Consider This from NPR - There Is No 'Second Wave.' The U.S. Is Still Stuck In The First One
Episode Date: June 15, 2020Nationwide, numbers were never trending downward in any big way. Now in some states that are reopening, they are going up. Oregon and Arizona are two of those places. Each state is taking a different ...approach. Testing is more available than ever before. Some cities are urging people who don't feel sick to get a test, just as a precaution. But WPLN's Blake Farmer reports some insurance companies won't pay for the cost of a test unless it's "medically necessary." Due to the pandemic, a lot of states are making it easier to vote by mail. NPR's Miles Parks says this new process could mean waiting a lot longer for elections results come November. Sign up for 'The New Normal' newsletter. Find and support your local public radio station. Email the show at coronavirusdaily@npr.org. This episode was recorded and published as part of this podcast's former 'Coronavirus Daily' format.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Before we get to the show, just a quick announcement. For months now, this pandemic has been the biggest story in the world, but that's not going to be true forever.
At the same time, we want to keep helping you understand what is happening every day. So
pretty soon, we're going to start bringing you news that's not just about the pandemic.
And we're going to give the show a new name. We're calling it Consider This. What is not changing is
we will keep bringing you the most important news about this virus as
soon as we know it. In the meantime, we would love to hear from you. Our email is coronavirusdaily
at npr.org. Thanks a lot. Okay, so it's time to just say it. We are not in a second wave.
Because across this country, cases never really went down in any big way.
Back in May, the numbers looked a little better
after things started to improve in the Northeast, which was hit really hard.
Then came Memorial Day, warmer weather, and more states opening up.
It might have felt like things were getting better.
They weren't.
The United States is still in the first wave.
We're going to continue seeing 25,000 to 30,000 additional deaths a month.
Ashish Jha with Harvard's Global Health Institute.
This is really quite bad. And the level of virus and the level of disease burden in our country
is very, very large.
Coming up, the U.S. is testing more and more people who's paying for all those tests.
And another reality we will all have to adjust to
is what we won't know on election night.
This is Coronavirus Daily from NPR.
I'm Kelly McEvers.
It's Monday, June 15th.
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Good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us today.
Last week, the governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, made a tough decision.
To all of the business owners who had planned to reopen this weekend,
I want to acknowledge how difficult this is for all of you.
Like a lot of places, Oregon was seeing case numbers go up.
They nearly doubled there in the past two weeks. And hospitalizations were going up too. As Dr. Fauci has said, we don't make the timeline,
the virus makes the timeline. Restaurants, bars, nail salons, tattoo parlors, a lot of them were
ready to open on Friday. Then state health officials decided to hit the brakes. This is essentially a statewide
yellow light. Businesses will have to wait another week at least. So this has always been about
saving lives. Not all states are taking that approach. And it's also about livelihoods in
the state of Arizona. Over the past week, Arizona has seen an average of more than 1,300 new COVID-19 cases each day.
But Governor Doug Ducey is not slowing down reopening plans.
He is talking a lot about hospital capacity.
We put the stay-at-home order there
so we could prepare for what we are going through right now.
His message seemed to be Arizona can deal with
the cost of reopening if that cost is more people in the hospital. We can care for Arizonans that
need it. We can provide them the hospital care and comfort and attention. And today we can do that. Saskia Popescu, an epidemiologist based in Phoenix, says it's not just when Arizona decided to open up.
Its stay-home order was lifted a month ago.
It was also about how fast they did it.
A lot of the concerns surrounding the reopening of Arizona, like many states that were not quite there yet,
was that it was done so rapidly, there wasn't time to make sure we were doing it appropriately and correctly.
Stores, restaurants, gyms were allowed to open with some general guidelines to socially distance,
all in the span of a few weeks.
And the state has no mask requirements for public spaces.
Also, it's important to say that the rise in cases isn't just because of more testing.
The rate of tests coming back positive is up, too.
Other states are now watching Arizona to see how things go.
And in a conference call last week, a deputy director at the CDC, Jay Butler,
hinted that some places with rising cases that are planning to reopen might need a plan B. More extensive mitigation efforts, such as what were implemented back in March, may be needed again.
And that is a decision than there used to be.
And that's a good thing.
In some places, there are enough tests for people to get one just out of precaution,
even if they're not feeling sick.
But there's a new issue with that.
Insurance companies argue they can't just pay for everyone to get tested
whenever they feel like it. Here's Blake Farmer of WPLN in Nashville. Lynn Cushing of Nashville
says she had been pretty strict about social distancing until the recent protests, which she
felt compelled to attend. I'd hoped to kind of stay on the periphery or at least along the edge
a little bit. But I didn't think about the fact
that everybody's going to be chanting all these, there's going to be a lot of forced air, you know,
coming out at people in the demonstration.
So the next day after marching in her mask, she went to a curbside clinic for a COVID-19 test.
Cushing knew health plans had to cover
the test and can't even charge a copay. Because I have health insurance, I'm lucky in that regard.
A law passed by Congress requires health plans to cover medically necessary testing,
but as testing capacity grows, a gray area is beginning to appear. Sabrina Corlett at
Georgetown University says the law can be interpreted various ways.
That requirement may only apply if you've been referred for a test by a health care professional after presenting with symptoms of the disease.
Health plans have been erring on the side of patients and paying the full cost.
But the nation's largest insurer, UnitedHealthcare, says in a statement they can only pay for tests deemed medically necessary. Otherwise, they worry about runaway costs.
Christine Groh is the spokesperson for America's health insurance plans.
These are some very big numbers that we are looking at.
The trade group just funded a study that estimates the cost of all the precautionary
testing needed over the next year. More than protesters, they're concerned about everyone returning to offices that may institute testing requirements. They
project it could cost health plans $25 billion a year if the government doesn't step in to pay.
That's why we think it's very important to approach testing with a very strategic approach,
one that's based on science and has very clear direction on who gets tested, how often.
Employment attorneys say most businesses aren't making workers get tested at this point,
settling for temperature checks and questionnaires.
But at least one industry is already staring down the dilemma of who pays.
Christine Thielen is a lawyer with the firm Lane Powell in Portland who represents nursing home companies.
She says one-time testing wouldn't be that big of a deal.
It also adds up for the number of times because, as you know, you take a COVID-19 test today,
but that doesn't mean that three days from now I don't test positive.
Many states are mandating coronavirus tests for nursing home staff every week.
In New York, it's twice a week.
And already,
health plans are balking at the cost. But Thielen says no worker should be asked to pay their own
way. I think employers need to pay for it. As for protesters, many cities are offering to fund the
precautionary tests, including in Nashville. Lynn Cushing was right to be worried. She tested
positive after the march, though she says she knew the risk.
Absolutely, it still feels that way. I don't regret it.
As gatherings resume, even with precautions, people will need more tests.
WPLN's Blake Farmer in Nashville.
We know the pandemic will change a lot of things about voting this November.
It'll change who votes.
The number of new voter registrations have been down dramatically the last few months.
It'll change how.
Some states, but not all, have made it easier to vote by mail.
And it will probably change when we know who won.
Here's NPR's Miles Parks.
On the night of Pennsylvania's June 2nd primary, things looked bleak for Nina Ahmed.
She was running in a crowded primary field for the statewide auditor general position.
If she won, she would become the first woman of color to be nominated for a statewide executive position.
But things weren't looking good.
She trailed by tens of thousands of votes, and supporters started reaching out to her, saying it was a good try.
A lot of people were worried.
They emailed, like, what's going on?
She lost. I'm so sorry.
And I said, just hold your horses.
Ahmed is the former deputy mayor of Philadelphia and also a scientist.
Naturally,
she wanted to wait for all the numbers. It was a full week after Election Day before she took the lead. And it was nine days after Election Day when she finally declared victory. What I'm learning
from this is that you have to trust the process. As states across the country transition to more
voting, it's been a similar story, with results coming days and weeks after voting is complete.
And election experts, like Nate Persily of Stanford University,
say voters need to be patient in November.
We really need to get into a mindset that we will not know
who the winner of the election is on election night.
The biggest reason for the delays is that mail ballots take longer to process than in-person votes. Officials need to verify signatures, open envelopes, and in many states, including
Pennsylvania, much of that can't even begin until election day. Now, that's not inherently a problem.
It doesn't mean anything's going wrong with the election or the tabulation. In fact, those
safeguards are actually in place to protect against fraud. But what keeps experts like
up at night is that if voters don't understand that,
the election becomes fertile ground for conspiracy theories.
In some ways, this is the worst year to have a pandemic that affects election administration
because we were already worrying about disinformation and loss of confidence.
This scenario has played out multiple times already in just the past two years. After the 2018 midterms, Republicans, including President Trump, questioned the
legitimacy of votes that were counted after Election Day in California, Arizona, and Florida
because they skewed more towards Democrats. Many experts worry the same thing will happen again
this year. The problem, according to election officials, is that expectations haven't been set correctly.
The headlines that say this is a disaster, if there's a delay, that's not right.
Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Bookvar.
If we all anticipate that accurate vote counts with a higher volume by mail, or for any reason,
because of a pandemic or because of civil arrest,
if it takes longer because it takes longer to make sure that count is accurate,
then that's the opposite of a disaster.
On the contrary, she said it's a sign that election officials are doing their job
and counting every single vote. NPR's Miles Parks.
Additional reporting in this episode by NPR's Noreet Eisenman,
Will Stone, who's been reporting on Arizona for NPR,
and Amelia Templeton of Oregon Public Broadcasting.
For more on the coronavirus, you can stay up to date with all the news
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The New Normal.
Sign up at npr.org slash newsletters.
I'm Kelly McEvers. We'll be back with more tomorrow.
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