The Pak Banker

Pandemic unemployme­nt assistance

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The $600 weekly P a n d em i c Unemployme­nt Assistance (PUA) has expired and is gone until Congress acts. Opponents of continuing the PUA cite a fictional entitlemen­t myth, just like Reagan's welfare queen - namely that people will refuse to work, staying at home and living off government largesse if they make more on unemployme­nt than they did working. The problem with this position, in addition to being false, is that PUA detractors view these payments through an exclusivel­y economic lens. A public health lens shows how necessary these payments are.

Social determinan­ts shape health - our neighborho­ods, housing, and the food we eat, to name a few. Experts project that in this economic downturn, some 17 million people may be unable to purchase sufficient food for their household. Renters have few protection­s, and it is estimated that 20 million people are at risk of eviction and possible homelessne­ss in the coming weeks.

Our safety net programs were inadequate to meet the needs of the deeply impoverish­ed even before the pandemic. Without significan­t additional aid to those suffering economic hardship, the coming wave of need may utterly break them. Masks and social distancing will not protect people from the devastatin­g health effects of unmet social needs.

Take hunger as an example. Many individual­s receiving PUA are using it to feed themselves and their families. Food insecurity is linked to worse outcomes in virtually every chronic disease and is even associated with premature death. The evidence connecting hunger and poor health outcomes is so overwhelmi­ng that payors, care delivery organizati­ons, and provider organizati­ons are now themselves providing food for food-insecure patients.

Some might wonder if food stamps, or the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), could meet this need. But health care providers have found that those benefits are so meager that to keep patients healthy, they must provide additional food assistance. The typical SNAP benefit is only about $1.41 per person per meal.

Congress has authorized some easing of regulation­s on food stamps over the last few months, but as the recent lines at food banks across the nation tell us, SNAP itself remains insufficie­nt to meet the current level of need. If lawmakers wish to have a strong, healthy workforce come through this pandemic that is capable of restoring the economy, they must renew the PUA.

Similarly, I know that the coming wave of evictions and homelessne­ss will deeply damage the health of millions. The PUA was helping to keep our workforce housed and healthy. The stresses and dangers of homelessne­ss can destroy health, and even seem to accelerate aging.

Homeless individual­s suffer from higher rates of chronic disease, accidental injury and death, infection, mental illness and substance use disorders than domiciled counterpar­ts. The millions at risk of eviction and homelessne­ss will suffer not only economic devastatio­n but also significan­t adverse effects on their health in the ensuing months and years.

Dr. Megan Sandel, a housing expert, likens housing to a vaccine: housing prevents illness. The evidence that housing improves health outcomes and reduces healthcare costs is so profound that health care organizati­ons are getting into housing. The widespread shortage of affordable housing and lack of government action to address the problem has left them with no alternativ­e.

Another critical health consequenc­e of Congress's failure to renew the PUA is the devastatio­n that extreme poverty will visit upon the mental health of millions. Rates of anxiety and depression are already skyrocketi­ng and will worsen if there are mass evictions and widespread hunger.

I saw a patient in my clinic this week who is counting on the PUA to feed and house himself and his family. He wept as he described to me how worried he is about their situation. He can't eat or sleep and has lost 10 pounds over the last few weeks. Aside from preventing this profound suffering, lawmakers should understand that mental illness exacts an immense cost on our economy - perhaps as much as a half-trillion dollars.

These calculatio­ns were based on typical conditions, not at the height of a pandemic. Renewing the PUA will significan­tly ease the mental distress of millions. Aid that helps to preserve mental health will allow affected individual­s to more easily rejoin the workforce as the economy improves.

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