Las Vegas Review-Journal

COVID fight not finished

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COVID-19 kills 500 Americans a day, and in 2022, it was the third-leading cause of death, after cancer and heart failure, for the third consecutiv­e year. An untold number of people suffer long-term health complicati­ons as a result of infection, the effects of which we still do not know. And the coronaviru­s is now the eighth-leading cause of death among young people 19 and under.

Despite all of that, President Joe Biden’s administra­tion announced Monday that it would allow the COVID national emergency and public health emergency declaratio­ns to expire in May. That came in response to two bills pending in the Republican-led House that would end both declaratio­ns immediatel­y, which would be far more disruptive to states such as Virginia and communitie­s such as ours.

While we all want to put the pandemic behind us, the fact is that people are still being sickened and dying — though thankfully in far fewer numbers than before — and Washington should continue to provide the support and resources for our communitie­s to protect the most vulnerable.

Beginning three years ago, officials at all levels of government confronted this unknown virus with the tools it had available, learning on the fly those strategies and programs that were most effective. The swift developmen­t of vaccines was a godsend. Studies suggest their rapid deployment saved 18 million Americans from hospitaliz­ation and prevented 3 million additional deaths.

Even with those extraordin­ary efforts, about 1.1 million people died of COVID in the United States since the virus first reached these shores, a staggering loss for communitie­s nationwide. The emergency declaratio­ns will cause the price of vaccines and boosters to skyrocket, and could mean that only those with access to health coverage will be able to afford a life-saving shot.

That was among the effects of those declaratio­ns, which dramatical­ly changed how many Americans accessed health insurance. They enabled the federal government to support testing, vaccinatio­ns and treatments that continue to save lives.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, the declaratio­n empowered Washington to “waive or modify certain requiremen­ts in a range of areas, including in the Medicare, Medicaid and CHIP programs, and in private health insurance.” It also enabled the rapid deployment of “medical countermea­sures and to provide liability immunity to providers who administer services.”

The expiration of the health emergency, which Biden said would happen May 11, will sunset many of those provisions. It will end continuous Medicaid coverage, which according to KFF will mean between 5.3 million and 14.2 million people lose their insurance, primarily adults who received coverage under Affordable Care Act expansion, adults with disabiliti­es and children.

A study published in The Lancet, a peer-reviewed medical journal, found that low-income Americans were five times more likely to die of COVID than the wellto-do. Pulling Medicaid coverage from millions of low-income Americans will undoubtedl­y put their lives at greater risk.

Congress did take crucial steps in recent months to provide funding for a host of pandemic-related products and services, from free at-home tests to coverage for treatment and antivirals. Plenty of Americans, especially those at greatest risk from infection, still lean on those measures, but that money will run out and it’s clear Republican­s leading the U.S. House have no intention of providing more.

The nation is far better equipped and prepared than at any point in the pandemic, primarily thanks to the vaccines. So much more is known about COVID, and there are effective treatment options for those who catch it. But ending the emergency declaratio­ns could make it harder to insulate the most vulnerable and care for the suffering.

We all want the pandemic to be over, but wishing won’t make it so. Washington should continue its fight to save American lives instead of throwing in the towel.

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