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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**
**Friday, August 21, 2020**
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TODAY ON THE BLOG
POLITICS
Taking Stock Of Republican Health Policy In The Trump Era
By Katie Keith
Health care will continue to be a hot topic as we near the 2020
election. Next week, the Republican party takes its turn laying out a
vision for the next four years under a second term for the Trump
administration. This post identifies several of the Republican party's
health policy priorities since 2017 and takes stock of President
Trump's record on health care. Read More >>
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IN THE JOURNAL
NARRATIVE MATTERS:âCOVID-19
An Understaffed Hospital Battles COVID-19
By David Scales
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In the first of three Narrative Matters essays in this issue, David
Scales, a hospitalist physician, describes the harrowing reality of
caring for patients with COVID-19 in an overwhelmed community hospital.
Read More >>
Listen to the podcast here.
Read the August 2020 Table of Contents
.
Subscribe to Health Affairs for full journal access.
HEALTH AFFAIRS REQUEST FOR ABSTRACTS-Border Health and Immigration
**Deadline: August 31, 2020**
**Preparation and formatting** guidelines
**Submit abstracts via our** online submission form
**Queries:**
[email protected]
**Health Affairs** is planning a theme issue on border health and
immigration, to be published in July 2021. We plan to publish
approximately 20 peer-reviewed articles including original research,
analyses, and commentaries from leading researchers, scholars, analysts,
and health care stakeholders.
**Health Affairs** thanks the California Health Care Foundation and the
Con Alma Health Foundation for their generous support of this issue.
Please see our request for abstracts
for a list of topics of interest, and visit our FAQs
page for additional submission requirements.
**A CLOSER LOOK**-Public Health Response To Urgent Case Reports
The ongoing pandemic continues to raise new questions on public health
and force the medical community to revisit old ones. Today, take a look
at David J. Dausey, Nicole Lurie, and Alexis Diamond's 2005 study.
Bringing the study into view fifteen years later, should we consider
what delayed response times
mean for
surrounding communities in the case of contagious diseases like
COVID-19?
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About Health Affairs
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