Impact of COVID-19 on Health Care Providers for People with Serious Illness
Policy changes could help address the suffering this workforce has experienced and facilitate their continued care for people with serious illness.

Policy changes could help address the suffering this workforce has experienced and facilitate their continued care for people with serious illness.
We need help. If we don’t receive this supporting cast, there might not be anyone left to play the role of health care provider.
The reshaping of the health care landscape due to the pandemic has reduced new cancer diagnoses by over 50% for patients with breast cancer.
Our health care workforce, as well as patients and their families, deserve better medicine in the sensitive and tenuous time at the end of life.
The COVID-19 pandemic has posed persistent, wide-ranging existential threats to effective 911 emergency response.
As devastating as working on the frontlines of the pandemic has been, I am hopeful that it may be a catalyst for positive change.
The institutional shortcomings we had long tolerated and adapted to were laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Debates exist over whether structural racism is a social determinant of health, and whether dismantling it is within the scope of public health law.
Increased flexibility for 340B covered entities is necessary to address COVID-19 disparities faced by marginalized communities.
Human subjects research has long been plagued by racial inequality. While flagrant abuses have been curtailed, disparities have, unfortunately, persisted.