
Here, the situation is part of a larger strategy that seems to be working, if the state’s numbers are any indication. As of Thursday, the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services reported fewer than 100 wasted doses and more than 137,000 people with at least one shot in their arms. (Hollander and Krakow, 2/21)
In other vaccine rollout news —
North Carolina Health News:
Without Transportation, Many Can't Get A COVID Shot
Jane Campbell is frustrated. Campbell, the town commissioner in Davidson, North Carolina, worries that some of her constituents, especially older adults, don’t have a way to get to COVID-19 vaccine sites. From Davidson, the nearest locations for anyone seeking a shot have been at mass vaccination events in the Charlotte area—more than a half hour away, Campbell said. For many older adults who needed transportation, that was too far. (Bergal, 2/20)
KHN:
Countless Homebound Patients Still Wait For Covid Vaccine Despite Seniors’ Priority
Opening another front in the nation’s response to the pandemic, medical centers and other health organizations have begun sending doctors and nurses to apartment buildings and private homes to vaccinate homebound seniors. Boston Medical Center, which runs the oldest in-home medical service in the country, started doing this Feb. 1. Wake Forest Baptist Health, a North Carolina health system, followed a week later. (Graham, 2/22)
KHN:
In Search Of The Shot
Too little covid vaccine and too great a demand: That’s what KHN readers from around the country detail in their often exasperating quest to snag a shot, although they are often clearly eligible under their local guidelines and priority system. Public health officials say the supply is growing and will meet demand in several months, but, for now, readers’ experiences show how access is limited. Some savvy readers report no problem getting in line for the vaccine, but others say that balky application processes and lack of information have stymied their efforts. Their unedited reports are a good snapshot of the mixed situation around the country. (2/19)
Also —
The Hill:
Blumenthal Pushes Facebook, Twitter To Remove Vaccine Misinformation Targeting Pregnant Women
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) is pushing Facebook and Twitter to clamp down on coronavirus vaccine misinformation campaigns that are targeting pregnant women. Blumenthal, in a letter sent to the tech giants on Friday, urged them to follow through on commitments to remove coronavirus vaccine misinformation after reported incidents of anti-vaccine campaigns are targeting and harassing pregnant women with false information. (Klar, 2/19)
KHN:
The Do’s And Don’ts On Social Media For Vaccine Haves And Have-Nots
Posting about their day is a regular practice for Generations Y and Z, especially when they have something novel or exclusive to share. So, in the thick of a global pandemic, and with the shaky rollout of covid vaccines making them somewhat of a holy grail, it’s no surprise selfies featuring the coveted shot are infecting social media timelines. It might engender envy, even outrage, especially if the person posting seems to have cut the line. But what if the intention was to encourage others to also get the shot? Does that make it OK? (Giles, 2/22)
The Hill:
Crist Calls On DOJ To Investigate DeSantis Over Coronavirus Vaccine Distribution
Democratic Florida Rep. Charlie Crist sent a letter to acting U.S. Attorney General Monty Wilkinson on Sunday, calling on the Department of Justice (DOJ) to open an investigation into Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) over allegations that the governor was selecting vaccine administration sites to benefit political supporters. (Choi, 2/21)
Vaccine Trials Skewed Toward Whites For At Least A Decade, Study Finds
Federal data showed that 78% of all participants in clinical trials dating to 2011 were white, while Latino Americans accounted for 12% and Black Americans 11%. In related news about health and racism, the FDA has issued an alert about the "limitations" of pulse oximeters.
Stat:
Most Vaccine Trials Fail To Report Data On Participant Ethnicity Or Race
An analysis of the demographics of a decade’s worth of vaccine clinical trials has found that Black Americans, Latinos, American Indians, and Alaskan Natives, as well as people age 65 and older, were underrepresented as participants within these studies, though most of the differences, when compared with the U.S. population, were not especially large. Adult women, on the other hand, were found to be overrepresented. (St. Fleur, 2/19)
NBC News:
Racial Diversity Lags In Clinical Vaccine Trials Despite Push For Inclusion, JAMA Study Finds
Vaccinating communities of color, which have been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus pandemic, has been a focus for both the Biden administration and many local governments. But federal data show that despite guidelines from the National Institutes of Health recommending more diversity in clinical trials, people of color are largely underrepresented. A study released Friday in JAMA Network Open suggests that the disparities started long before the pandemic magnified existing inequities. (Lozano, 2/19)
The Hill:
Majority Of People Receiving COVID-19 Vaccines Are White, Which Fauci Calls 'Disturbing'
Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, said on Friday that racial disparities in COVID-19 vaccination are “very disturbing.” Fauci made the remark during an interview on MSNBC’s “The ReidOut.” He and host Joy Reid were discussing data that showed white populations were getting vaccinated at higher rates than communities of color. (Williams, 2/20)
AP:
Washington Taps Pastors To Overcome Racial Divide On Vaccine
Stately and deliberate, with a distinctive white streak in his black hair, the Rev. Wallace Charles Smith started his Valentine’s Day sermon at Shiloh Baptist Church by talking about love and vaccinations. “That’s what love’s all about. When you get a vaccination, you are saying to everyone around you that you love them enough that you don’t want any hurt, harm or danger to befall them,” he said. “In the spirit of love, keep at it until you get your vaccination. That’s the only thing that’s going to erase this terrible scourge.” (Khalil and Powell, 2/22)
In related news about race and health —
Stat:
FDA Issues Alert On The 'Limitations' Of Pulse Oximeters
Two months after Democratic lawmakers expressed concern about potential racial disparities in pulse oximeter readings — calling the issue a matter of “life or death” — the Food and Drug Administration on Friday issued a public warning about the devices, acknowledging they had “limitations.” (Brodwin and St. Fleur, 2/19)
Relief Bill Faces Crucial Next Weeks In Divided Congress
Congressional lawmakers return to work after a recess with President Joe Biden's covid stimulus plan at the top of their agenda.
Politico:
Dems Prepare For Party-Line House Vote On Biden's Pandemic Aid Bill
The House is on track to pass President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package by the end of this week as Congress sprints to deliver aid to millions of Americans reeling from the pandemic and facing a jobless benefits cliff in mid-March. But House Democrats aren't expecting to get a single GOP vote for their aid package, which they're taking up with the procedural maneuver known as reconciliation in order to win Senate passage without the threat of a filibuster. The House Budget Committee will meet Monday afternoon to tee up the legislation for floor passage on Friday or Saturday, with Senate action as soon as the following week. (Emma, 2/21)
AP:
Big Factor In COVID Votes: Would Dems Sink First Biden Goal?
Democratic leaders have a potent dynamic on their side as Congress preps for its first votes on the party’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill: Would any Democrat dare cast the vote that scuttles new President Joe Biden’s leadoff initiative? Democrats’ wafer-thin 10-vote House majority leaves little room for defections in the face of solid Republican opposition, and they have none in a 50-50 Senate they control only with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote. Internal Democratic disputes remain over issues like raising the minimum wage, how much aid to funnel to struggling state and local governments and whether to extend emergency unemployment benefits for an extra month. (Fram, 2/22)
Fox News:
House Conservatives Unveil Playbook On How They’ll Fight Back Against Democrats' $1.9T COVID Bill
The largest conservative caucus in the House is circulating a new playbook on how to fight back against President Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill by exposing each of the ''liberal goodies" tucked inside the package. The Republican Study Committee (RSC) authored a three-page memo to conservatives to outline "all the left-wing items Democrats are hoping the public won’t find about." Fox News first obtained a copy of the fact sheet that is slated to be widely circulated Monday. (Schultz, 2/22)
NBC News:
'What Would They Have Me Cut?': Biden Urges Republicans To Vote For His Covid Relief Bill
President Joe Biden called on Republican lawmakers Friday to support his nearly $2 trillion Covid-19 relief plan, dismissing the argument from some critics that the proposal is too expensive. ... "Critics say that my plan is to big, that it costs $1.9 trillion," Biden said in a speech at Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing facility near Kalamazoo, Michigan."Let me ask them: What would they have me cut? What would they have me leave out? Should we not invest $20 billion to vaccinate the nation? Should we not invest $290 million to extend unemployment insurance for the 11 million Americans who are unemployed so they can get by?" (Egan, 2/19)
In other news from Capitol Hill —
Boston Globe:
Lawmakers Seek $25.2 Billion For Vaccine Equity As Part Of Budget Plan, Markey Says
Senator Edward Markey said Saturday that lawmakers are seeking $25.2 billion to address COVID-19 health disparities nationally and protect vulnerable populations hardest hit by the pandemic as part of President Biden’s stimulus package. The funding package was discussed during a nearly hour-long livestream discussion regarding efforts to ensure equity in vaccine distribution as people of color are disproportionately affected by the pandemic. That effort not only includes ongoing work to overcome skepticism of vaccines among some people of color, but to provide the funding and support for local, community-driven efforts to help people navigate the state’s phased vaccination rollout and help them secure appointments to get shots. (Hilliard, 2/20)
The Hill:
House Panels Underscore Vaccine Obstacles For Minority Groups
Two House committees chaired by senior Black Congress members held hearings on Friday to discuss the importance of equitable vaccine distribution and the obstacles that local and federal officials have had up to this point. (Johnson, 2/19)
Telehealth-Related Fraud Has Spiked, Government Watchdog Warns
The federal Office of Inspector General estimates that there were $4.5 billion worth of telehealth-related fraud losses in fiscal year 2020, the largest of any category and a record for Medicare fraud, Stat reports.
Stat:
Federal Watchdog Raises Concerns About Increasing Telehealth Fraud
A federal government watchdog is sounding the alarm that Americans’ growing enthusiasm for telehealth services during the coronavirus pandemic has led to a worrying parallel: a “dramatic increase” in telehealth-related fraud. (Diaz, 2/22)
Modern Healthcare:
Quality Of Care May Be Slipping During COVID, Experts Warn
Experts are worried that patient safety has been negatively affected amid all this immense change. “The conditions and the common contributing factors that increase the risk for errors have probably risen throughout the pandemic,” said Patricia McGaffigan, vice president of patient safety programs at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. “The normal defenses we have put in place have really been centered around our expected way of working and so much of that has really changed.” For instance, restrictions on family members visiting patients likely contributes to oversights in safety because they are typically an extra set of eyes and ears for their loved ones, McGaffigan said. (Castellucci, 2/20)
In related health care industry news —
Modern Healthcare:
Staffing Stress Leading To Calls For More Nurses
Anecdotes from front-line caregivers—particularly nurses—over unsafe conditions for patients have emerged throughout the pandemic. Crystal Johnson, an emergency department nurse at Emanate Health Inter-Community Hospital in Covina, Calif., is an example. The hospital experienced a surge of COVID-19 during the holiday season and in the weeks after. When she spoke to Modern Healthcare last month, Johnson claimed a waiver from the state allowing hospitals to adopt higher nurse-staffing ratios led to subpar care for patients. “You’re prioritizing your care based on what is needed at the time,” she said. “It’s completely unsafe.” (Castellucci, 2/20)
CNN:
Black Nurses Seek Mental Health Support During The Pandemic
Throughout Olivia Thompson's 12-hour shift as a cardiac and Covid-19 nurse in Chandler, Arizona, she closely monitors the oxygen levels of several patients at a time and works with other medical specialists to heal them. For some, no amount of care Thompson gives prevents them from being transferred to the Intensive Care Unit. (Marples, 2/22)
Boston Globe:
Thousands Of Hospital Workers Sickened With COVID Since Start Of Pandemic
They’ve been on the front lines of the pandemic for almost a year. They’ve battled under grueling conditions. They’ve saved lives and watched people die. And a staggering number have become sick themselves. More than 14,000 health care workers at the state’s largest medical centers and hospital systems have been infected with COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, according to data compiled by the Globe — a reflection of the toll of the pandemic on the essential health care workforce. The figure includes people who work in all parts of hospitals, from nurses and doctors to cleaning and cafeteria staff. (Dayal McCluskey, 2/21)
Also —
Rome News-Tribune:
Floyd Expecting To Submit Paperwork For Atrium Proposal In March, Deal Likely To Close In Mid-Summer
The details of a deal between Floyd Medical Center and Atrium Health will be presented to the Floyd boards during their joint meeting Monday. No vote will be taken, said FMC President and CEO Kurt Stuenkel, but it’s his intention to detail the mountains of minutiae regarding the deal during the closed session portion of that meeting. (Bailey, 2/20)
About-Face On Contact Tracing: Airlines To Collect Passenger Data
The efforts will allow health officials to more quickly warn passengers about exposure to covid. News reports look at vision problems surfacing in children, an “unconscionable” decision in Texas to export N95 masks and more.
The Washington Post:
U.S. Airlines Agree To Voluntary Program To Speed Contact-Tracing Efforts
Seven U.S. air carriers said Friday that they will begin collecting information from international passengers intended to help health officials more quickly warn travelers if they have been exposed to the coronavirus on a flight. The announcement is a turnabout for the industry, which previously pushed back against government efforts to require it to provide passenger information for contact tracing. (Aratani, 2/19)
Stat:
Could The Pandemic Drive A Rise In Vision Problems Among Children?
Researchers around the world are closely watching for a potential ripple effect of the Covid-19 pandemic: an uptick in vision problems in children, many of whom are spending less time outside, and more time than ever in front of screens during work and play. (Goshua, 2/22)
KHN:
Feds OK’d Export Of Millions Of N95 Masks As U.S. Workers Cried For More
In the midst of a national shortage of N95 masks, the U.S. government quietly granted an exception to its export ban on protective gear, allowing as many as 5 million of the masks per month to be shipped overseas. The Federal Emergency Management Agency issued the waiver in the final moments of Donald Trump’s presidency last month, allowing a Texas company to export its products after it failed to secure U.S. customers, according to the FEMA letter obtained by KHN. (Jewett, 2/19)
CNN:
People With Body Dysmorphia Find Relief In Wearing Covid-19 Masks
For Lavinia Darr, a public bus was dangerous territory. There were the other passengers, who she feared would be aghast at her physical flaws. And there were the mirrors and windows, which she knew would propel her into deep self-loathing. Daily commute debilitated the 23-year-old -- because body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) defined so many parts of her daily life. (Morava and Andrew, 2/21)
Federal Court Blocks South Carolina 'Heartbeat' Abortion Law
A similar effort in Ohio never took effect but many women thought abortion had been banned. Health news is also from Maryland, Maine, Georgia, and Nevada, as well.
NPR:
Court Temporarily Blocks South Carolina Heartbeat Abortion Ban
Just a day after a bill banning most abortions in South Carolina was signed into law by Gov. Henry McMaster, a federal court blocked the measure. U.S. District Court Judge Mary Geiger Lewis granted a two-week temporary restraining order on Friday while the case, brought by Planned Parenthood, works its way through the legal system. The "South Carolina Fetal Heartbeat and Protection from Abortion Act" would prohibit abortion as soon as cardiac activity can be detected with an ultrasound. The only exceptions would occur in cases of rape, incest or when a mother's life is in danger. (Romo, 2/19)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
Ohio's 'Heartbeat Bill' Never Took Effect; 1 In 10 Ohio Women Thought Abortion Was Illegal Anyway
Ohio's "heartbeat bill," one of the nation's most restrictive abortion bans, never took effect. But 1 in 10 Ohio women thought abortion was illegal in the state anyway, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. While most Ohio women, about 64%, understood abortions are legal in Ohio, another 26.2% weren't sure and 9.8% incorrectly believed all abortions were illegal in the state, according to an eight-month review of the Ohio Survey of Women led by Ohio State University professor of epidemiology Maria Gallo. (Balmert, 2/18)
In other news from Maryland, Maine, Georgia, Nevada and California —
The Washington Post:
Coronavirus Outbreak Inside Maryland Detention Facility Sparks Class Action Lawsuit
Advocates for detainees inside Maryland’s Chesapeake Detention Facility filed a federal lawsuit Saturday alleging that a host of unsanitary conditions fostered a coronavirus outbreak that affected 234 inmates and employees. The class-action lawsuit, filed in Baltimore’s U.S. District Court, alleges among other things that guards in the pretrial facility of 400 detainees rarely wore masks and that healthy detainees were forced into contaminated cells that had not been sanitized. (Olivo, 2/21)
Bangor Daily News:
Health Advocates Decry Cuts To Anti-Smoking Programs In Maine's Proposed Budget
In Maine, smoking costs more than $800 million a year in health care costs and contributes to nearly 30 percent of cancer deaths. Health advocates called it a serious problem, and they said Gov. Janet Mills is making a mistake by cutting $5 million a year from state smoking cessation programs. This year Maine is spending nearly $14 million on smoking cessation programs, but Mills is proposing to cut $5 million a year over the two-year budget as part of her proposal to keep state revenues in line with expenditures. Hilary Schneider of the American Lung Association’s Maine chapter told the Legislature’s Appropriations Committee that this is not the time to curtail efforts to get people to quit. (Leary, 2/22)
KHN:
New Single-Payer Bill Intensifies Newsom’s Political Peril
A group of Democratic state lawmakers introduced legislation Friday to create a single-payer health care system to cover all Californians, immediately defining the biggest health policy debate of the year and putting enormous political pressure on Gov. Gavin Newsom. The Democratic governor faces the increasingly likely prospect of a Republican-driven recall election later this year. The single-payer bill adds to his political peril from the left if he doesn’t express support, and from the right if he does. (Hart and Bluth, 2/19)
Valdosta Daily Times:
Duncan Talks State Of Rural Health Care
Lately, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan has caught eyes as a Republican speaking out against claims of election fraud on national news outlets. But as a freshman lawmaker and throughout his years in the General Assembly, he was known for his efforts to bolster Georgia’s strained rural health care system. (Bunch, 2/21)
AP:
Pandemic Makes Prostitution Taboo In Nevada's Legal Brothels
Before the coronavirus pandemic, tourist-dependent Nevada had a notorious attraction: It was the only place in America where someone could legally pay for sex. These days, even in the state known for sin, the business is taboo. Legal brothels have been shuttered for nearly a year, leaving sex workers to offer less-lucrative alternatives like online dates or nonsexual escort services. Those in the industry say many of the licensed prostitutes, who work as independent contractors, have struggled to qualify for unemployment benefits since closures began last March and some have opted to take their work into the shadows, offering sex illegally. (Price, 2/20)
England Moves Ahead Of Schedule On Vaccines
The country plans to give many more people protection by waiting to give second doses until 12 weeks later. Pfizer says it doesn't have data to back the delay, but the country expects to end its lockdown. News reports focus on France, Australia, Tanzania, China, Russia and Norway, as well.
NPR:
U.K. Moves To Speed Up Vaccinations, With Goal Of 1st Dose For All Adults By July 31
The British government has announced that every adult in the U.K. will be offered a first dose of COVID-19 vaccine by the end of July, one month earlier than initially planned. Prime Minister Boris Johnson says the accelerated target will allow vulnerable people to be protected "sooner," which should help relax the lifting of lockdown restrictions across the country. Senior ministers met to discuss the plan Sunday. Johnson will unveil the plan to ease restrictions to the House of Commons on Monday. Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the BBC that about one-third of U.K. adults — about 17 million people — have already been vaccinated. The new target also calls for everyone over 50 or with an underlying health condition to get a vaccine shot by April 15, rather than the previous target of May 1. (Northam, 2/21)
The Hill:
Macron Urges US, EU To Share Vaccine Doses
French President Emmanuel Macron pressed the U.S. and European Union to allocate some coronavirus vaccine doses to be shared with developing countries that have been slower in getting their COVID-19 outbreaks under control. Macron said in an interview with the Financial Times that the U.S. and E.U. should set aside between 3 percent and 5 percent of their doses. (Axelrod, 2/19)
The Hill:
Australia Begins Coronavirus Vaccine Rollout
Australia has begun its coronavirus vaccine rollout, Reuters reports, with frontline healthcare workers and senior citizens receiving the first round of doses. According to the news outlet, Prime Minister Scott Morrison, was among a group of 20 people who received the first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer before the broader rollout began on Monday. Sixty thousand doses are expected to be administered by the end of this week, Reuters reports. (Choi, 2/21)
AP:
Tanzania's President Admits Country Has COVID-19 Problem
Tanzania’s president is finally acknowledging that his country has a coronavirus problem after claiming for months that the disease had been defeated by prayer. Populist President John Magufuli on Sunday urged citizens of the East African country to take precautions and even wear face masks — but only locally made ones. Over the course of the pandemic he has expressed wariness about foreign-made goods, including COVID-19 vaccines. (2/22)
The Hill:
WHO To Recommend Extensive Study Of First Known COVID-19 Patient, Wet Market Suppliers: Report
The World Health Organization (WHO) will release a report on the roots of the coronavirus pandemic recommending more comprehensive contact tracing of the first known patient in Wuhan, China and the wildlife market where it is believed to have originated. Scientists involved in the investigation into how the virus originated told CNN they found it “implausible” Chinese authorities had not investigated these aspects. (Budryk, 2/21)
In other global developments —
The Hill:
First Human Case Of H5N8 Bird Flu Reported In Russia
Russia on Saturday announced that it has identified the first cases of H5N8 avian influenza in humans, according to multiple reports. Anna Popova, the country’s public health chief, said in televised comments that seven cases were detected in workers at a poultry farm in southern Russia, Bloomberg News reported. Authorities have reported information on the cases to the World Health Organization (WHO). (Williams, 2/20)
Bloomberg:
Norway To Decriminalize Personal Use Of Illegal Drugs In Small Quantities
Norway plans to decriminalize the personal use of illegal drugs in small quantities, citing recommendations from the United Nations and the World Health Organization. The Nordic country will abolish criminal liability “for the use of drugs and the acquisition and possession of a small amount of drugs for own use,” according to legal proposals by the health-care ministry to lawmakers, published on Friday. The acts will be illegal, but not punishable. “The drug reform is a historic shift in Norwegian drug policy,” Health Minister Bent Hoie said in an emailed statement. “It’s high time we replace punishment with help.” (Ummelas, 2/19)
Opinion writers weigh in on these pandemic topics and others.
CNN:
As 500,000 Covid Death Looms, US Reaches Pivotal Moment
The United States will within hours record its unfathomable 500,000th death from Covid-19 paradoxically at a moment of rare hope in the pandemic. Yet the tragic landmark will occur with the White House loath to predict when the crisis may ease as it balances critical political and epidemiological risks. (Stephen Collinson, 2/22)
Stat:
Propelling From National Crisis To A Resilient Health Care System
A year into the Covid-19 pandemic and the U.S. is still battling this crisis. As the country enters its second and third waves of cases, we know it won’t be back to “business as usual” soon. But was “business as usual” in our health care system really working? The two of us have devoted our lives to health care and to thinking about its future. We’ve watched the pandemic expose critical fissures in the country’s infrastructure, like supply chain challenges that left health care workers without essential protective gear, tragically unequal access to care, too many Americans dying from treatable diseases, and public health capacity constricted by underfunding. We’ve also observed with awe as care teams — grappling with workforce shortages and other long-standing problems — have continuously risen to the challenge with formidable innovation, decisiveness, and collaboration. (Melinda B. Buntin and Kristine Martin Anderson, 2/22)
The New York Times:
How To Prevent The Medical Care Crisis After Covid-19
The coronavirus pandemic has yet to end, but we are already beginning to feel the aftershocks. Even as thousands of Americans continue to die of Covid-19 every day, many people are suffering from serious health problems unrelated to the virus because their health care has been disrupted. With many Americans still afraid to go to hospitals and doctor’s offices, a second, more subtle pandemic is now looming because of the diseases that have gone undiagnosed and untreated since March 2020 .A study published in the Journal of the National Medical Association in December reported that 43 percent of Americans have missed preventive care appointments during the pandemic. In the three months after lockdown measures were first imposed, Epic Health Research Network found that screenings for breast, colon and cervical cancers had declined by two-thirds. (Howard University president Wayne A.I. Frederick, 2/22)
Philadelphia Inquirer:
Nursing Homes Still Deserve Better
Nursing home residents infected by COVID-19 are approximately five times more likely to die than a person of the same age living at home. Nursing homes and other long-term care facilities make up about 33% of all COVID-19 deaths nationwide. As of last week, over 163,000 residents and employees of nursing homes and other long-term care facilities had died. Even before the pandemic, many facilities had quality control issues. (David R. Hoffman and Jerry Seelig, 2/22)
The Hill:
We Thought We Were Prepared For A Pandemic — And That's A Lesson For Next Time
Everyone thought the U.S. was well prepared to battle a pandemic. The country ranked first worldwide on the 2019 Global Health Security Index, an effort explicitly created to track abilities to address infectious disease outbreaks that was widely touted by the Trump administration in the early days of the pandemic. It was near the top of the World Health Organization’s Joint External Evaluation Exercise, designed to do the same thing. And yet, America ended 2020 the world leader in reported COVID-19 deaths. (Charles Kenny, 2/21)
Hartford Courant:
Teachers Need COVID Vaccines, Now
If you want to understand how society values your life, wait for a pandemic and watch how it prioritizes your safety. If you’re a public-school teacher in Connecticut, you may not be a priority. According to Education Week, more than half of the states have already made their public-school teachers eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations. That includes big blue ones like New York and California and smaller red ones like Arkansas and Alabama. But Connecticut isn’t on the list. Its teachers are not eligible for vaccinations. (Joe Mandese, 2/21)
The Hill:
Health Care — Moms Can't Wait
Moms can't wait — this has been our ongoing message for years as we urged Congress to extend Medicaid coverage for pregnant individuals to 12 months postpartum to help address the nation’s maternal mortality crisis. This crisis is grave and disproportionately impacts Black and Brown mothers. (Eva Chalas, Jacqueline W. Fincher and Lee Savio Beers, 2/21)
The Washington Post:
On TV, Abortion Is The Road Less Traveled. Life’s Not Like That.
After the sixth episode of “Atypical,” I stormed into my daughter’s room. “Please tell me the therapist is not going to have that baby.” She paused to remember which show she had told me to watch, and then she shrugged sympathetically. “Sorry, Mom.” Dammit! I was hoping that the young, professional Californian, upon learning she was pregnant right after her jerky boyfriend left her, might decide to have an abortion. Instead, it turns out, she doesn’t even consider it. I’m so tired of this. (Kate Cohen, 2/19)
The New York Times:
50 Million Americans Are Unpaid Caregivers. We Need Help.
Five years ago I stood in a tiny hospital room wondering how I was going to care for the man I loved most without succumbing to despair. For four months, my husband, Brad, had been recovering from a stem-cell transplant that saved his life from aggressive lymphoma. The hospital administration said he must go home, but he needed a level of support that, I thought, only a hospital could provide. His homecoming ought to have been cause for celebration. But I felt anything but joyful. (Kate Washington, 2/22)
Los Angeles Times:
Lessons From The Long History Of Homelessness In L.A.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti’s campaign to “end homelessness” by 2028 — which has cost about $200 million in building shelters around the city — addresses some of the structural pitfalls ensnaring the poor. But it is far from living up to its promise of moving homeless Angelenos off the streets into permanent housing. Recent data show that of nearly 1,500 people who were in the shelters and left in November, only 15% moved to permanent housing. Two-thirds either went back to the streets or did not indicate where they were going. (Marques Vestal and Andrew Klein, 2/22)