From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject 'The Basic Problem Is a Lack of Central Strategy'
Date January 21, 2021 8:19 PM
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'The Basic Problem Is a Lack of Central Strategy' Janine Jackson ([link removed])



Janine Jackson interviewed Kaiser Health News' Elisabeth Rosenthal about the troubled vaccine rollout for the January 15, 2021, episode ([link removed]) of CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript.

WaPo: Vaccine reserve was exhausted when Trump administration vowed to release it, dashing hopes of expanded access

A day after Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said the administration would be releasing all of the federal government's Covid vaccine reserves, officials admitted that these reserves were nonexistent (Washington Post, 1/15/21 ([link removed]) ).

Janine Jackson: Having for weeks held back doses of the Covid-19 vaccine, the federal government announced ([link removed]) this week that not only is it releasing all of it now, but states will be penalized for not using it quickly enough. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar claimed ([link removed]) that this was always the plan, that states have "ample funding" to roll out the vaccines to the public, and that there was "never a reason" for prioritizing any groups like healthcare workers, or the frontline workers, overwhelmingly low-waged people of color, who have been disproportionately sickened and killed.

It's just the latest opportunity for reporters to use words like “stunned” and “perplexed” in describing ([link removed]) the response of state and local officials to the vaccine rollout, which would have been challenging at the best of times—and these sure aren't those.

Joining us now to talk about what we're seeing is Elisabeth Rosenthal, longtime journalist, now editor-in-chief at Kaiser Health News, and author of the book ([link removed]) , An American Sickness: How Healthcare Became Big Business and How You Can Take It Back. She joins us now by phone from Washington, DC. Welcome to CounterSpin, Elisabeth Rosenthal.

Elisabeth Rosenthal: Thanks for having me here.

JJ: You see phrases in stories ([link removed]) like, “The administration of vaccines has met with delays and roadblocks.” That passive voice is safe. But the opposite of that isn't necessarily finger-pointing ([link removed]) , another word we're seeing a lot. It's just trying to understand where the breakdowns or flaws in the system are, so they can be addressed. I think it's understood that this process was going to present challenges, as we say, but what would you identify as the primary factors that have made it more confusing, more chaotic, than it needed to be?
Kaiser: Vaccination Disarray Leaves Seniors Confused About When They Can Get a Shot

Kaiser Health News (1/14/21 ([link removed]) )

ER: Sure. I always say this is not rocket science; it’s complicated logistics, but not even that complicated. The basic problem is a lack of central strategy ([link removed]) . You can argue that a lot of different kinds of algorithms should dictate who gets the vaccine. And instead of deciding nationally, with the best experts, how we want to do it, basically the feds have sent it to the states, the states decide how they want to allocate it to the counties, the counties decide how they want to allocate it to hospitals, and likewise to nursing homes and CVS. And it's just predictable chaos without a central plan which people can trust.

And the newest wrinkle in this today, which I have smoke coming out of my ears for, is all these governors and mayors have announced ([link removed]) that, OK, starting this week, January 11, folks over 75, or over 65, will be able to sign up for the vaccine. Well, good luck with that. I compare it to trying to get a delivery from Whole Foods during the beginning of the pandemic; you have to be tech savvy ([link removed]) , sitting there when the slots are released, refreshing your web browser. That is a crazy way to do a vaccine program.

And I think one thing that would have made this whole thing better was a central strategy, where everyone knew where they stood. And if someone says to me, “OK, you're going to get your vaccine in April,” I can be OK with that, because I can at least know exactly when and where it's coming, rather than this current turmoil, where we have—literally, these are the stories ([link removed]) we are hearing at Kaiser Health News today, where I'm currently editor-in-chief: A doctor's office will get a call from a hospital saying, “Hey, we have six extra doses, send your staff over here,” or there'll be an announcement at a Giant supermarket saying: “Hey, we've got four extra doses. Come one, come all.”

You hear of a one nursing home getting everyone vaccinated, and another one 10 miles away, which is presumably not as well-connected, or in a different county that's doing things differently, having no idea when they're getting that vaccine. So that introduces chaos, introduces anger. And we just have to be slow and plodding and systematic about the way we do this, in a rapid way. So how’s that for a challenge?

JJ: And particularly at a time when public trust is obviously going to be paramount, you have to trust that there is a plan. But first I wanted to say, it can be hard for some people to see the unfairness in that “first come, first served”; it sounds like it's equitable. Of course, it's not at all equitable ([link removed]) , both in terms of, as you say, having to be tech savvy enough to get in line on the website, or sign up and then know when you're supposed to show up to someplace. But also, of course, a lot of folks—we’re talking about undocumented ([link removed]) workers, we're talking about homeless ([link removed]) people, a lot of the folks who should be getting vaccinated—they're just left out entirely. There's no incentive, in that
sense, to reach them, particularly if the federal government is going to be counting how quickly you can say you're vaccinating folks.

ER: Yes. And I think we know there's more vaccine skepticism, generally, in those populations, which makes it even more troubling. Boy, you have to be good at playing the game of accessing healthcare in the US. As you said, you need to be tech savvy. So what does that mean? It means maybe 80-year-olds are not as good as the 65-year-olds, or an 85-year-old who has a 30-year-old grandson who can snag an appointment is in much better shape. So you're kind of favoring the well-educated, well-connected, well–hooked up to the internet. And then, PS: We've seen in some states, like New York, where you officially get an appointment, but it's not really timed, so there are these long lines ([link removed]) . So many people, particularly low-income people, have to work, so they need an appointment time if you want this to go smoothly, or good weekend and evening times. There are ways to do
this well, and other countries ([link removed]) are doing so, but we are not.

JJ: Well, but you say “central plan,” what are you, some kind of Communist?

ER: [laughing] No, not at all.

JJ: Your book is about the businessification of healthcare. I wonder what role you see that playing in all of this, in terms of the development of the vaccines and their distribution?
NYT: Hospital Workers Start to ‘Turn Against Each Other’ to Get Vaccine

New York Times (12/24/20 ([link removed]) )

ER: Well, no, I'm certainly not a Communist or a socialist, but being a capitalist doesn't mean you don't plan; it should mean the opposite, right? But instead of planning, having a government plan, we've let every company—and I will call hospitals “companies” for the purpose of this interview—and doctor's office go it on their own, and nursing homes.

So, for example, what did many hospitals in New York do? There was a great New York Times article ([link removed]) about this: They gave it to their entire staff, including people who'd been working from home for the last eight months.

Now, that's what a company would do: You would protect your own before you protected your vulnerable patients. A hospital that really cared about its community would say, “Yes, we want these frontline workers who have Covid exposure to be vaccinated. But then, next, we're going to look to our vulnerable cancer patients, who may be in here every week for chemotherapy, or our vulnerable people with bad lung disease.” And we did not see that happening at many, many hospitals.

JJ: I think part of the problem was the setup: A vaccine was presented ([link removed]) as “the light at the end of the tunnel” for a scientifically under-informed and to some degree politicized public; it was going to be something that would put an end to arguments about what we needed to do societally, since we could do this thing individually--or not, you know.

ER: Yes.

JJ: In a way, “public health,” as a thing—kind of like democracy—it seems is being tested.

Elisabeth Rosenthal: "We have chosen the most profitable form of ending the pandemic, which is a vaccine.... This is the only solution, given how out of control we’ve let this become, as a result of not being good at public health."

ER: Yes, we have chosen the most profitable form of ending the pandemic, which is a vaccine. And, you know, the fact that we've gotten vaccines at record pace, I'm not going to say that's a bad thing; it’s a good thing, and that was one way to solve the problem. But why can these other countries be more methodical and systematic? It's partly because they have central planning, but it's partly because Covid never got out of control there. So we are desperate for a solution; this is the only solution, given how out of control we’ve let this become, as a result of not being good at public health. And so there's a kind of feeding frenzy for how to distribute it and who should get it, and survival of the fittest, in a way—and that's not very good.

JJ: Not the way to do it. Well, I wonder, are there things that you think reporters could maybe do more of, could maybe do less of, in covering Covid and the vaccine?

ER: I've written ([link removed]) that I thought the public service announcements should be scarier, because Covid is scary, if you get a bad case. I think we believe in this, like, “Let's be good neighbors, think about your grandma.” That didn't work. We saw it all over the country, we've had Covid exploding, because we didn't do the right public health things.

So I think, lessons learned is, we really need to reinforce our public health system, make the CDC and the FDA scientific, not political, organizations. And then at this point, yes, we will be depending on a vaccine, mostly, to get us out of it, but that doesn't mean ([link removed]) you should stop the social distance and masking.

And a lot of people are, you know, the classic American thing, “Well, which vaccine is the best? I only want the best.” I think the answer so far is any one that's out there looks pretty good—and, you know, different countries are using different ones—but when it's your turn, you should take what's available. That would be my advice as a journalist and as a former physician, and it's what I intend to do.

JJ: We've been speaking with Elisabeth Rosenthal, editor-in-chief at Kaiser Health News. Her book ([link removed]) is called An American Sickness: How Healthcare Became Big Business and How You Can Take It Back, out from Penguin Press. Elisabeth Rosenthal, thank you very much for joining us this week on CounterSpin.

ER: Thanks for having me.
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