- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- UVA Health Still Squeezing Money From Patients — By Seizing Their Home Equity
- Health Care Groups Dive Into Property Tax Ballot Fight, Eyeing Public Health Money
- ‘An Arm and a Leg’: Vetting TikTok Mom’s Advice for Dealing With Debt Collectors
- Political Cartoon: 'The Petri Dish'
- Vaccines 3
- No Vaccine Application From Pfizer Before The Election, CEO Says
- CVS and Walgreens To Distribute Vaccine to Nursing Homes
- No Vaccine Yet, But States Organize Distribution Plans
- Administration News 3
- Judge Stops Trump Administration From Stripping Food Stamps At Time When So Many Are Hungry
- CMS To Penalize Labs Taking More Than Two Days To Process COVID Tests
- Conflict Rife Among Trump's COVID Advisers
- Elections 3
- Trump, Biden Paint Dire Pictures Of Pandemic's Future If The Other Is Elected
- Issues Of Violence And The Pandemic Command Trump's Trip To Michigan
- How COVID Is Affecting Voting
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
UVA Health Still Squeezing Money From Patients — By Seizing Their Home Equity
The University of Virginia promised reforms but has stopped short of announcing them, while hospital giant VCU Health has freed tens of thousands from property liens. (Jay Hancock, 10/19)
Health Care Groups Dive Into Property Tax Ballot Fight, Eyeing Public Health Money
Health care leaders say Proposition 15, a ballot initiative that would raise property taxes for large-business owners, could help boost revenue for chronically underfunded public health departments. (Angela Hart, 10/19)
‘An Arm and a Leg’: Vetting TikTok Mom’s Advice for Dealing With Debt Collectors
We first learned about Shaunna Burns when her tips on medical bills went viral. In part two of our conversation with the so-called TikTok mom, we’re back for guidance about dealing with debt collectors. Then we fact-checked her advice with a legal expert, who said: Most of Burns’ advice totally checks out. (Dan Weissmann, 10/19)
Political Cartoon: 'The Petri Dish'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'The Petri Dish'" by Clay Bennett.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
PFIZER NOT RUSHING IT
No vaccine ready
until the election's done ...
I'm both glad and sad
- Anonymous
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:
'Third Wave' Set To Swamp US; Planet Hits 40M COVID Cases
Health care professionals brace for the fall resurgence's influx of new coronavirus patients — and worry that the winter will be even worse. Meanwhile, the global tally of infections passes 40 million.
Reuters:
Global Coronavirus Cases Surpass The 40 Million Milestone
Worldwide coronavirus cases crossed 40 million on Monday, according to a Reuters tally, as the onset of winter in the northern hemisphere fuelled a resurgence in the spread of the disease. The Reuters tally is based on official reporting by individual countries. Experts believe the true numbers of both cases and deaths are likely much higher, given deficiencies in testing and potential under-reporting by some countries. The Reuters data shows the pace of the pandemic continues to pick up. It took just 32 days to go from 30 million global cases to 40 million, compared with the 38 days it took to get from 20 to 30 million, the 44 days between 10 and 20 million, and the three months it took to reach 10 million cases from when the first cases were reported in Wuhan, China, in early January. (Ahluwalia and Abraham, 10/19)
CNBC:
U.S. May Face 'Substantial Third Wave' Of Coronavirus Cases, Experts Warn
Colder temperatures are arriving in the Northern Hemisphere, and an insidious rise in new coronavirus cases in the U.S. and Europe is underway. For months, health officials have warned against this possibility, and as these trends begin to materialize, countries are weighing whether to impose stricter measures to contain the virus’ spread. (Higgins-Dunn, Feuer and Rattner, 10/17)
NBC News:
Covid-19 Cases Climbing In Almost Every State As U.S. Braces For Possible 'third Peak'
Although Texas reported a "slight decrease" in cases over the 14-day period that ended Saturday, its news was better than elsewhere: 38 states, Washington, D.C., and Guam all recorded increases in cases over the last 14 days, and nine states have plateaued, according to NBC News tallies. Rhode Island, which, like Texas, has also had a net decrease, does not report data over the weekend, and Missouri is not reporting data because of a technology issue. (Kesslen and Grumbach, 10/18)
The Hill:
Key Coronavirus Model Predicts Nearly 80 Percent Rise In Deaths By February
A key model foresees approximately 171,000 more coronavirus related deaths by February 2021, a number that would represent a spike of 78 percent. The model from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington School of Medicine suggests there will be roughly 389,087 deaths by Feb. 1. If all Americans use face masks, the model’s best-case scenario projects 314,000 deaths by that date. The model, however, foresees more than 477,000 deaths if mask mandates are eased. (Gstalter, 10/16)
NPR:
How Many COVID Deaths Could U.S. See This Winter? Here's What Experts Project
Coronavirus cases are rising rapidly in many states as the U.S. heads into the winter months. And forecasters predict staggering growth in infections and deaths if current trends continue. It's exactly the kind of scenario that public health experts have long warned could be in store for the country, if it did not aggressively tamp down on infections over the summer. (Stone, 10/16)
No Vaccine Application From Pfizer Before The Election, CEO Says
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla says his company's mid-October target to apply for FDA emergency use authorization for its COVID-19 vaccine candidate has shifted to mid-November, at the earliest.
AP:
Pfizer: Mid-November Earliest It Can Seek Virus Vaccine OK
Pfizer Inc. cannot request emergency authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine before the third week of November -- and that’s if everything goes well, the company’s CEO announced Friday. Despite President Donald Trump’s repeated promises of a vaccine before Election Day, scientists have been cautioning that it’s unlikely data showing a leading shot actually works would come until November or December. (10/16)
Stat:
Pfizer Won't Seek Covid-19 Vaccine Approval Before Mid-November
An analysis of the efficacy of the vaccine could be available sooner, the company said in an open letter from its CEO, Albert Bourla, but required safety data will take longer. The timelines included in the letter are not new, based on disclosures the company has previously made about the status of its vaccine effort with the German biotechnology firm BioNTech. But the need for Bourla, who had previously said a vaccine could be available by October, to make a public announcement emphasizes the tense political conditions surrounding the race for a vaccine. (Herper, 10/16)
The New York Times:
Pfizer Says It Won’t Seek Vaccine Authorization Before Mid-November
Close watchers of the vaccine race had already known that Pfizer wouldn’t be able to meet the requirements of the Food and Drug Administration by the end of this month. But Friday’s announcement represents a shift in tone for the company and its leader, who has repeatedly emphasized the month of October in interviews and public appearances. In doing so, the company had aligned its messaging with that of [President Trump], who has made no secret of his desire for an approved vaccine before the election. (Thomas and Weiland, 10/18)
CVS and Walgreens To Distribute Vaccine to Nursing Homes
Two large national pharmacy chains, CVS and Walgreens, have agreed to distribute COVID vaccine to nursing homes at no cost. Meanwhile, CVS says it will hire 15,000 people, 10,000 of them pharmacy technicians.
The Hill:
Trump Health Officials Announce Plan For Free COVID Vaccines In Nursing Homes
The Trump administration on Friday announced a partnership with two national pharmacy chains to distribute a potential coronavirus vaccine to residents of long term care facilities for free. The partnership with CVS and Walgreens will allow health officials to prioritize a vaccine when one becomes available, so it can be administered to the most vulnerable populations. (Weixel, 10/16)
FierceHealthcare:
CVS, Walgreens Make Deal With Trump Admin To Quickly Distribute COVID-19 Vaccines To Nursing Homes
Retail pharmacy chains CVS Health and Walgreens reached a deal with the Trump administration to quickly provide and administer COVID-19 vaccines directly to nursing homes with no out-of-pocket costs. The agreement, announced Friday, focuses on the distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine to the highest-risk individuals ahead of a potential vaccine approval either this year or in early 2021. (King, 10/16)
In other news from CVS —
FierceHealthcare:
CVS Pushing For Pharmacy Technicians To Be Able To Administer COVID-19 Vaccines
CVS Health is pushing for pharmacy technicians to be allowed to administer COVID-19 vaccines. The healthcare giant is hiring more than 10,000 full- and part-time pharmacy technicians in Q4 in anticipation of flu season, and urging for them to have an expanded scope of practice that would allow them to vaccinate patients for the novel coronavirus under supervision from an immunization-certified pharmacist. (Minemyer, 10/19)
CNBC:
CVS To Hire 15,000 Employees As It Prepares More Covid-19 Cases, Vaccine
CVS Health said Monday that it wants to immediately hire 15,000 employees to prepare for an expected rise in Covid-19 and flu cases this fall and winter. More than 10,000 of those will be full-time and part-time licensed pharmacy technicians who can help dispense medications and administer Covid-19 tests. (Repko, 10/19)
No Vaccine Yet, But States Organize Distribution Plans
They also want $8.4 billion from Congress to pay for the rollout.
The New York Times:
Governors Ask How Vaccines Will Be Distributed
With the first coronavirus vaccines in the final stages of testing, the National Governors Association has some pressing questions for the Trump administration: Who is going to pay for the administration of vaccines? And how will scarce supplies be allocated among the states? The association, a bipartisan group headed by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, posted its questions on Twitter. (10/18)
Boston Globe:
State’s Tentative Vaccine Distribution Plan Prioritizes Medical Workers, High-Risk People
Massachusetts residents who are elderly or at risk for serious illness, health care providers, and other essential workers are likely to be the first to receive a COVID-19 vaccine after one is approved, according to a draft of the state’s distribution plan filed with the federal government. The document, sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, prioritizes those groups because the state, home to nearly 6.9 million people, is expected to receive only 20,000 to 60,000 doses of a vaccine during the federal government’s initial allocation, according to the draft. (Fox and Lugli, 10/18)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgia Submits COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution Plan To CDC
The Georgia Department of Public Health submitted its COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday, laying the groundwork for an extraordinary undertaking to vaccinate millions of people across the state. The 56-page plan touches on everything from ordering and tracking the vaccine to meeting cold-storage requirements. It also outlines a strategy of making the vaccine available at not only healthcare settings but non-traditional places like churches and workplaces. (Oliviero and Hart, 10/16)
The Hill:
State Health Officials Tell Congress They Need $8.4B For COVID-19 Vaccination Effort
State public health officials are urging Congress to provide at least $8.4 billion in emergency funding for distributing a coronavirus vaccine, warning that they do not currently have enough money to carry out the immense logistical effort. The letter to bipartisan congressional leaders came from the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO), a group that represents state public health departments, and the Association of Immunization Managers (AIM), which represents states’ vaccination officials. (Sullivan, 10/16)
In other vaccine news —
Axios:
Ex-FDA Head: White House Coronavirus Strategy Of Waiting For Vaccine Is "Problematic"
Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said on CBS's "Face the Nation" Sunday the White House strategy to combat the spread of coronavirus appears to be "to endure the spread until we get to that vaccine." That strategy, which leaves much of the mitigation efforts up to the states and excludes a national mask mandate, is "problematic" because the "first tranche of people to get vaccinated really won't be protected ... probably until February and maybe March," even if companies apply in November with the FDA to administer the vaccine, Gottlieb said. (Allassan, 10/18)
CNN:
Vaxart Is Under Federal Investigation After Allegedly Misrepresenting Its Role In Government Program Operation Warp Speed
California biotech company Vaxart, which is working on a Covid-19 vaccine, is under federal investigation and is being sued by a number of investors for allegedly exaggerating its involvement in the US government's Operation Warp Speed program for developing Covid-19 vaccines and treatments. Vaxart stated in an October 14 Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it's being investigated by the SEC and federal prosecutors, and that it was served with a grand jury subpoena in July from the US District Court for the Northern District of California. (Liao, 10/18)
Judge Stops Trump Administration From Stripping Food Stamps At Time When So Many Are Hungry
A Department of Agriculture rule would have slashed benefits for as many as 700,000 Americans. A federal judge struck it down Sunday, saying that the Trump administration failed to provide adequate justification or acknowledge the impact of such a change during the pandemic.
CNN:
Federal Judge Strikes Down Trump Rule That Could Have Cut Food Stamps For Nearly 700,000 Unemployed Americans
A federal judge Sunday struck down a Trump administration rule that could have stripped food stamps from nearly 700,000 people, saying the US Department of Agriculture has been "icily silent" about how many Americans would have been denied benefits had the changes been in effect during the pandemic. ... The rule, announced in December, would have required more food stamp recipients to work in order to receive benefits by limiting states' ability to waive existing work mandates. It had been scheduled to take effect on April 1, but Howell in mid-March blocked it from being implemented, and Congress suspended work mandates in the food stamp program as part of a coronavirus relief package that month. (Luhby, 10/18)
The Washington Post:
Federal Judge Strikes Down Trump Plan To Slash Food Stamps For 700,000 Unemployed Americans
In a scathing 67-page opinion, Chief U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell of D.C. condemned the Agriculture Department for failing to justify or even address the impact of the sweeping change on states, saying its shortcomings had been placed in stark relief amid the coronavirus pandemic, during which unemployment has quadrupled and rosters of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program have grown by more than 17 percent, with more than 6 million new enrollees. (Hsu, 10/18)
In related news —
The Hechinger Report:
'We Needed Some Food': Seven Months Into Pandemic, Families Struggle To Meet Basic Needs
By early October, Kaneadsha Jones was close to giving up. It had been seven months since she or her husband had steady work. Seven months since her three school-age children, including a 14-year-old daughter with autism who is blind, nonverbal and immunocompromised, had been to school. Four months since a shooting on her block left her car and her family’s rented house in north Columbus, Ohio, riddled with bullet holes and her 12-year-old daughter struggling with severe post-traumatic stress disorder. The pressure of it all – the hunger, the constant worrying, the desperation to find some stability – was crushing. Some days, she struggled to get out of bed. “I’m so tired,” Jones said. “It seems nothing is getting a little better. The only thing that keeps me trying is my family.” (Mader, 10/17)
Indianapolis Star:
Hunger In Indiana: Food Stamp Benefits Generally Don't Meet Needs
Indiana families receiving aid from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, widely known as food stamps, generally receive less than half of the lowest of food cost budgets projected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Over 725,000 Hoosiers received SNAP benefits in August, according to data from the Family and Social Services Administration, but some hunger relief advocates say the amount of aid they — and other families across the nation — receive is insufficient. (Hays, 10/19)
KATU:
Oregon DHS Offers Food Stamps To People Impacted By Wildfires
The Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS) has received federal approval to offer disaster food benefits to eight Oregon counties impacted by wildfires. Residents impacted by the wildfires in Clackamas, Douglas, Jackson, Klamath, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, and Marion counties are approved to participate. (10/18)
Forbes:
Meet MRelief, The Nonprofit Using Technology To Fight Hunger
1 in 9 people in the U.S. struggle with hunger. And despite federal assistance programs like food stamps, which aim to help millions of families across the U.S., many of these families aren’t actually receiving these benefits due to the cumbersome administrative process required to enroll. mRelief is changing that. Led by cofounders Rose Afriyie and Genevieve Nielsen, the tech nonprofit is transforming access to food stamps, so more families can get the help they need to eat with dignity. (Farley, (10/15)
CMS To Penalize Labs Taking More Than Two Days To Process COVID Tests
In an effort to speed up the delivery of COVID-19 test results, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says it will pay less to labs that take longer than 2 days.
USA Today:
Trump Administration To Labs: Finish COVID-19 Tests In Two Days Or Face Payment Cuts
Labs that take longer than two days to complete coronavirus tests will see federal payments cut $25 per test under a new policy to begin Jan. 1. The agency overseeing Medicare will pay labs $100 per coronavirus test completed on a high-volume machine within two days of collecting a specimen. Labs that take longer will get only $75 per test next year, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. (Alltucker, 10/18)
McKnight's Long Term Care News:
CMS Will Pay More To Labs That Process COVID-19 Tests Quicker Starting Jan. 1
In mid-April the agency announced that it was doubling the pay rate to $100 per test to labs using high throughput technology, meaning that, in essence, Thursday’s announcement reveals a $25 penalty to those labs that don’t produce results within two days. The agency explained the new payment amounts ($100 and $75) reflect the resource costs laboratories face for completing COVID-19 diagnostic tests using high throughput technology. (Brown, 10/16)
Conflict Rife Among Trump's COVID Advisers
Dissension among the White House coronavirus advisers is hampering efforts to fight the pandemic. Much of the blame is placed on Scott Atlas, who advocates for a passive herd immunity response and no masks.
The Washington Post:
Trump’s Den Of Dissent: Inside The White House Task Force As Coronavirus Surges
As summer faded into autumn and the novel coronavirus continued to ravage the nation unabated, Scott Atlas, a neuroradiologist whose commentary on Fox News led President Trump to recruit him to the White House, consolidated his power over the government’s pandemic response. (Yasmeen Abutaleb, Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey and Robert Costa, 10/19)
AP:
White House Puts ‘Politicals’ At CDC To Try To Control Info
The Trump White House has installed two political operatives at the nation’s top public health agency to try to control the information it releases about the coronavirus pandemic as the administration seeks to paint a positive outlook, sometimes at odds with the scientific evidence. The two appointees assigned to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Atlanta headquarters in June have no public health background. They have instead been tasked with keeping an eye on Dr. Robert Redfield, the agency director, as well as scientists, according to a half-dozen CDC and administration officials who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal government affairs. (Dearen, Stobbe and Lardner, 10/16)
AP:
Twitter Blocks Tweet From Trump Adviser Downplaying Masks
Twitter blocked a post Sunday from an adviser to President Donald Trump who suggested that masks do not work to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Scott Atlas, who joined the White House in August as a science adviser, had tweeted “Masks work? NO,” and said widespread use of masks is not supported. (Bussewitz, 10/18)
The New York Times:
As The Virus Surges, Stark Differences Over What Is Around The Corner
As the coronavirus continued to surge in many parts of the United States, officials and experts offered starkly different outlooks on Sunday about what was to come and when the situation might improve. Alex Azar, the secretary of Health and Human Services, noted that many people had grown tired of pandemic precautions, and tried to paint an optimistic picture of how much longer they would be needed. (Delkic, Kolata and Tompkins, 10/18)
In updates on Drs. Fauci and Birx —
ProPublica:
Who Decides When Vaccine Studies Are Done? Internal Documents Show Fauci Plays A Key Role.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease official, will oversee most of the ongoing COVID-19 vaccine trials in the U.S., but not that of the current front-runner made by Pfizer, documents obtained by ProPublica show. According to a draft charter spelling out how most of the advanced COVID-19 vaccine trials will be monitored, Fauci is the “designated senior representative” of the U.S. government who will be part of the first look at the results. That puts Fauci in the room with the companies — including Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca — in deciding whether the vaccines are ready to seek approval from the Food and Drug Administration. (Arnsdorf, Chen and Gabrielson, 10/16)
CBS News:
Fauci Admits Administration Has Restricted His Media Appearances, Says He's Not Surprised Trump Got COVID
In a wide-ranging 60 Minutes interview, Dr. Anthony Fauci expresses his frustration with a Trump campaign ad; explains why, early in the pandemic, masks were largely recommended for health care workers; and says whether he plans to vote in person. (LaPook, 10/18)
Politico:
Fauci: Trump ‘Equates Wearing A Mask With Weakness’
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, suggested in a new interview that President Donald Trump is reluctant to cover his face in public amid the coronavirus pandemic because he “equates wearing a mask with weakness.” In an interview with CBS’s “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday, Fauci said the president’s frequent refusal to model the personal mitigation measure is “less an anti-science [position] than it’s more a statement.” (Forgey, 10/19)
CNN:
As Cases Rise, Fauci Says Public Health Measures Are The Way To Slow Spread
As Covid-19 cases continue to soar across the country, the nation's top infectious disease doctor said following public health measures is the way out of the crisis that has hobbled the economy, claimed thousands of lives and sickened millions. Health experts say the predicted fall surge is here, and rising cases across the US appear to bear that out. The US is averaging more than 55,000 new cases a day, and 10 states reported their highest single-day case counts on Friday. (Holcombe, 10/19)
The Hill:
Whatever Happened To Deborah Birx?
Deborah Birx is nowhere to be found at the White House these days. Though she retains the title of coordinator of the White House coronavirus response, Birx has not attended any of President Trump's press briefings on the pandemic since he started them anew in late July, nor was she at a recent event to tout the administration's advances in testing. (Samuels, 10/18)
Trump, Biden Paint Dire Pictures Of Pandemic's Future If The Other Is Elected
Donald Trump tells his supporters that more lockdowns are in store if Joe Biden wins the White House. Meanwhile, Biden says the situation will get even worse under Trump who "continues to lie to us about the circumstances."
AP:
Trump Plays Down Virus As He Steps Up Pitch For Second Term
Gone are the days when President Donald Trump held forth daily at the White House podium flanked by members of his coronavirus task force. And the days when Vice President Mike Pence and other task force officials would head to Trump’s office to brief him immediately after their meetings. The White House won’t say when Trump last met with the task force. In the week since he emerged from coronavirus isolation, Trump has demonstrated new determination to minimize the threat of the virus that has killed more than 215,000 Americans and complicated his chances of winning another four years in the White House. (Madhani and Miller, 10/17)
The Hill:
HHS Lawyer Warns Trump's Vaccine Discount For Seniors Could Be Illegal: Report
A top lawyer at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is warning that President Trump's plans to provide a discount on a coronavirus vaccine once it is ready could violate federal election law, according to a new report. In an internal memo circulated this week, HHS general counsel Robert Charrow told aides that Trump's plan could open up the federal government and the Trump campaign to legal troubles, several sources told Politico. (Mastrangelo, 10/17)
AP:
AP FACT CHECK: Trump's Falsehoods On Virus, Taxes And Bidens
Back fully campaigning after COVID-19 sidelined him, President Donald Trump returned to familiar form, spreading a litany of falsehoods. Over the weekend, he asserted yet again the virus was “rounding the corner” when it isn’t, misrepresented Democratic rival Joe Biden’s tax proposals and resurrected unfounded claims about Biden and the business dealings of his son, Hunter Biden, in Ukraine. (Yen, Woodward and Boak, 10/19)
Axios:
Trump Warns Of Lockdowns If Biden's Elected: "He'll Listen To Scientists"
The Biden campaign slammed President Trump after he said at a Nevada rally Sunday if his Democratic presidential rival Joe Biden were elected there'd be more coronavirus pandemic lockdowns because "he'll listen to the scientists. "What he's saying: "If I listened totally to the scientists, we would right now have a country that would be in a massive depression," Trump said. (Falconer, 10/18)
In updates from the Biden campaign —
The Hill:
Biden: Trump 'Continues To Lie To Us' About Coronavirus
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on Sunday slammed President Trump for continuing to "lie about the circumstances" of the coronavirus pandemic. Biden reportedly hammered Trump during a rally in North Carolina for comments the president has made claiming that the U.S. is turning the corner and getting past the worst of the COVID-19 outbreak. Most states in the U.S. are seeing rates of COVID-19 infections rise. (Bowden, 10/18)
Detroit Free Press:
Joe Biden Promises Accessible Health Care During Metro Detroit Visit
Americans worried about their health now and in the future can't trust President Donald Trump to keep them safe from COVID-19 or to protect their coverage, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said Friday during a trip to Southfield. Standing in a gymnasium at Beech Woods Park in the metro Detroit suburb, Biden blasted the president and touted his own health care plans during a wide-ranging speech. (Boucher, 10/16)
The Wall Street Journal:
Where Trump And Biden Stand On Health Care
Most of the differences between President Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on health care align on a central dispute: Mr. Trump wants to reduce the federal government’s role in Americans’ health care, while Mr. Biden wants to expand it. Both agree that health-care costs should be reduced, but they disagree on how to address the coronavirus pandemic, health coverage, driving down prescription-drug prices and lowering insurance premiums. (Armour, 10/18)
Issues Of Violence And The Pandemic Command Trump's Trip To Michigan
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer -- recently the target of a kidnapping plot related to her coronavirus lockdown orders -- charged that President Donald Trump is "inciting this kind of domestic terrorism" after he seemingly encouraged chants of "lock her up" at a Saturday campaign rally in the state.
Politico:
Whitmer To Trump: Talk About The Pandemic, Not Me
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Sunday that although President Donald Trump incites violence against public servants and inspires domestic terrorism, she would rather focus on his handling of the coronavirus pandemic than his incendiary rhetoric. “Every moment that we are not focused on the fact that there are 220,000 Americans who died from this virus is good for him,” Whitmer, a Democrat, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an interview. (Forgey, 10/18)
NPR:
Gov. Whitmer Responds To 'Lock Her Up!' Chants At Trump Rally
During his rally in Muskegon, Mich., on Saturday, Trump blamed Whitmer for imposing what he sees as too severe restrictions on the state during the coronavirus pandemic. That led to a chorus of "lock her up!" chants. And instead of condemning the chants, Trump seemed to egg on his supporters, smiling and saying, "You got to get your governor to open up your state," and "Lock them all up." (Sprunt, 10/18)
Politico:
‘He Was Having Fun’: Lara Trump Defends President’s Attack On Whitmer
Lara Trump, a senior adviser to President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, on Sunday defended her father-in-law’s suggestion that Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer should be imprisoned alongside his other political rivals. In an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Lara Trump insisted the president was merely “having fun at a Trump rally” when he criticized Whitmer, a Democrat, at a campaign event this weekend. (Forgey, 10/18)
The Detroit News:
Whitmer, Trump Campaign Clash After '8645' Seen Next To Michigan Gov
Whitmer implored the Republican president and other officials on Sunday to "bring the heat down" and accused Trump of "inspiring and incentivizing and inciting this kind of domestic terrorism. "Whitmer, a national campaign co-chair for Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, made the comments with an "8645" emblem on a table beside her visible in the camera frame, an apparent anti-Trump message referring to "86ing," or getting rid of, the 45th president. The presence of the decal prompted a backlash from Trump's campaign, which argued: "86 can be shorthand for killing someone." (LeBlanc, 10/18)
After a surge of early voting across the country, election officials now brace for Election Day and in-person voting altered by the coronavirus.
Reuters:
Early Voting Begins In Crucial Florida As Campaign Enters Closing Stretch
Early voting for the Nov. 3 presidential election begins in the crucial battleground state of Florida on Monday as a record 28 million Americans have already cast ballots with barely two weeks remaining in the campaign. President Donald Trump, running out of time to change the dynamics of a race that polls show him losing, will visit Arizona on Monday after holding a rally in Nevada on Sunday and urging his supporters to vote amid signs that Democrats are leading the surge in early voting. (Ax, 10/19)
Reuters:
Young U.S. Poll Workers Brace For Election Day As Virus Fears Keep Elders Home
After scrambling to replace an aging force of poll workers most at risk from the coronavirus, U.S. election officials face the challenge of running the Nov. 3 voting with untested volunteers tasked with following strict health protocols in an intensely partisan environment. A nationwide drive that recruited hundreds of thousands of younger poll workers - the people who set up equipment, check in voters and process ballots - means most battleground states will not be understaffed, a Reuters review of Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin found. (Harte and Whitesides, 10/18)
NPR:
Emergency Rooms Sign Up New Voters Ahead Of Election
This year, there aren't as many large public events with volunteers signing people up to vote in the weeks before the election, due to the pandemic. But doctors' offices are stepping in to fill the void, through programs like VotER and Vote Health 2020, nonpartisan efforts to register patients in free clinics, community centers and emergency rooms. (Silver, 10/18)
Also —
Scientific American:
Physician-Politicians Tout Medical Credentials In Key U.S. Congressional Races
Hiral Tipirneni spent nearly a decade working in emergency medicine in Arizona. She started out 23 years ago at Banner Good Samaritan Hospital in downtown Phoenix, treating patients with broken bones, failing hearts and a lot of other problems. Then some health tragedies hit home. “Our family suffered a great loss to cancer: my mom and nephew,” she says. Tipirneni felt she should do something to combat the illness that took her loved ones. In 2010 she accepted a position as a scientific review officer for the Society of Research Administrators International, a global research management group overseeing cancer studies. But when Donald Trump was elected U.S. president in 2016, “I was terrified of the threats of ‘repeal and replace’ of the Affordable Care Act,” she recalls. “After years spent in the ER seeing thousands of families come through with no access to health care..., it was too much to stand by. That prompted me to throw my hat into the ring.” (Dickie, 10/15)
KHN:
Health Care Groups Dive Into Property Tax Ballot Fight, Eyeing Public Health Money
A November ballot initiative to raise property taxes on big-business owners in California is drawing unconventional political support from health care power players and public health leaders. They see Proposition 15 as a potential savior for chronically underfunded local health departments struggling to respond to the worst public health crisis in more than a century. The initiative would change California’s property tax system to tax some commercial properties higher than residential properties, which backers say could generate billions to help local governments pay for critical public health infrastructure and staffing. (Hart, 10/19)
Odds Of A Stimulus Bill Remain Slim
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the Senate will vote on a $500 billion coronavirus relief package, but Nancy Pelosi says it is unlikely to happen before Election Day.
The Wall Street Journal:
Pelosi Tells White House It Has Until Tuesday To Reach Relief Deal Before Election
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) told the White House it had until Tuesday to reach a deal with Democrats, or legislation to provide additional coronavirus relief to struggling households and businesses couldn’t be passed before the election. “That depends on the administration,” Mrs. Pelosi said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” when asked about whether a deal could still be struck. The 48-hour deadline “only relates to if we want to get it done before the election, which we do,” she said. (Peterson, 10/18)
The Hill:
Pelosi: White House Made 'Unacceptable Changes' To Testing Language During Negotiations On Coronavirus Stimulus
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) accused White House officials of making "unacceptable changes" to language concerning funding for COVID-19 testing efforts in the framework of an emerging coronavirus relief deal. In a letter to House Democrats released by the Speaker's office Sunday afternoon, Pelosi accused the White House of refusing to commit funding for a national coronavirus testing and contact tracing program as well as trying to create a "slush fund" from which the administration could offer grants to various entities at its own discretion. (Bowden, 10/18)
Politico:
McConnell Sets Up Votes On Narrow Coronavirus Relief Proposal
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Saturday that the Senate will hold two votes next week on a half-trillion-dollar coronavirus relief package, even as the chances of Congress approving a broader deal before the election remain slim. The Senate will vote Tuesday on additional money for the Paycheck Protection Program and Wednesday on the rest of the package. Democrats have already dismissed the GOP approach as inadequate, and are not expected to support the proposals. (Levine, 10/17)
The Hill:
Schumer Labels McConnell's Scheduled Coronavirus Stimulus Vote As 'A Stunt'
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) labeled Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) scheduled coronavirus stimulus vote for this week as “a stunt.” Schumer in a Sunday call with reporters commented on McConnell’s scheduling of two stimulus votes this week, including a stand-alone Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) bill Tuesday and a $500 billion package that Democrats rejected last month. (Coleman, 10/18)
The Hill:
Expiring Benefits Raise Economic Stakes Of Stalled Stimulus Talks
Washington's inability to pass a much-needed stimulus bill ahead of November's election is expected to inflict further damage on the economy, potentially kneecapping its recovery as the expiration of key benefits looms. Haggling between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has progressed, with Mnuchin saying he is willing to sign on to a $1.8 trillion deal, but the sides say they remain far apart on key issues. (Elis, 10/18)
50 Employees Of Kansas Hospital — Including The CEO — Get COVID
Twenty-six of the infected personnel at Gove County Medical Center in Quinter, Kansas have recovered and two remained hospitalized as of Oct. 16. Other health industry news is on PPE stockpiles, financially troubled dental practices, nursing, medical real estate and more.
Becker's Hospital Review:
Kansas Hospital CEO, Employees Infected With COVID-19
Fifty employees at Gove County Medical Center in Quinter, Kan., including CEO David Caudill, tested positive for COVID-19 in the last two to three weeks, Mr. Caudill confirmed to Becker's Hospital Review. Twenty-six of the infected employees have recovered and two remained hospitalized Oct. 16. (Gooch, 10/16)
Boston Globe:
Amid A Rising Tide Of COVID-19, Hospitals Stock Up On Protective Gear
As COVID-19 hospitalizations in Massachusetts inch up day by day, Oliveira is among several hospital officials who expressed a cautious optimism that adequate supplies of personal protective equipment — known as PPE — will be on hand during the second wave of COVID-19. That’s not to say that worries don’t continue: N95 masks, the best protection against the virus, remain hard to get, and a shortage of exam gloves is anticipated. But the global supply chain has stabilized, US manufacturing has expanded, hospitals and the state are stocking up in advance, and new avenues for purchasing have opened up. (Freyer, 10/18)
USA Today:
Dentists, Reeling From Pandemic, To Raise Fees, Sell Practices
Millions of Americans are delaying dental appointments over concerns about coronavirus infection, and that's likely to trigger increased fees for patients, job cuts for workers and fewer family practices. When the pandemic began this spring, essentially all dentists temporarily shut down for all but emergency appointments, putting hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work. While 99% of dentists have reopened, the number of patients visiting offices remains about 20% below usual levels, according to the American Dental Association. (Bomey, 10/19)
Modern Healthcare:
Nurses Share In Pandemic Decisionmaking Process Through Professional Governance
Like health systems across the country and around the world, Emory Healthcare in Atlanta faced a personal protective equipment shortage when the coronavirus pandemic hit. The system was running out of gowns and had to decide whether to recycle or wash them. Instead of making that decision themselves, Emory’s leaders turned to their nurses. (Christ, 10/17)
Modern Healthcare:
Yale New Haven's COVID-19 Nurse-Staffing Model Has Long-Term Benefits
Yale New Haven Hospital anticipated in March it would soon need as many as 500 more beds to treat an expected influx of coronavirus inpatients. Although the 1,540-bed Connecticut teaching hospital used staffing agencies in part to help with the heightened demand, the closure of operating rooms and clinics presented an opportunity to leverage those nurses, too. (Castellucci, 10/17)
Georgia Health News:
He Tried To Fix America’s Ailing Nursing Homes. Now Taxpayers May Owe $76 Million.
With the help of approximately $300 million in bonus payments, Rollins quietly built one of Georgia’s largest health care empires, which over a decade and a half grew up from making $20 million in total revenues to over $650 million in total revenue. Rollins' nonprofit network, today called Community Health Services of Georgia, or CHSGa, includes a company called Ethica, which includes 55 nursing homes, and related firms that supply the facilities with prescription drugs, health care supplies and medical transportation. (Blau, 10/17)
In other health industry news —
Crain's New York Business:
Lenox Hill Hospital Expansion Faces Opposition Due To Health Care Inequalities
Northwell Health’s $2.5 billion expansion plan for the Lenox Hill Hospital is facing vehement opposition from healthcare advocates who say the project neglects communities of color because it serves one of the city’s whitest enclaves rather than underserved neighborhoods that need more investment. These communities in the outer boroughs have been disproportionately devastated by the pandemic, the hospital’s opponents say, and the last thing the city needs is a luxury facility in an affluent neighborhood with ample health care resources. (Sachmechi, 10/16)
Modern Healthcare:
Methodist Le Bonheur Accused Of Paying Kickbacks To Physicians
Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare allegedly paid independent physicians more than $400 million for referrals, according to a whistleblower lawsuit. A former Methodist board member and the former CEO of Methodist University Hospital claimed that Methodist would share 340B drug discount program profits with West Clinic physicians each year as well as guarantee above fair market value rates for services, according to a qui tam lawsuit filed in Tennessee federal court in 2017. The scheme allegedly netted more than $1.5 billion in inflated revenues from 2012 to 2018, about half of which was funded by Medicare and Medicaid. (Kacik, 10/16)
KHN:
UVA Health Still Squeezing Money From Patients — By Seizing Their Home Equity
Doris Hutchinson wanted to use money from the sale of her late mother’s house to help her grandchildren go to college. Then she learned the University of Virginia Health System was taking $38,000 of the proceeds because a 13-year-old medical bill owed by her deceased brother had somehow turned into a lien on the property. “It was a mess,” she said. “There are bills I could pay with that money. I could pay off my car, for one thing.” (Hancock, 10/19)
Crain's Chicago Business:
Is Medical Real Estate Immune To COVID?
COVID-19 continues to ail investors in most types of commercial real estate. But many of those that own healthcare properties are feeling good. While the pandemic jacks up vacancy, hampers property values and raises critical questions about the future of the retail and hospitality and traditional office sectors, medical office buildings have been largely free of those economic symptoms. (Ecker, 10/18)
WGXA:
Navicent CEO Dr. Ninfa Saunders Steps Down, Acting President Takes The Helm
The Medical Center, Navicent Health says that President and CEO Dr. Ninfa Saunders has effectively stepped down. In a release from the hospital, "As previously communicated, Dr. Ninfa Saunders recently informed us that after an eight-year tenure as President & CEO of Navicent Health, she would be retiring in early 2021. For personal and health reasons, Dr. Saunders will be transitioning from this role, effective October 16, 2020." (Mines, 10/16)
Despite FDA's Request, Company Says It Won't Pull Premature Birth Drug
The FDA says evidence doesn't show that Makena is effective for its approved use, but AMAG Pharmaceuticals wants a hearing to review its rationale. Other companies in the news include Evotec, Eli Lilly, Disarm Therapeutics, AstraZeneca and more.
Stat:
AMAG Wants An FDA Hearing Rather Than Withdraw Its Premature Birth Drug
In a defiant move, AMAG Pharmaceuticals (AMAG) is refusing to voluntarily withdraw its controversial treatment for preventing premature births, despite a request to do so made earlier this month by the Food and Drug Administration. Instead, the drug maker is seeking a hearing to review the rationale given by the regulator for wanting its Makena medication pulled off the market. (Silverman, 10/16)
Reuters:
Evotec Secures Grant To Evaluate Antibody Drugs For COVID-19
German biotech company Evotec EVTG.DE said on Monday it had received a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help identify and develop potential monoclonal antibody (mAbS) drugs for the prevention of severe COVID-19. Several drugmakers are testing antibody treatments for COVID-19 to help patients’ immune systems fight the coronavirus that causes the disease which has killed more than 1 million people worldwide. (10/19)
Boston Globe:
Disarm Therapeutics Bought By Lilly For $135 Million
Disarm Therapeutics, a Cambridge biotechnology firm working on new potential drugs for neurological diseases such as ALS and multiple sclerosis, will be bought by the pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly and Company for $135 million up front. Under the deal announced Thursday, investors in the four-year-old, privately held biotech could reap up to $1.225 billion in additional payments, depending on how well Lilly does developing and marketing new medicines resulting from the acquisition. (Saltzman, 10/16)
Reuters:
AstraZeneca Wins Two Approval Recommendations From EU Agency
The European medicines watchdog has recommended approving AstraZeneca Plc's treatments for a form of heart failure and a lung disorder, the British drugmaker said on Monday. The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) recommended approving Forxiga for treating a form of heart failure and Trixeo Aerosphere for a form of lung disorder known as “smoker’s lung”. (10/19)
In biotech news —
AP:
UK Space Agency Backs Medical Drone Delivery Project
A medical drone delivery service founded by trainee doctors that aims to transport coronavirus samples, test kits and protective equipment between hospitals has won the backing of Britain’s Space Agency. The start-up project can help free up healthcare staff, avoid courier waiting times and minimize the risk of virus transmission, authorities said Saturday. (10/17)
Modern Healthcare:
Artificial Intelligence Gets Real In The OR
Since the start of the year, some surgeons and residents at UC San Diego Health have had access to a new surgical resource: reams of video recordings of them performing operations, parsed by artificial intelligence. Video recordings of procedures are uploaded to the cloud for quick analysis. The five surgeons involved in the project and their residents then receive videos of their minimally invasive procedures, which are divided into critical steps with a dashboard that compares an operation against previous procedures. The system pixelates distinguishing features of patients and staff, such as faces and tattoos, to de-identify them. (Cohen, 10/17)
Stat:
How Biotechs Are Cramming Multiple Fundraising Rounds Into A Single Year
Historically, biotech startups have tried to bring in new money every eighteen months or so — ideally raising enough to keep them going for the next few years. But in the last year, that timeline has become noticeably compressed. Several companies have crammed multiple venture financings into a single year this year, and some have even managed to go public less than eighteen months after launch. (Sheridan, 10/19)
Stat:
The Two Months In 1980 That Shaped The Future Of Biotech
In the course of just under two months that started 40 years ago this week, five events occurred that shaped the biotechnology industry and bioscience research. Looking back on these seminal events is a reminder of the odd ways in which change happens. (Greely, 10/17)
Scientists Try To Unravel COVID's Secrets
Do car emissions make COVID worse? Why do more men die than women? Researchers — including a 14-year-old from Texas — are getting closer to finding answers.
Stateline:
Emissions Exposure May Increase COVID-19 Mortality
Researchers say they're seeing indications that the pollutants spewed out of tailpipes are making the people who breathe them at high levels more likely to die from COVID-19. Much of the analysis is still in its early stages, but several studies, some not yet peer-reviewed, show high levels of nitrogen dioxide and fine particulate matter correlate with higher mortality rates from the virus. (Brown, 10/19)
Modern Healthcare:
Experts Worry Antibiotic Resistance May Be Worsening During COVID-19
Although inroads have been made in combating antibiotic resistance, infection control specialists are worried that misuse of antibiotics on COVID-19 patients—on top of cuts to stewardship programs and burnout of infection control staff—will only worsen the crisis. (Castellucci, 10/17)
The Washington Post:
Why The Coronavirus Is Killing More Men Than Women
Early in the coronavirus outbreak, hospital data from China revealed a startling disparity: Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, was killing far more men than women. That difference persisted in other Asian countries, such as South Korea, as well as in European countries, such as Italy. Then, it appeared in the United States. (Guarino, 10/17)
The New York Times:
Some Signs Of Recovery From Severe Covid Lung Damage
Lingering shortness of breath and diminished stamina have dogged many Covid patients whose lungs were viciously attacked by the coronavirus. Early in the pandemic, doctors worried that Covid might cause irreversible damage leading to lung fibrosis — progressive scarring in which lung tissue continues to die even after the infection is gone. ... While global or nationwide statistics on post-Covid lung recovery are not yet available, hospitals and clinics are assessing their cases. (Zeldovich, 10/18)
Also —
CNN:
3M Young Scientist Challenge Winner Is Anika Chebrolu, Who Won For A Coronavirus Discovery
As scientists around the world race to find a treatment for the coronavirus, a young girl among them stands out. Anika Chebrolu, a 14-year-old from Frisco, Texas, has just won the 2020 3M Young Scientist Challenge -- and a $25,000 prize -- for a discovery that could provide a potential therapy to Covid-19. (Elassar, 10/18)
CNN:
1918 Flu Quack Cures: Bloodletting, Gas Fumes And More
If the idea of drinking hand sanitizer, absorbing ultraviolet light and gargling salt water to prevent or treat Covid-19 sounds bizarre to you, know that this isn't the first time humans have put themselves in dangerous situations to quell their fears. In the face of threat by a new infectious disease, people become desperate, said Dr. Jeremy Brown, an emergency care physician and author of "Influenza: The Hundred-Year Hunt to Cure the Deadliest Disease in History." (Rogers, 10/17)
Problems With Covid Testing Persist
False test results, consequences of delays and now confusion with colds and flu plague the response to COVID. Also, more news on how the sports industry is dealing with testing.
Bloomberg:
Lab That Provided False Covid Test Results Faces License Threat
A company that performed Covid-19 tests for dozens of Massachusetts nursing homes is facing federal sanctions, including the possible loss of its license, for lab practices that resulted in “immediate jeopardy to patient health and safety.” Last month, Bloomberg News reported that the company, Orig3n Inc., a consumer DNA-testing company that pivoted to Covid-19 testing amid the pandemic, was responsible for hundreds of false positive results at nursing homes across the state. (Brown, 10/16)
NPR:
Coronavirus Testing Delays Still Prevent Effective Disease Control, Survey Finds
People are getting the results of coronavirus tests in the U.S. faster than they were in the spring, but testing still takes far too long to help effective disease control measures such as contact tracing and quarantining, according to the results of a large national survey. The survey, which is conducted monthly by a consortium of researchers from Northeastern, Northwestern, Harvard and Rutgers universities, also finds that Hispanics and African-Americans are waiting about a day longer than whites on average, underscoring yet another way the pandemic is hitting minorities harder. (Stein, 10/19)
In other testing news —
Modern Healthcare:
COVID Test Sales Don't Tell The Whole Story At Abbott Labs
Strong demand for novel coronavirus tests is propping up Abbott Laboratories, obscuring downturns in the company's other business segments. Without surging sales of COVID-19 tests, the North Chicago medical device maker's 8% second-quarter revenue decline would have been twice as bad. Sales are down sharply in the company's medical device and drug businesses, and flat in its nutritionals unit. (Goldberg, 10/17)
AP:
Hard Hit By Virus, Airlines Push For Tests Over Quarantines
What will it take to get people flying again? International air traffic is down 92% this year as travelers worry about catching COVID-19 and government travel bans and quarantine rules make planning difficult. One thing airlines believe could help is to have rapid virus tests of all passengers before departure. Scattered experiments on improving safety are under way around the world, and a UN organization is leading talks to set guidelines. There is a lot at stake. With no end in sight to the pandemic, the near total halt to international travel will hinder economies as they try to bounce back from recession and return to normal levels of business activity. Millions of jobs - at airlines, airports and travel related businesses such as hotels and restaurants - are affected. (McHugh, 10/19)
The Washington Post:
Should You Get A Covid-19 Test If You Have A Cold?
If you fell ill last winter, it probably didn’t really matter whether your sore throat and sniffles were the result of a cold or the flu. This year, with covid-19 added to the mix of look-alike winter maladies, it’s more important to know which virus is causing your illness, because the coronavirus is so contagious and can result in such serious outcomes. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that people with any symptoms of covid-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, be considered for testing. However, not all experts agree that those with mild symptoms resembling a cold should. (Chang, 10/16)
In sports news —
The New York Times:
After Alabama Says Nick Saban Does Not Have Coronavirus, He Coaches A Game
Nick Saban, the college football coach who revived Alabama into a national power, returned to work on Saturday — just in time for one of the most important games of the season — after doctors said that he had not been infected with the coronavirus after all. (Blinder, 10/17)
Yahoo Sports:
Florida Coach Dan Mullen Tests Positive For COVID-19 Days After Pleas For Fans To 'Pack The Swamp'
Florida coach Dan Mullen has tested positive for COVID-19, he confirmed in a statement on Saturday. Mullen said he’s isolating from his family and he’s experiencing “mild to no symptoms.” Mullen’s positive test comes amid an outbreak of staff and players that’s amounted to more than 20 positive tests. Florida’s game against LSU scheduled for Saturday had already been postponed, as the school announced on Wednesday that it didn’t have enough players to play. (Thamel, 10/17)
ESPN:
Purdue Boilermakers Say Football Coach Jeff Brohm Has Presumed Positive Coronavirus Test
Purdue football coach Jeff Brohm had a presumed positive test for the coronavirus on Sunday, the school announced. Brohm, who is at home in isolation, is undergoing a PCR test to confirm the results of an antigen test. He is expected to speak with reporters during his regularly scheduled Zoom call Monday morning. The Boilermakers are scheduled to host Iowa on Saturday as the Big Ten Conference begins its virus-delayed, eight-game, conference-only season. (10/18)
Potential Super-Spreader Event, A Massive Wedding, Averted
Other events that drew massive crowds are linked to the spread of the coronavirus to a large number of people.
The New York Times:
N.Y. Shuts Down Hasidic Wedding That Could Have Had 10,000 Guests
New York State health officials have taken extraordinary steps to shut down an ultra-Orthodox wedding planned for Monday that could have had brought up to 10,000 guests to Brooklyn, near one of New York City’s coronavirus hot spots. The state health commissioner personally intervened to have sheriff’s deputies deliver the order to the Hasidic synagogue on Friday, warning that it must follow health protocols, including limiting gatherings to fewer than 50 people. (Haag, 10/18)
The Washington Post:
How The Sturgis Motorcycle Rally May Have Spread Coronavirus Across The Upper Midwest
It had been a long ride back from Sturgis, S.D., so when he first felt an ache at the back of his throat, Kenny Cervantes figured he was just tired. He’d traveled the 400-some miles on his Harley, rumbling through wide-open farm and prairie land on his way home to Riverdale, Neb., where his girlfriend was waiting. A lifelong motorcycle enthusiast, the 50-year-old construction worker and father of five had been determined to go to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, a holy grail for bikers. Even when his girlfriend, Angie Balcom, decided to stay back because she was worried about being around so many people during a pandemic, Cervantes was adamant about going. “I don’t think there was nothing that was going to stop me,” he said. (Shammas and Sun, 10/17)
AP:
Illinois Gov Says Trump Partly To Blame For COVID-19 Spike
Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Sunday that President Donald Trump and his allies in Illinois are partly to blame for the coronavirus spike in the state. Pritzker spoke to CNN’s “State of the Union” the same day health officials announced 4,245 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 22 additional deaths. (10/17)
The Washington Post:
As Coronavirus Cases Rise, Red-State Governors Resist Measures To Slow The Spread, Preach ‘Personal Responsibility’
With cases surging to new highs and hospital capacity running low, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum teared up describing a state “caught in the middle of a covid storm. ”To weather it, he said at a news conference last week, people would need to keep their distance, wear masks and avoid gatherings. But the one thing North Dakota did not need were legal limits on reckless behavior. (Witte and Romm, 10/18)
In other state news —
The New York Times:
Man Arrested After Threatening Wichita Mayor Over Face Masks, Police Say
Mayor Brandon Whipple of Wichita, Kan., said he often gets “goofy” threats, like the time someone said they wanted to attack him with a Goodyear blimp. But those threats took a serious turn on Friday after someone reported to the police that they had received text messages threatening to kidnap and kill Mr. Whipple, a Democrat. Although the messages weren’t sent directly to Mr. Whipple, he said a detective read them to him. (Morales and Levenson, 10/18)
AP:
New Hampshire Gets Funding To Set Up Drug Court Program
New Hampshire’s congressional delegation announced the state has been awarded $1.75 million to establish a new family drug court program. The grant will fund a Family Treatment Court pilot project in Sullivan County to improve access to services for children and families experiencing abuse and neglect as well as those facing substance abuse and mental health issues. (10/17)
Reports: People Of Color More Likely To Die From COVID
In San Francisco, 38% of the 123 COVID-19 deaths are Asian American residents, the most of any ethnicity, according to USA Today. Also, the CDC looks at higher rates among Hispanics and Blacks.
USA Today:
Asian Americans In San Francisco Are Dying At Alarming Rates From COVID-19: Racism Is To Blame
Mandy Rong was terrified her 12-year-old daughter had COVID-19. It was 2 a.m. and the young girl was hours into a fierce fever and a racking cough. She was weak and didn’t want to eat. What few medications were on hand had expired. She sipped warm water instead. “Mommy, why are my eyes on fire?” asked Amy Rong. The mother and daughter, along with Rong’s parents, live in an 80-square-foot windowless single-room-occupancy Chinatown building that is a home of last resort for many impoverished Asian immigrants. Hallways are cramped, bathrooms and kitchens are communal. A ripe setting for the spread of the highly contagious novel coronavirus. (della Cava, 10/18)
The Hill:
CDC: Blacks, Hispanics Dying Of COVID-19 At Disproportionately High Rates
Black and Hispanic Americans were disproportionately more likely to die of COVID-19 during the spring and summer months, a new indicator that the coronavirus’s toll is falling most heavily on underserved and minority communities. A new analysis by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of more than 114,000 Americans who died of COVID-19 between May and August found that 24 percent were Hispanic or Latino, even though only about 18 percent of Americans are of Hispanic decent. (Wilson, 10/16)
Georgia Health News:
Race And COVID: Stark Disparities In Rural Georgia
A USA Today analysis shows that of the 10 counties in the nation with the highest death rates from COVID-19, five are in Georgia. Hancock County is No. 1 on the list. The Middle Georgia county, with a death rate from COVID-19 of 45.7 per 10,000 residents, became a virus hot spot after outbreaks in two nursing homes, where at least 27 residents have died. (Miller, 10/16)
Also —
The New York Times:
Disney Adds Warnings For Racist Stereotypes To Some Older Films
They are classic animated films like “Dumbo” (1941) and “Peter Pan” (1953), but on Disney’s streaming service they will now get a little help to stand the test of time. Before viewers watch some of these films that entertained generations of children, they will be warned about scenes that include “negative depictions” and “mistreatment of people or cultures.” The 12-second disclaimer, which cannot be skipped, tells viewers, in part: “These stereotypes were wrong then and are wrong now. Rather than remove this content, we want to acknowledge its harmful impact, learn from it and spark conversation to create a more inclusive future together.” (Pietsch, 10/18)
Millennials Are Struggling With Mental, Physical Health, Study Finds
The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association analysis found that rates of depression — as well as alcohol, tobacco and drug use — are rising.
FierceHealthcare:
BCBSA: Millennials' Mental Health Is On The Decline—And COVID-19 Is Making It Worse
Millennials' health is on the decline, due in large part to rising rates of several behavioral health conditions, according to a new report. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) released an analysis looking at the health of millennials and found that rates of major depression in this cohort increased by 12% between 2017 and 2018. In that same window, rates of alcohol use disorder increased by 7% and rates of tobacco use disorder and substance use disorder increased by 5%. (Minemyer, 10/16)
MarketWatch:
'This Is A Moment In History When Suicide Prevention Must Be Prioritized As A Serious Public-Health Concern'
A pandemic-era rise in the suicide rate is not “inevitable,” argues a new journal article that offers strategies for leaders in policy, business and health care to help reduce suicide risk. While evidence from the coronavirus pandemic’s first six months has pointed to “specific effects on suicide risk,” real-time suicide-mortality data isn’t available in most parts of the world, and data surveillance varies widely, wrote Christine Moutier, the chief medical officer of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP), in a JAMA Psychiatry article published Friday. Meanwhile, “emerging data from several countries finds no evidence of increased suicide rates during the pandemic thus far.” (Jagannathan, 10/19)
NPR:
Empathy Overload? How To Care For Yourself While Supporting Others
Feeling overwhelmed? Maybe the parent of a preschooler in your family just called to say they need extra help with child care, and a sick neighbor wants to know if you can pick up some groceries for her. Meanwhile, your best friend keeps calling, wanting to vent. In less stressful times, perhaps, you'd have jumped to help out and lend an ear. But after months of social isolation, juggling work demands, and caring for loved ones, the balance has started to tip. Suddenly your own need for emotional support is outweighing your capacity for kindness. (Fraga and Crowe, 10/17)
In related news —
AP:
Mental Health Experts To Pair With Cops In Northern Illinois
Winnebago County sheriff’s deputies and Rockford police officers will pair with mental health experts when responding to emergency psychiatric and suicidal episodes as a new approach over arrests. Law enforcement will team with Rosecrance crisis-intervention specialists to create a three-month pilot program, beginning next month, in efforts to divert people in psychiatric crises away from the criminal justice system and into treatment instead, Winnebago County Sheriff Gary Caruana said. (10/17)
WBUR:
Removing Cops From Behavioral Crisis Calls: 'We Need To Change The Model'
In what will be among the largest and boldest urban police reform experiment in decades San Francisco is creating and preparing to deploy teams of professionals from the fire and health departments — not police — to respond to most calls for people in a psychiatric, behavioral or substance abuse crisis. Instead of police, these types of crisis calls will mostly be handled by new unarmed mobile teams comprised of paramedics, mental health professionals and peer support counselors starting next month. (Westervelt, 10/19)
AP:
New Hampshire Gets Federal Mental Health Grant
New Hampshire has been awarded more than $300,000 to reduce crime and recidivism among defendants who have mental health issues, the U.S. attorney’s office announced. U.S. Attorney Scott W. Murray said the $326,150 Department of Justice grant will go to Carroll County to support adult and juvenile justice initiatives. The programs aim to provide care before, during and after incarceration for those with serious mental illness. The funding also goes to support training to law enforcement and their partner mental health and substance abuse authorities with a goal of improving the outcomes of mental ill defendants. (10/17)
The Washington Post:
Fatal Police Shootings Of Mentally Ill People More Likely In Small And Midsized Areas
The final moments of Stacy Kenny’s life are captured on a recorded 911 call. Kenny, who had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, begs an emergency operator to explain why she’s been pulled over. Amid screaming and rustling sounds, police officers smash the windows on her red Nissan, Taser her twice, punch her in the face more than a dozen times and try to pull her out by her hair. But Kenny, 33, who legally had changed her gender but still appeared to be a man, was anchored to the car by a locked seat belt. Her life ends, as does the 911 call, when she tries to flee by driving away with one of the officers still inside the car. There’s a burst of gunfire, then an officer says: “We are all okay. Bad guy down.” (Kindy, Tate, Jenkins and Mellnik, 10/17)
Cities Push To Expand Shelters For Homeless This Winter
Both Boston and New Orleans struggle with ways to provide more shelter beds during the pandemic. News reports are on care in rural areas, dementia, knuckle cracking and arthritis, mammographies, and more.
WBUR:
'We're Not Going Back To Crowded Shelters': The Scramble For Space To Shelter Homeless In Pandemic Winter
Homeless service providers in Massachusetts are scrambling to make sure they have enough space to shelter people and provide protection against the coronavirus as winter approaches. Ntyshall Moore is one of those people. She said she's been homeless in Boston since she checked out of the state foster care system when she was 18. (Jolicoeur, 10/16)
New Orleans Times-Picayune:
New Orleans' Homeless Numbers Will Rise, Advocates Warn; Public Schools Plea For Funding To Help
Advocates and officials with NOLA Public Schools say there are likely thousands of youth in the city who are like [Destiny] Hodges was, homeless students who have become more vulnerable since the pandemic has further strained fiscal resources, made couch-surfing more dangerous and made it difficult to connect with people who can help. They're asking Congress for $2.8 billion in emergency COVID-19 funding to help homeless youth age 22 and under attending local schools, living in shelters and crashing with friends or distant family. (Hasselle, 10/17)
North Carolina Health News:
Early Assessment Can Save Rural Patients With Chest Pain A Hospital Trip
In an election year where soaring health care costs are on voters’ minds, a new collaboration aims to help rural cardiac patients avoid a potentially unnecessary — and costly — trip to the emergency department. The $1.2 million program, slated to begin in mountainous Wilkes County early next year, will bring doctors and nurses to the scene of medical emergencies through telehealth. The doctors and nurses — most of them experts in emergency medicine — will help first responders evaluate patients with chest pain to decide the most appropriate next step, be it a hospital visit or a trip to a county health department for further tests. (Engel-Smith, 10/19)
The Washington Post:
Dementia Isn't Just Forgetting Names And Words
The number of cases of dementia in the United States is rising as baby boomers age, raising questions for boomers themselves and also for their families, caregivers and society. Dementia, which is not technically a disease but a term for impaired ability to think, remember or make decisions, is one of the most feared impairments of old age. Incidence increases dramatically as people move into their 90s. About 5 percent of those 71 to 79 have dementia, and about 37 percent of those about 90 live with it. (Archbald-Pannone, 10/18)
The Washington Post:
Knuckle Cracking May Harm Your Hands
Ignoring generations of parents who’ve warned that knuckle cracking is bad for you, between 20 and 54 percent of Americans continue to engage in this annoying nervous habit. Many have been reassured by repeated clinical reports over the decades that there is no strong evidence that knuckle cracking causes arthritis. A 2018 Harvard Medical School blog went so far as to pronounce the practice “harmless.” “Harmless” is overstating it, however, argue experts who have studied the fine print of the research. Even as there’s no strong link to arthritis — specifically osteoarthritis, the degeneration of the cartilage cushioning the ends of bones — cracking knuckles, they conclude, may still harm your hands. (Ellison, 10/17)
The Augusta Chronicle:
Augusta University Study To Look At Mammography, Barriers To Screening In Black And Hispanic Breast Cancer Death Rates
Geraldine Davis, 77, laughs when asked about how long she has been getting an annual mammogram. “Forever, forever,” she said. She nearly considered stopping after she got into her 70s but decided to ask her doctor, who convinced her to keep with it. “And that next mammogram something showed up,” she said, in July 2018. Hers was caught very early and she only had to have the tiny tumor and some lymph nodes removed. But many women like her are not as fortunate. (Corwin, 10/16)
KHN:
‘An Arm And A Leg’: Vetting TikTok Mom’s Advice For Dealing With Debt Collectors
TikTok mom Shaunna Burns used to be a debt collector, so she knows a few things about what’s legal and what’s not when a company contacts you to settle a debt. We fact-checked her advice with a legal expert: Jenifer Bosco, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center. Bosco said most of Burns’ advice totally checks out. A recent report from ProPublica shows that debt collectors have thrived during the pandemic; they’re out in force to get people to pay up. But we have rights. Scroll down for some consumer protection resources. (Weissmann, 10/19)
In school news —
Politico:
Colleges Cancel Partying Holiday To Tamp Down Virus Spread
The scenes from spring break earlier this year make college presidents shudder now: Partygoers on the beach in Florida barely inches from their maskless, sweating companions. Jammed lines at Walt Disney World. Students flying back to campus on still-packed flights before state and campus shutdowns kicked in. Not again. ... FSU and dozens of other colleges and universities nationwide aren’t taking any chances with spring break in 2021, even though it will have been a year since the pandemic set in. They have rearranged their calendars to wipe out the annual ritual entirely to keep students from their uninhibited and unsupervised sunny sojourns.
(Shah, 10/18)
Boston Globe:
Thousands Of Boston Public School Students Cut Off From Dental Care
When school closed suddenly in March, Boston students not only lost the daily connection to teachers and learning, but dental services that the city’s most vulnerable children depend on for critical care. That has left nearly 4,000 Boston public school students without an opportunity to see a dentist or hygienist in school this academic year, practitioners say, a significant concern given the strong correlation between poor oral health and learning loss and the risk of chronic illnesses. (Irons, 10/18)
The New York Times:
The Challenges Of Remote Learning For Children Who Stutter
Like all of the students at her Bronx high school, Kaitlyn Tineo had to contend with the social awkwardness and technology glitches that were common during the early days of remote learning. But Kaitlyn, a 15-year-old sophomore, had a compounding challenge: She stutters. On the first day of school, she emailed five of her teachers. “It takes a bit for me to say what I want to say,” she wrote, “so please have some patience with me.” (Marder, 10/15)
Strong Backlash Against Restrictions Meets New Daily Case Records In Eastern Europe
News reports are from Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Germany, Italy, France, Belgium, Israel and Russia.
ABC News:
Eastern Europe Largely Avoided Coronavirus 1st Wave, Now It's Battling Outbreaks And Outrage Over New Restrictions
At a "Farewell COVID" party in June, thousands of Prague residents dined outdoors at a 500-meter long table across the Charles Bridge to celebrate the end of the lockdown measures. The Czech Republic was being hailed by the rest of Europe for successfully stopping the virus after closing its borders and putting in place the harshest lockdown on the continent. Now the country is in the midst of a strong outbreak, with case numbers rising above anything recorded in the spring -- and already there are signs renewed restrictions won't be greeted favorably. (Guenford and Jovanovic, 10/18)
The Washington Post:
Italy's Second Wave Of Covid-19 Is Hitting The South Hard
Italy is about to test the value of "flattening the curve." When northern Italy became the epicenter of the pandemic in the spring, one urgent concern was that the country’s coronavirus outbreak would quickly spread to the less-prosperous south and overwhelm under-resourced regional health systems. That fear wasn’t realized. A strict nationwide lockdown largely contained the virus in the north and brought the outbreak under control. (Harlan and Pitrelli, 10/17)
AP:
French Virus Curfew Produces Eerie Quiet On Streets Of Paris
The streets of Paris and eight other French cities were deserted on Saturday night on the first day of the government-imposed 9 p.m. curfew that is scheduled to last for at least four weeks. The measure was announced by French President Emmanuel Macron to curb the resurgent coronavirus as new infections peaked to over 30,000 a day. Macron said the curfews were needed to stop local hospitals from becoming overrun. (10/17)
Politico:
Coronavirus ‘Tsunami’ Nearing Belgium, Health Minister Warns
Coronavirus transmission is slipping out of control in Belgium, Health Minister Frank Vandenbroucke said Sunday, on the eve of new restrictions in the country. “We are really very close to a tsunami,” he warned, speaking to broadcaster RTL. “We no longer control what is happening.” New restrictions are set to take effect on Monday, including the closure of all bars and restaurants, and a midnight curfew nationwide. (Wheaton, 10/18)
The Washington Post:
Israel Imposes Second Covid Lockdown. Citizens Are Ignoring It.
As one of the few countries to return to a complete lockdown amid a new surge in coronavirus infections, Israel is learning that freezing a nation in place is even more difficult the second time around. Israel's experience could hold lessons for other governments looking to stem the pandemic's stubborn grip across the world. (Hendriz and Eglash, 10/18)
AP:
Russia Shuns Tough Restrictions Even As Infections Soar
It’s Friday night in Moscow, and popular bars and restaurants in the city center are packed. No one except the staff is wearing a mask or bothers to keep their distance. There is little indication at all that Russia is being swept by a resurgence of coronavirus infections. “I believe that everyone will have the disease eventually,” says Dr. Alexandra Yerofeyeva, an internal medicine specialist at an insurance company, while sipping a cocktail at The Bix bar in Moscow. She adds cheerfully: “Nothing ventured, nothing gained.” (Litvinova, 10/17)
Editorial pages focus on these public health issues and more.
Modern Healthcare:
COVID-19 Adds Urgency To The Fight Against Food Insecurity
We live in one of the most plentiful nations on the planet. Yet 1 in 6 people may face hunger in 2020, including 1 in 4 children. This public health crisis is unacceptable. And it is one that we must join together to address. As the CEOs of Feeding America, the nation's largest domestic hunger-relief organization, and Anthem, one of the nation's leading health companies, we have witnessed the devastating impact food insecurity can have on our nation's health. Understanding that no single entity can combat this growing national crisis, Anthem and Feeding America are working together to help deliver solutions. (Claire Babineaux-Fontenot and Gail K. Boudreaux, 10/16)
Stat:
Medicare Must Speed Coverage For Breakthrough Digital Therapeutics
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recently issued a draft rule that could dramatically improve access to evidence-based treatments that can be delivered virtually. But it won’t unless CMS makes another seemingly simple change regarding benefit categories. Covid-19 has killed more than 180,000 Medicare beneficiaries to date, representing about 80% of all Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. That means there’s a pressing need for safe and effective socially distanced digital therapeutics. (Andrey Ostrovsky, 10/19)
The Hill:
Should COVID Still Force Us To Postpone Elective Surgery Or Forgo A Trip To The ER?
In March, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) urged people to stay away from crowded emergency rooms and put-off elective surgery, including heart procedures, to reduce potential coronavirus exposure. As early as April, doctors worried that people experiencing life-threatening emergencies were avoiding hospitals. Those fears were validated. (Dr. Jonathan Fielding, 10/18)
Boston Globe:
Neglect Has Become Far Too Common At ICE Detention Centers
There’s no evidence at this point to substantiate a whistle-blower’s shocking allegation that a doctor was performing unneeded hysterectomies on unsuspecting detainees at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Ocilla, Ga. But it seems clear that something very disturbing was happening at the facility — and that ICE’s approach to detention, and care for its detainees, needs to change. (10/18)
The Hill:
Why The Nobel Prize Shows The US And China Need To Work Together On Gene Editing
Last week, two women — Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier — were awarded the Nobel Prize for their groundbreaking discovery of an enzyme system (CRISPR-Cas9) that can edit an organism’s genetic code with extreme precision. As the Nobel committee recognized, this discovery has had a revolutionary impact on the life sciences. There are arguably fewer discoveries in recent years that have been met with as much excitement about the possibilities — from treating cancer patients to developing new crops to rapidly developing diagnostic tools in pandemics such as COVID-19 — coupled with as much concern of its use and application. (Mahlet N. Mesfin and Scott Moore, 10/18)
Houston Chronicle:
Another Victim Of Texas’ Failure To Expand Medicaid? Kids.
Not all our troubles can be blamed on the pandemic. Even before the novel coronavirus outbreak, the number of children living without health coverage in the United States had risen to the highest levels in more than a decade. (10/19)
Viewpoints: Pros, Cons Of The Great Barrington Declaration; Lessons On Trump's Antibody Cocktail
Opinion writers weigh in on these pandemic topics and others.
Dallas Morning News:
It’s Time To Take A Focused Approach To COVID-19 Protection And Stop Acting Rashly
We support the Great Barrington Declaration and its strategy of focused protection of the vulnerable and freedom to choose individual levels of protection for others. The declaration has been signed by leading epidemiologists, scientists and medical professionals. This internationally endorsed, nonpartisan, scientifically based strategy of how to respond to the pandemic and its subsequent policy responses is based on the most current COVID-19 data. (Rodney X. Sturdivant, Andrew G. Glen and Mark Arvidson, 10/18)
The New York Times:
Herd Immunity? Or ‘Mass Murder’?
No matter their politics, people nearly always listen to those who say what they want to hear. Hence, it is no surprise that the White House and several governors are now paying close attention to the “Great Barrington Declaration,” a proposal written by a group of well-credentialed scientists who want to shift Covid-19 policy toward achieving herd immunity — the point at which enough people have become immune to the virus that its spread becomes unlikely. (John M. Barry, 10/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Where Do I Go To Get My Covid Antibody Cocktail?
Covid researchers are racing the clock. They’ve made enormous progress on therapies and vaccines, but they aren’t far enough along to arrest the current surge of Covid infections as winter approaches. One of the biggest challenges is making sure the new treatments reach the patients who need them most. The most immediate opportunity comes from antibody drugs that can be used both as treatment and prophylaxis. President Trump and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie both recovered after they received antibody combinations when their symptoms were worsening. These medications are likely to be most effective when used before or soon after symptoms begin. The Food and Drug Administration is reviewing evidence for the emergency authorization of these drugs, aiming to get them to Covid patients before they need to be hospitalized. (Scott Gottlieb and Mark McClellan, 10/18)
USA Today:
COVID Vaccine Is The Only Way To Achieve Herd Immunity On This Disease
Winter is coming and we are headed towards the feared intersection of COVID-19 and flu season. Yet already the coronavirus is surging across the world and the United States, the global leader in number of coronavirus deaths, is moving closer to a quarter-million fatalities. Our medical system could be overwhelmed if hospitalizations increase. This is why I am concerned about the reports that some officials and policymakers in the White House are considering “herd immunity” as a strategy to combat the pandemic. This is dangerous, callous and flawed thinking. (Thomas Ken Lew, 10/19)
Stat:
The Rose Garden Superspreader Convocation Was A 'Never Event'
President Donald Trump’s surprisingly rapid discharge from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, coupled with conflicting and vague statements on his condition, has created a whirlwind of confusion among the public. There’s a lot we don’t know, such as how he was exposed to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, what kind of treatments he may still be receiving, and how effective they may be. But there is one thing we do know: His infection was absolutely preventable. In health care, the term “never event” refers to a serious, preventable occurrence that could have severe implications for a patient. These are normally things like operating on the wrong knee, giving the wrong medication, or discharging an infant to the wrong person. (Richard J. Baron, Marianne M. Green and Yul D. Ejnes, 10/19)
The New York Times:
There’s A Word For Why We Wear Masks, And Liberals Should Say It
Joe Biden does a pretty good job of talking about this. At a recent town hall in Miami, he said: “I view wearing this mask not so much protecting me, but as a patriotic responsibility. All the tough guys say, ‘Oh, I’m not wearing a mask, I’m not afraid.’ Well, be afraid for your husband, your wife, your son, your daughter, your neighbor, your co-worker. That’s who you’re protecting having this mask on, and it should be viewed as a patriotic duty, to protect those around you.” (Michael Tomasky, 10/17)
Bloomberg:
Ardern's NZ Election Victory Shows Voters Want Covid Action
For governments facing a growing wave of coronavirus cases as fall turns to winter, there’s a stark lesson in Saturday’s stunning election victory for New Zealand’s incumbent Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern: Voters really want their governments to suppress the pandemic. A landslide victory means Ardern could govern with the first outright majority since her country adopted proportional representation in the 1990s, with her Labour party on track to win the largest share of the vote in 70 years. (David Fickling, 10/17)