Weekly Edition: June 5, 2020
Must-Reads Of The Week
Jordan Rau
KHN senior correspondent Jordan Rau takes a spin through this week's essential health care news.
Police Using Rubber Bullets On Protesters That Can Kill, Blind Or Maim For Life
Liz Szabo
Police in multiple cities are using supposedly “nonlethal” crowd-control methods from rubber bullets to tear gas bombs to pepper-spray projectiles.
Social Media Fears About Lack Of Coverage For Protest Injuries Are Overblown
Michelle Andrews
After some protests over the death of George Floyd resulted in violence, online discussions raised concerns that health plans might deny medical coverage. Although plans do sometimes make exclusions for “illegal acts” or riots, experts say concerns by people who are protesting Floyd’s death may be overstated.
Open (Your Wallet) Wide: Dentists Charge Extra For Infection Control
Phil Galewitz
A growing number of dental offices across the country are now charging patients an “infection control fee” of $10 to $20 to pay for masks, face shields, gowns and air purifiers to help keep the offices free of the coronavirus.
Coronavirus Surprise: IRS Allows Midyear Insurance And FSA Changes
Michelle Andrews
Last month, the Internal Revenue Service announced it would let employees add, drop or change some of their benefits for the remainder of 2020. The catch: Your employer has to allow the changes. KHN explains how it could work.
‘Why Do We Always Get Hit First?’ Proposed Budget Cuts Target Vulnerable Californians
Samantha Young
Safety-net health care programs that keep low-income Californians out of nursing homes are on the chopping block as Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers attempt to plug a massive budget deficit caused by the COVID-19 emergency.
Hiring A Diverse Army To Track COVID-19 Amid Reopening
Carmen Heredia Rodriguez and Anna Almendrala
Experts estimate local and state health departments will have to hire 100,000 to 300,000 people as contact tracers to get the economy back on track. Many states are trying hard to hire from the racial and ethnic minority communities hit hardest by the virus.
Judges Try To Balance Legal Rights And Courtroom Health
Brian Krans
Courtrooms aren’t built for social distancing, and pandemics don’t offer ideal conditions for fulfilling the right to a speedy trial. But, eventually, every court in the nation will have to reckon with a return that may risk safety to some degree.
In Hard-Hit Areas, COVID’s Ripple Effects Strain Mental Health Care Systems
Cheryl Platzman Weinstock
In areas hit hard by the coronavirus, such as Detroit, behavioral health care workers have been overburdened and forced to scale back services at the same time people battling mental health disorders became more stressed and anxious.
Pandemic Presents New Hurdles, And Hope, For People Struggling With Addiction
Nina Feldman, WHYY
Relaxed regulations in response to the pandemic means more access to addiction treatment medications. But recovery programs are accepting fewer people, and the danger of overdose remains high.
COVID-19 Overwhelms Border ICUs
Heidi de Marco
Some California hospitals near the Mexican border have received so many COVID-19 patients the past few weeks that they have had to divert some to other facilities. Hospital officials say most of the infected patients are U.S. citizens or legal residents who live in, or recently traveled to, Mexico and came to the U.S. for care.
Montana’s Tribal Nations Preserve COVID Restrictions To Preserve Their Cultures
Kathleen McLaughlin
Some of Montana’s Native American nations are holding firm on coronavirus protections even as the rest of Montana reopens. They’ve got more at stake, they say, in protecting their elders who preserve their endangered culture.
Hype Collides With Science As FDA Tries To Rein In ‘Wild West’ of COVID Blood Tests
JoNel Aleccia and Anna Maria Barry-Jester
Amid questions about the accuracy of the COVID-19 antibody tests flooding the market — and the usefulness of the results they provide — the FDA has belatedly stepped in to try to rein in the chaos.
ICUs Become A ‘Delirium Factory’ For COVID Patients
Liz Szabo
The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 targets more than just the lungs. New research shows it also penetrates the brain, complicating treatment and risking lifelong damage. And the pandemic limits hospitals from running MRIs or other tests on coronavirus patients.
California AG Seeks More Power To Battle Merger-Hungry Health Care Chains
Rachel Bluth
Xavier Becerra has made battling health care consolidation a priority since he became attorney general. Now that COVID-19 threatens vulnerable health care practices, he’s pushing to expand his authority to slow health care mergers.
‘An Arm And A Leg’: The $7,000 COVID Test And Other Lessons From SEASON-19
Dan Weissmann
“An Arm and a Leg” wraps an all-COVID podcast season with three different perspectives on what the pandemic is costing us — and what might come next.
KHN’s ‘What The Health?’: Protests And The Pandemic
The outrage over the death of an African American man, George Floyd, after he was restrained and knelt on by Minneapolis police officers has sparked national protests, including in places where the coronavirus is still spreading. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s attempt to withdraw the U.S. from the World Health Organization could have ramifications for Americans. Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Mary Agnes Carey of KHN and Joanne Kenen of Politico join KHN’s Julie Rovner to discuss this and more. Also, Rovner interviews Jonathan Oberlander, a University of North Carolina health policy professor and the editor of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, about articles examining the COVID-19 pandemic through the lens of health inequity and structural racism.
Newsom Likes To ‘Go Big’ But Doesn’t Always Deliver
Angela Hart
The COVID-19 pandemic is showcasing California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s leadership style to a national audience. The first-term Democrat doesn’t shy away from making splashy announcements and lofty promises, but his plans often lack detail and, in some cases, follow-through.
Efforts To Curb Congenital Syphilis Falter In COVID’s Shadow
Anna Maria Barry-Jester
A new federal report sheds light on the reasons newborn syphilis rates are on the rise despite simple treatment options. But amid the COVID-19 pandemic, public health departments will struggle to respond.
Democratic Super PAC Uses Familiar Political Play To Hit Trump On Medicare
Victoria Knight
This is a tactic that we’ve seen before.