Tag: Kaiser

  • Friday, March 11, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    Friday, March 11, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    How Many Have Died From Covid? Toll May Be Triple The Confirmed Tally

    The global death toll from the covid-19 pandemic has been alarmingly undercounted, researchers find. They estimate the total to be 18.2 million people.


    Bloomberg:
    Covid Study Finds 18 Million Deaths, Three Times Official Tally


    The pandemic’s death toll may be three times higher than official Covid-19 records suggest, according to a study that found stark differences across countries and regions. As many as 18.2 million people probably died from Covid in the first two years of the pandemic, researchers found in the first peer-reviewed global estimate of excess deaths. They pointed to a lack of testing and unreliable mortality data to explain the discrepancy with official estimates of roughly 5.9 million deaths. (Gale, 3/10)


    USA Today:
    ‘Very Sobering’: Global Deaths From COVID May Be More Than 3 Times Higher Than Official Toll, Study Says


    As the U.S. approaches the grim milestone of one million COVID-19 deaths, a team of researchers published the first peer-reviewed study looking at excess death estimates on a global scale. The results are alarming, health experts say. Excess deaths is the difference between the number of recorded deaths from all causes and the number of expected deaths based on past trends. Researchers at the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation found an estimated 18.2 million people may have died by the end of 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, more than three times the official toll of 5.9 million, according to the study published Thursday in The Lancet. (Rodriguez, 3/10)

    In more news about covid cases —


    Detroit Free Press:
    Michigan COVID-19 Death Rates By County: Education, Age, Trump Factors


    Who died of COVID-19 in Michigan during the first two years of the coronavirus pandemic was heavily influenced by demographics like age, education level, the county where they lived, vaccination rates — and even who got their vote in the 2020 presidential election. As Michigan marked the grim two-year anniversary Thursday of the day when the first cases were identified, a Free Press analysis of state and federal data shows a higher death rate in counties where a larger share of people voted for Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election. “I would expect to see significant correlation,” said Peter Jacobson, professor emeritus of health law and policy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. (Jordan Shamus and Tanner, 3/11)


    The Boston Globe:
    Number Of COVID-19 Deaths In Mass. Will Drop Under State’s New Counting Method


    The official count of COVID-19 deaths in Massachusetts will decline by about 3,700 under a new surveillance system that state health leaders say more accurately captures the true toll from the virus. “We think this is an absolutely critical step in improving our understanding of who COVID has impacted most significantly during the pandemic,” Dr. Catherine Brown, the state’s epidemiologist, said at a media briefing Thursday. Currently, the state’s reported confirmed and probable deaths total about 23,700. Under the new method, that could drop to about 20,000. But Brown said a team at the state’s health department is still crunching the numbers and would release them Monday. (Lazar, 3/10)


    AP:
    Nevada Shifting To Weekly COVID Stats As Cases Keep Falling 


    State health officials are moving from daily to weekly reporting of COVID-19 statistics as the public health emergency fades and new infections and hospitalizations continue to fall to their lowest levels in Nevada since last June. Beginning next week, they’ll also be changing the way they track the spread and response to the coronavirus, including dropping regular reporting of positivity rates that are increasingly skewed due to widespread use of home-testing results. (Sonner, 3/10)


    Crain’s New York Business:
    NYC Says It Is Ready To Take On ‘Test To Treat’ Initiative


    Despite modest stockpiles of oral COVID treatments, New York City says it is ready to carry out the new federal initiative to treat patients who test positive on the spot. The Department of Health and Human Services on Tuesday outlined details for the “Test to Treat” initiative, introduced by President Joe Biden in his State of the Union address last week. The program allows individuals who receive a positive COVID test result to receive treatment with antiviral pills on the spot. It kicked off Monday, and participating pharmacy-based clinics, federally qualified health centers and long-term-care facilities are eligible to receive direct distributions of molnupiravir and Paxlovid from HHS. Molnupiravir was developed by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics and Paxlovid comes from Pfizer. (Sim, 3/10)

    The ‘Deltacron’ Variant — Something To Worry About, Or Just A ‘Scariant’?

    Experts say it’s too soon to worry about deltacron and that it appears unlikely to spread as easily as omicron. In other covid news, a database created by the Federation of State Medical Boards shows that at least 26 states have proposed or passed legislation that would make it easier for patients to get ivermectin, USA Today reported.


    USA Today:
    A New COVID Variant Called Deltacron? Here’s What We Know


    A potential new COVID-19 variant, a combination of the delta and omicron variants – you can call it “deltacron” – has been identified. The World Health Organization said Wednesday that the new COVID-19 combination has been detected in France, the Netherlands and Denmark. It’s also been found in the U.S., according to a new report soon to be published on research site MedRxiv, and viewed by USA TODAY. The San Mateo, California-headquartered lab Helix, which works with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to track COVID-19, sequenced 29,719 positive COVID-19 samples collected Nov. 22 to Feb. 13 from across the U.S., according to the research team, which included the University of Washington Medical Center and testing company Thermo Fisher Scientific. (Snider, 3/10)


    Deseret News:
    Should You Worry About The New ‘Deltacron’ Variant?


    Society has had a run-in with a “deltacron” variant before. In January, scientists in Cyprus said they had discovered a COVID-19 variant that mixed the omicron and delta variants, per Bloomberg News. However, the medical community — including biologist Eric Topol of the Scripps Research Translational Institute — disputed the science behind “deltacron.” Experts called it a “scariant” of COVID-19 that wouldn’t pose much of a threat, but made for a scary headline in the news. (Scribner, 3/10)


    The Atlantic:
    So … What Will The Next Variant Look Like?


    Let’s start with the worst-case scenario, because it’s also probably the least likely. A new variant checks each of the Big Three boxes: more transmissible, more deadly, and much more evasive of the defenses that vaccines and other SARS-CoV-2 flavors have laid down. In this version of events, even immunized people could suffer high rates of severe disease; additional boosters might not mount a sufficient blockade. The chasm in protection between the vaccinated and unvaccinated would start to close—perhaps rapidly, if the new variant collides with us when many people aren’t up-to-date on their shots and population immunity is low. (Wu, 3/9)

    In other pandemic news —


    Axios:
    Axios-Ipsos Poll: Media Habits Defined The COVID Culture War


    The key factor determining how Americans have handled COVID-19 — more than race, education or even political affiliation — is where they get their news, according to an analysis of two years of data from our Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index. Partisan divisions weaken U.S. leaders’ ability to deal with such existential crises — and the modern media landscape feeds that cycle. In March 2020, when everything changed, roughly nine in 10 Americans, regardless of their preferred media outlet, said they trusted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Within weeks, though, that trust was plunging among Americans who mostly watch Fox News or other conservative outlets, as well as those who cited no source. (Talev, Bettelheim and Alberti, 3/11)


    The 19th:
    Moving In With Other Adults Has Become A Lifeline For Single Moms Hit ‘Tenfold’ By The Pandemic


    As a single parent, Gabriela Villagomez-Morales faces one question with uncomfortable regularity: What are you willing to do for your kids? It’s the question Villagomez-Morales’ own mother asked her when, at the start of the pandemic, her job at a child care facility ended indefinitely. Other workers could tap into coronavirus relief, including enhanced unemployment payments, to keep the lights on and a roof over their heads. But despite being a taxpayer who contributes to that system, Villagomez-Morales and other undocumented immigrants couldn’t access those programs. Without those payments, she had no way to make rent in the home she shared with her four children, ages 20, 18, 10 and 9. So when her mom posed the question, they both knew the answer. (Carrazana and Mithani, 3/10)

    And in news about covid vaccines and treatments —


    USA Today:
    Lawmakers Push Legislation To Protect Doctors Who Prescribe Ivermectin For COVID-19. Can They Do That?


    Dozens of state lawmakers push bills that would make it easier for doctors to prescribe ivermectin for COVID-19, even though the anti-parasitic has not been proved effective at preventing or treating the disease. As of Thursday, at least 26 states have proposed or passed legislation that would increase patient access to the drug, according to a database created by the Federation of State Medical Boards. Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, chair of the department of medical ethics and health policy at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, said the bills “drive (him) nuts.” (Rodriguez, 3/10)


    CIDRAP:
    Study: Third COVID MRNA Vaccine Dose Needed Against Omicron


    mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective in preventing adult hospitalizations from the Alpha, Delta, and Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variants, but three doses are needed to reach the same efficacy against Omicron as two doses offer against the first two strains, suggests an observational test-negative study yesterday in BMJ.A team led by University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) researchers prospectively estimated the effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines against COVID-19 hospitalization among 5,728 adult COVID-19 patients and 5,962 uninfected controls at 21 US hospitals. (Van Beusekom, 3/10)


    The Boston Globe:
    Scientists Say We Need Universal Coronavirus Vaccines, But Will They Arrive In Time?


    Over the last several months, the COVID pandemic has become an exercise of vaccination whack-a-mole. A variant arises, and the vaccine manufacturers figure out how to tweak their product to address it — but not quickly enough. New variants keep arising, making the variant-specific shots outdated before we even get a chance to use them. But what if scientists could develop one universal vaccine that could address all variants? That work is underway at academic labs and biotech firms, including several in Boston, and in recent months, progress has picked up speed. (Cross, 3/10)


    The Atlantic:
    Vaccinating Kids Has Never Been Easy


    In September 1957—two years after church bells rang in celebration of the new polio vaccine, two years after people rejoiced in the streets, two years after Americans began lining up for their shots—the proportion of children fully vaccinated against polio remained at about 50 percent. Supply was not the problem. Nor were doubts about the vaccine’s safety or efficacy, concluded a report from around that time by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, now known as the March of Dimes, which had funded research into the vaccine. But the “initial excitement” had nevertheless “faded,” and vaccine proponents found themselves in an incremental slog to reach the remaining unvaccinated Americans. Well into the 1960s, doctors held “Sabin Oral Sundays,” dispensing sugar cubes dosed with a drop of the oral vaccine invented by Albert Sabin. It would ultimately take more than two decades to go from ringing church bells to polio eradication in the U.S. (Zhang, 3/10)


    FiercePharma:
    Novavax, Eyeing The COVID ‘Vaccine Hesitant’ And Kids, Unveils New Education Campaigns As Nuvaxovid Nears US Finish Line 


    Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson were quickest off the mark in getting COVID vaccines into American arms, but Novavax is hoping to add another pandemic vaccine to the U.S. mix soon—and it’s pushing new campaigns to get the word out. The biopharma, which has approvals and authorizations in Europe and around the world, is now on the cusp of a potential green light in the U.S. And with a market comes the need for marketing. (Adams, 3/10)

    In related news —


    FiercePharma:
    Moderna CEO’s Pay Jumps 41{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} To $18.2M As COVID Vaccine Giant Expands Globally


    Moderna’s business took flight in 2021 thanks to authorizations for its COVID-19 vaccine, and so did its CEO’s pay. Moderna is hiking CEO Stephane Bancel’s 2021 pay by 41{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} to $18.2 million, citing “unprecedented growth” at the mRNA specialist, a securities filing (PDF) shows. The CEO pay bump comes as the Massachusetts biotech generated $18.5 billion in revenues last year, a massive increase over the prior year when it recorded $803 million. (Liu, 3/10)

  • .9 Million Helmsley Charitable Trust Grant Helps KFF Establish Kaiser Health News Rural Health Reporting Desk

    $3.9 Million Helmsley Charitable Trust Grant Helps KFF Establish Kaiser Health News Rural Health Reporting Desk

    Jan. 27, 2022 — SAN FRANCISCO and SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — KFF is expanding its KHN (Kaiser Wellbeing Information) operation by creating a rural overall health reporting desk supported by a $3.9 million grant from The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Belief.

    KFF will increase KHN’s editorial team and build a workforce of journalists and social media professionals in the states of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Whole-time reporters and freelancers from these states and KHN’s nationwide newsroom will produce and distribute explanatory, business, and investigative stories on well being treatment challenges applicable to rural communities.

    The group of journalists will deliver unbiased, precise, and trustworthy reporting on a huge variety of elaborate issues, which includes the ongoing pandemic, access to well being protection and treatment, the stress of health and fitness treatment prices on shoppers, housing and schooling, the opioid epidemic, mental wellness, medical center closures, the lack of crucial lifesaving tools, and burgeoning improvements in telehealth and medication. KHN will lover with neighborhood media in the course of the region to generate deeply sourced tales that shed light on underreported concerns.

    As with all its journalism, KHN stories produced by the Rural Well being Desk will be made freely accessible for publication by media outlets across the country, released on khn.org and dispersed by way of KHN’s social media platforms.

    “Rural America’s small populace density gives sizeable challenges in the supply of wellbeing care providers, nonetheless at the identical time devoted providers are providing major-notch treatment via progressive methods, like state-of-the-art telemedicine,” explained Walter Panzirer, a Trustee for the Helmsley Charitable Have faith in. “KHN’s new rural health and fitness reporting desk will dive deep into these issues and spotlight initiatives that guarantee a person’s ZIP code doesn’t establish their health care results.”

    “Rural wellbeing demands much more focus, and with this grant we can deliver that,” claimed KFF President and CEO Drew Altman, who is also KHN’s founding publisher. “We are thrilled to develop our work in this crucial spot, and we are grateful for the help of the Helmsley Charitable Belief.”

    The institution of the Rural Health Desk follows information past summertime that KHN is opening an Atlanta-dependent Southern Bureau to deliver extra journalism centered on wellbeing, race, fairness, and poverty in the region. KHN also operates regional bureaus in California, the Midwest, and the Mountain States.

    Media corporations fascinated in functioning with KHN should really make contact with us at [email protected] and individuals fascinated in becoming a member of our initiatives to increase and make improvements to health journalism in rural The us and further than should really make contact with KFF at [email protected]. Employment opportunities for the Rural Health Desk will be posted quickly listed here.

    About KFF and KHN

    KHN (Kaiser Wellbeing Information) is a countrywide newsroom that creates in-depth journalism about well being concerns. Alongside one another with Policy Assessment and Polling, KHN is just one of the a few major operating courses at KFF (Kaiser Relatives Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit firm offering information on wellbeing troubles to the country.

    About the Helmsley Charitable Have faith in

    The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Have faith in aspires to improve lives by supporting remarkable endeavours in the U.S. and all over the planet in health and fitness and choose spot-based initiatives. Given that beginning active grantmaking in 2008, Helmsley has fully commited a lot more than $3 billion for a large selection of charitable uses. Helmsley’s Rural Health care Application resources ground breaking jobs that use info technologies to join rural patients to crisis health care care, provide the most recent medical therapies to patients in distant spots, and give point out-of-the-art training for rural hospitals and EMS staff. To date, this application has awarded additional than $500 million to organizations and initiatives in the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Minnesota, Iowa, Montana, and Nevada. For a lot more information and facts, take a look at below.

  • Friday, March 11, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    Wednesday, January 26, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    Texas Reduce Medicaid Staffing — Shortly This May perhaps Induce Problems For Signups

    According to a report, throughout the pandemic, Texas reduce the selection of people functioning in Medicaid expert services even as a million Texans acquired protection because of to crisis federal funding. Now, staffing issues may perhaps impact an anticipated flood of new and returning applicants.


    Houston Chronicle:
    Texas Slash Medicaid Staffing Throughout The Pandemic. Thousands and thousands Are Now At Possibility Of Becoming Dropped From The Software


    A lot more than 1 million Texans were being added to Medicaid protection through the pandemic, lots of of them little ones, thanks to unexpected emergency federal funding that deters states from dropping recipients throughout the well being disaster. But these gains could shortly be erased, according to individual advocates, who stress that state well being officers are not prepared for the inflow of new and returning Medicaid apps that could pour in as early as this spring, when the Biden administration is scheduled to elevate the emergency declaration. (Blackman, 1/25)

    In California information —


    Los Angeles Occasions:
    COVID-19 Unwell Spend In California Would Return Below New Deal


    Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers attained an agreement Tuesday to all over again require companies to offer personnel with up to two weeks of supplemental paid out unwell leave to recuperate from COVID-19 or treatment for a relatives member with the virus. The legislation, which lawmakers would most likely quick-track to the governor in the coming months, would apply to all enterprises with 26 or more employees. A identical legislation from 2021 that furnished 80 hours of supplemental paid out unwell leave expired Sept. 30. (Luna and Gutierrez, 1/25)


    Los Angeles Instances:
    No Ifs, Ands Or Butts: California Monthly bill Would Ban One-Use Using tobacco Merchandise Like Cigarette Filters


    California could see fewer cigarette butts and vape pods on the streets underneath a evaluate released Tuesday. Assembly Monthly bill 1690 would ban single-use cigarette filters, e-cigarettes and vape products and solutions in the state with the intention of benefiting the atmosphere and general public health. “For a lot more than 50 percent a century, tobacco filters have prompted a community and environmental well being crisis that identified renewed vigor in the latest several years as the tobacco marketplace began to provide electronic vape products,” Assemblymember Luz Rivas (D-North Hollywood), who released the monthly bill, reported in a news launch Tuesday. (Martinez, 1/25)

    KHN:
    What The Federal ‘No Surprises Act’ Signifies In California 

    Betty Chow, a Los Angeles resident, experienced a cervical disc replaced in August 2020 at a surgical procedure centre that was portion of her Anthem Blue Cross PPO network. 13 months later on, she was blindsided by a invoice for nearly $2,000 from the anesthesiologist who was on her surgical team but was not contracted with her PPO, or most well-liked service provider corporation. (Wolfson, 1/26)

    In abortion and being pregnant information —


    The Texas Tribune:
    Prepared Parenthood Drops Appeal In Lubbock Abortion Circumstance


    When the notion of banning abortion in Lubbock initial came up, the city council declined to acquire it up, arguing the proposal conflicted with point out legislation and federal courtroom precedent. Citizens passed the ordinance via a ballot initiative anyway in May well 2021, empowering non-public citizens, relatively than community officers, to carry lawsuits against any person who assists an individual getting an abortion, like by driving them to a clinic — which the ordinance refers to as “aiding or abetting. ”The ordinance was quickly challenged in court. But now, 8 months later on, Prepared Parenthood has dropped that legal problem, saying “it is crystal clear we simply cannot rely on the courts to secure our constitutional legal rights.” (Klibanoff, 1/25)


    Bloomberg:
    Boycott Pepsi Phone calls Develop Above Donation To Texas Republicans, Abortion Monthly bill


    PepsiCo Inc. is facing a further potential boycott above politics, this time for a $15,000 contribution to the Texas Republican Bash. Abortion-rights advocates are sounding the alarm that the donation, dated Aug. 5 in accordance to condition ethics fee data, arrived practically a few months after Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed into regulation a monthly bill banning most abortions in the state. Pepsi suggests it made the donation in 2020 but that the state party didn’t cash its examine right up until the next year. (Ceron, 1/25)


    AP:
    New Mexico Lawmakers Propose $1 Million For ‘Baby Boxes’ 


    Two lawmakers are proposing funding “baby boxes” in each of New Mexico’s 33 counties in an exertion to improve solutions for dad and mom who want to abandon their toddlers beneath the state’s present safe haven legislation. A invoice to fund the initiative released by Sens. David Gallegos, a Republican, and Leo Jaramillo, a Democrat, would allocate all-around $30,000 for every single of the packing containers, which would be outfitted with warmth regulation and silent alarms. (1/25)

    In other news from throughout the U.S. —


    AP:
    Nationwide Blood Lack Places Idaho Hospitals In Dire Need 


    A nationwide blood scarcity brought about by a surge in omicron scenarios has strike Idaho really hard, with some hospitals practically jogging out of the significant medical source before they are resupplied, point out well being officers stated Tuesday. A great deal of the southern 50 percent of the condition entered disaster specifications of treatment on Monday, partly due to the fact of workers shortages and partly since the inventory of blood solutions employed in transfusions, surgeries and other remedies is operating dangerously low. The designation will allow hospitals to ration treatment as needed when they don’t have sufficient resources for all clients. (Boone, 1/26)


    AP:
    Georgia Lawmakers Purpose To Deal with Spike In Suicides, Overdoses 


    Dealing with a surge in overdose fatalities and rural suicides, Ga lawmakers want to bolster the state’s dismal psychological wellness care system by pressuring personal insurers to strengthen protection and expanding condition funding for procedure and crisis expert services. Users of the condition Legislature are scheduled to unveil a policy package deal for mental wellbeing and compound abuse on Wednesday. Efforts to make certain non-public insurers provide the exact amount of positive aspects for depression, stress and anxiety and other psychological disorders as they do for health care ailments are expected to be a central element of the laws. (Thanawala, 1/26)


    Philadelphia Inquirer:
    CHOP Is Opening A $289 Million Facility In King Of Prussia As Other Hospitals Struggle


    Whilst normal hospitals are fiscally stretched slim by the COVID-19 pandemic, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia is opening a new $289 million, 52-bed healthcare facility fewer than 20 miles northwest of its city flagship, in the coronary heart of King of Prussia’s shopping district. The facility, which has a pediatric emergency division and 16-bed intense treatment device, is supposed to simplicity stress on CHOP’s crowded West Philadelphia hospital and catch the attention of new client people from farther west, who might not have been ready or willing to vacation into Philadelphia for treatment. Opening Wednesday, it shares a campus with one of CHOP’s busiest specialty care centers, on South Goddard Road. (Gantz, 1/25)