Today's early morning highlights from the major news    organizations.  
    Kaiser Health News and USA Today: Less-Lethal    Weapons Blind, Maim And Kill. Victims Say Enough Is    Enough.    Theres a gap in Scott Olsens memory for the night of Oct. 25,    2011. The Iraq War vet remembers leaving his tech job in the    San Francisco Bay Area and taking a BART train to join an    Occupy Oakland protest against economic and social inequality.    He remembers standing near protesters who faced off with    Oakland police officers bristling with riot gear. He remembers    being carried away by other protesters. But not the moment when    a bean bag round fired from an officers 12-gauge shotgun    crashed into the left side of his head, fracturing his skull    and inflicting a near-fatal brain injury that forced him to    relearn how to talk. (Slack, Wagner, Hancock, McCoy, 7/24)  
    Kaiser Health News: Technology Divide Between    Senior Haves And Have-Nots Roils Pandemic    Response    Family gatherings on Zoom and FaceTime. Online orders from    grocery stores and pharmacies. Telehealth appointments with    physicians. These have been lifesavers for many older adults    staying at home during the coronavirus pandemic. But an    unprecedented shift to virtual interactions has a downside:    Large numbers of seniors are unable to participate. (Graham,    7/24)  
    Kaiser Health News and PolitiFact: With DACA    Ruling, Did Supreme Court Grant Trump New Powers To Reshape    Health Care?    President Donald Trump came into office vowing to repeal and    replace Obamacare. While he successfully neutralized the health    care laws requirement that everyone carry insurance, the    lawremains in effect. When Fox News host Chris Wallace    noted that Trump has yet to put forward a replacement plan,    Trump told him to stay tuned. Were signing a health care plan    within two weeks, a full and complete health care plan that the    Supreme Court decision on DACA gave me the right to do, Trump    saidJuly 19 on Fox News Sunday. (Greenberg, 7/24)  
    Kaiser Health News: Lost On The    Frontline    A lab assistant who spoke out about employee safety. A disease    intervention specialist who hoped to follow her mother into    nursing. A father of three who juggled jobs at three nursing    homes. These are some of the people just added to Lost on the    Frontline, a special series from The Guardian and KHN that    profiles health care workers who died of COVID-19. (7/24)  
    The Wall Street Journal: U.S. Coronavirus    Deaths Surpass 144,000    The U.S. death toll from the coronavirus pandemic rose above    144,000 as several states reported record single-day    fatalities. The U.S. reported more than 68,000 new cases    Thursday, slightly lower than the previous days tally. The    nation accounts for more than a quarter of the more than 15.5    million coronavirus cases world-wide, according to data    compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Higher case counts in the    U.S. are partly attributable to expanded testing across the    country, while a patchwork of rules and regulations has    contributed to a resurgence of new cases. (Hall, 7/24)  
    CIDRAP: Just A Few Nations Driving Much Of    World's COVID-19 Surge    The global surge in COVID-19 cases is mainly driven by intense    transmission in a relatively few countries, the head of the    World Health Organization (WHO) said today, with South Africa    now among the five hardest-hit countries. The global total    today is at 15,348,877 cases, and 626,190 people have died from    their illnesses, according to the Johns Hopkins online    dashboard. (Schnirring, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Its Emotional Whiplash:    California Is Once Again At The Center Of The Virus    Crisis    When everything shut down in March as the coronavirus took off    in California, Canters Deli, a mainstay in the Fairfax    District of Los Angeles, laid off dozens of employees. A few    months later, it called them back to work. By then, the state    appeared to have emerged from the initial virus crisis in much    better shape than other parts of the country. But now    Californias caseload is exploding, with rising deaths and    hospitalizations. As quickly as things had opened up, they have    shut down again. (Arango and Mervosh, 7/23)  
    The Hill: California, Florida Report Record    Numbers Of Daily Deaths    California and Florida reported record numbers of daily    coronavirus fatalities Thursday, as the total number of    infections in the U.S. surpassed 4 million. California's 157    deaths on Wednesday continued aweek of coronavirus    records in the state that had once been considered a COVID    success story. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Wednesday said 12,807    new coronavirus infections had been reported statewide in 24    hours, a record high.(Weixel, 7/23)  
    Politico: Spiking Or Plateauing? Covid-19 Case    Counts Spur Debate    A monthlong resurgence in Covid-19 cases appears to be hitting    a peak, but a new assessment of the coronavirus trajectory is    fueling conflicting interpretations about whether the worst is    over. Slowing caseloads in Florida and Arizona have fanned a    narrative that the worst of the disease spread is cresting in    some of the nations worst hot spots  repeating a pattern seen    in early June. But public health experts on Thursday issued new    warnings that the virus is still spiraling out of control, only    in the form of a rolling series of outbreaks in almost half the    states, with more troubling signs in many others. (Doherty,    7/23)  
    The Hill: Trump Likely To Sign Executive Orders    On Drug Pricing Friday    President Trump is likely to sign executive orders on Friday    aimed at lowering drug prices, elevating a key issue for voters    in an election year.While the plans could shift at the    last minute, some GOP lawmakers have been invited to a    presidential event on drug pricing Friday at 3 p.m. at the    White House in the South Court Auditorium to make the    announcement, according to an invitation obtained by The Hill.    (Sullivan, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Trump Moves To Roll Back    Obama Program Addressing Housing Discrimination    The rule, introduced in 2015, requires cities and towns to    identify patterns of discrimination, implement corrective plans    and report results. The administrations decision to complete a    process of rescinding it culminates a yearslong campaign to gut    the rule by conservative critics and members of the    administration who claimed it overburdened communities with    complicated regulations. (Fuchs, 7/23)  
    Los Angeles Times: Trump Repeals Housing Rule,    Amplifying Appeals To Racial Bias    With President Trump facing sagging support in the suburbs, his    administration on Thursday targeted an Obama-era affordable    housing regulation, the latest in a series of appeals to white    voters fears of crime and declining property values. The U.S.    Department of Housing and Urban Development announced that it    would scrap a regulation known as Affirmatively Furthering Fair    Housing, which was implemented by President Obama in an attempt    to promote more integrated communities. Under the rule, cities    receiving some federal housing aid had to develop plans to    address patterns of segregation or risk losing money.    (Megerian, Dillon and Stokols, 7/23)  
    Politico: Trump Administration Renews Public    Health Emergency After Urging From States    The Trump administration has renewed the public health    emergency for the coronavirus, ensuring that critical resources    to fight the pandemic can continue while much of the country    battles rising caseloads. The news will come as relief to    health care groups who worried that President Donald Trump    would let the emergency declaration lapse when it was set to    expire July 25, despite previous assurances from top    administration officials it would be renewed. (Roubein, 7/23)  
    Politico: Trump Warns Of 'Greater Mortality' If    Schools Don't Reopen    President Donald Trump is still demanding schools reopen, even    after nixing his Republican National Convention keynote events    in Florida next month. The president argued Thursday that "a    permanent shutdown was never the strategy, which would    ultimately lead to greater mortality and irreversible harm."    The prosperity of the U.S. economy hinges on children returning    to school in person this fall, he contended, noting that the    Council of Economic Advisers has estimated more than 5 million    parents won't be able to go back to work if their kids don't    return to campus. (Quilantan and Miranda Ollstein, 7/23)  
    AP: In Shift, Trump Says Some Schools May Need To    Delay Opening    Softening his earlier stance, President Donald Trump on    Thursday acknowledged that some schools may need to delay their    reopening this fall as the coronavirus continues to surge. It    marks a shift from Trumps previous demand for a full reopening    of the nations schools. Speaking at a White House news    conference, Trump said districts in some virus hot spots may    need to delay reopening for a few weeks. He said the decision    will fall to governors. (Binkley, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Trump Cancels GOP Convention Plans In    Jacksonville    President Trump said Thursday that he would cancel the GOP    convention events in Jacksonville, Fla., in August, saying it    wasnt the right time due to the coronavirus. I told my team    it's time to cancel the Jacksonville component of the GOP    convention, Trump told reporters at a news conference at the    White House. Ill still do a convention speech in a different    form, but we wont do a big crowded conventionper se.    Its just not the right time for that." (Chalfant, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Trump Abruptly Cancels    Republican Convention In Jacksonville: Its Not The Right    Time    The surprise announcement threw one of the tent-pole moments of    Mr. Trumps re-election effort into limbo, with the president    describing in vague terms how the Republicans would hold his    renomination in North Carolina and do other things with    tele-rallies and online. It was an ill-defined sketch of an    August week that Mr. Trump once envisioned drawing huge crowds    and energizing his struggling bid for a second term. (Haberman,    Mazzei and Karni, 7/23)  
    Politico: How Trump Went From A Massive    Convention Bash To No Party At All    On Wednesday evening, President Donald Trump convened his top    political advisers, including campaign manager Bill Stepien and    Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, for a    conference call to consider a move that would have been    unthinkable just a few weeks ago: Cancel his partys upcoming    convention in Jacksonville, Fla. By Thursday afternoon, with    coronavirus raging in the state, the president who all year    envisioned a boisterous send-off to the final months of his    reelection campaign, had made up his mind: It was a no-go.    (Isenstadt, Dixon and Fineout, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Trump Administration Recommends    Against Universities Requiring COVID-19 Tests Before Students    Return    The Trump administration said Thursday it is not recommending    universities require students be tested for COVID-19 before    they head back to campus this fall. In general, testing people    before going back to the university  is not a strategy that we    recommend, nor does the CDC recommend, because you're only    negative for that one moment, Adm. Brett Giroir, assistant    secretary at the Department of Health and Human Services who is    in charge of COVID-19 testing strategy, told reporters.    (Hellmann, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Fauci: With Vaccine, 'We Could Start    Talking About Real Normality Again' In 2021    The completion of a coronavirus vaccine could allow the U.S. to    return to real normality in 2021, Anthony Fauci, the nations    top infectious diseases expert, said Thursday. "The timetable     of getting into 2021, well into the year, then I can think with    a successful vaccine if we could vaccinate the    overwhelming majority of the population we could start    talking about real normality again," Fauci said Thursday on CNN    contributor David Axelrods podcast The Axe Files. "But it is    going to be a gradual process." (Budryk, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Fauci Says That He And His Family    Have Experienced 'Serious Threats' During    Pandemic    Anthony Fauci, the nations top infectious diseases expert,    said Thursday that he has received serious threats to himself    and his family since he became one of the public faces of the    federal response to the coronavirus pandemic. The doctor said    that the anger has appeared on a different level than when he    began his work during the HIV/AIDS crisis. (Budryk, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Birx Warns Of Disturbing Rise Of    Coronavirus Cases In 12 Cities    White House coronavirus task force coordinator Deborah Birx    saidin a private meeting with local and state health    officials that the task force is tracking increases in the    virus in 12 U.S. cities. "There are cities that are lagging    behind and we have new increases in Miami, New Orleans, Las    Vegas, San Jose, St. Louis, Indianapolis, Minneapolis,    Cleveland, Nashville, Pittsburgh, Columbus and Baltimore, so    we're tracking this very closely, Birx said in the audio,    first obtainedby the nonprofit Center for Public    Integrity. We're working with the state officials to make sure    we're responding together, but when you first see that    increased test positivity, that is when to start the mitigation    efforts." (Budryk, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Obama: US Not Dealing With    Coronavirus As 'Smartly' As Other Countries    Former President Obama saidin remarks released    Thursdaythat the U.S. is not dealing with the coronavirus    pandemic as smartly as other countries with similar    resources. The former president made the remarks during a    conversation with presumptive Democratic presidential nominee    Joe Biden, saying he was confident that if his former vice    president is elected in November he will respond to the crisis    effectively. (Klar, 7/23)  
    NBC News: Despite Judge's Order, Migrant    Children Remain Detained Amid COVID Outbreak    Nearly a month after a federal judge ruled the Trump    administration must release migrant children "with all    deliberate speed" from Immigration and Customs Enforcement    detention centers because of COVID-19, 346 parents and children    are detained in facilities with outbreaks and court filings    show releases remain rare. When U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee    ordered the release of children detained with their parents in    late June, she was explicit in her reasoning. The ICE    facilities, she said, were "on fire and there is no more time    for half measures." (Soboroff, 7/23)  
    Politico: Marine Assigned To Trump's Helicopter    Squadron Tests Positive For Covid-19    A Marine assigned to the military helicopter squadron    responsible for transporting the president has tested positive    for Covid-19, a Marine Corps spokesperson told POLITICO. The    Marine, assigned to Marine Helicopter Squadron 1, was tested on    Tuesday and received the positive result on Thursday, said    spokesperson Capt. Joseph Butterfield, adding that the squadron    administers 80 to 100 tests per week. (Seligman, Lippman and    Caputo, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Republican Stimulus Talks    Stall Over Differences On Unemployment    Republicans stumbled on Thursday in their efforts to find    agreement on a broad new proposal to lift the struggling    economy, with Senate leaders and the Trump administration at    odds over multiple provisions, including how to extend    unemployment benefits and White House requests for spending    unrelated to the pandemic. Even after President Trump folded on    one of his key demands, for a payroll tax cut, negotiations    bogged down over details of the package, including how to    reduce the amount of money that Americans are currently    receiving as unemployment benefits. (Cochrane, Tankersley and    Rappeport, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Senate GOP Punts Coronavirus Package    To Next Week    GOP senators expected to introduce the package of bills on    Thursday after days of closed-door haggling among themselves    and the White House and publicly struggling to get on the same    page. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said    key senators will instead unveil it Monday, pointing at the    White House as the reason behind the delay. (Carney, 7/23)  
    Politico: As Unemployment Grows, White House    And Senate GOP Stumble On Virus Talks    Senate Republicans were forced to delay the rollout of a $1    trillion coronavirus relief package after differences between    the White House and GOP leadership derailed the timing for    unveiling the measure  an embarrassing setback that could have    serious consequences for millions of unemployed Americans. The    main area of dispute was over extension of federal unemployment    assistance for workers that have lost their jobs as the United    States economy shut down during in response to the coronavirus    pandemic. These $600-per-week payments begin to expire this    week. Just on Thursday, the federal government announced that    1.4 million new unemployment claims had been filed in the past    week. (Bresnahan and Levine, 7/23)  
    AP: Jobless Claims Rise As Cutoff Of Extra $600    Benefit Nears    The nation got another dose of bad economic news Thursday as    the number of laid-off workers seeking jobless benefits rose    for the first time since late March, intensifying concerns the    resurgent coronavirus is stalling or even reversing the    economic recovery. And an extra $600 in weekly unemployment    benefits, provided by the federal government on top of whatever    assistance states provide, is set to expire July 31, though    this is the last week recipients will get the extra funds. It    is the last major source of economic help from the $2 trillion    relief package that Congress approved in March. A small    business lending program and one-time $1,200 payment have    largely run their course. (Rugaber, 7/24)  
    The New York Times: Heres How Congress Might    Replace The Extra $600 Weekly Jobless Benefit    An additional $600 per week that has provided a vital financial    cushion for unemployed Americans is set to expire next week. On    Thursday, top Republicans said they had reached agreement on a    proposal to replace a benefit that has helped millions of    laid-off workers and been a boon to consumer spending amid a    deep recession. Their plan would continue to offer    larger-than-normal payments to workers filing for unemployment    benefits. But it would significantly reduce the amount of money    flowing each week to those without a job, at a time when 30    million people remain unemployed and the recovery from a    pandemic recession is stuck in the mud. (Tankersley and    Casselman, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Democrats Hit Interior Secretary For    Reportedly Refusing To Wear Mask In Meeting With    Tribes    Three Democratic senators are criticizingInterior    Secretary David Bernhardtover reports that he refused to    wear a mask in a meeting with tribes in Oregon earlier this    month. On your July 9 visit with the Klamath Tribes of Oregon,    the tribe expressed concerns that you and a member of the U.S.    House of Representatives from the State of California refused    to wear a mask  wrote Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren    (Mass.), Ron Wyden (Ore.) and Jeff Merkley (Ore.). (Frazin,    7/23)  
    The Wall Street Journal: China Says It Will    Have Covid-19 Vaccine Ready This Year    One of the first Chinese projects to start testing its Covid-19    vaccine candidates overseas said it would have a vaccine ready    for the public before the end of the year. Liu Jingzhen,    chairman of state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group,    also known as Sinopharm, said on state broadcaster CCTV on    Tuesday that clinical trials that began in Abu Dhabi last week    should be completed in roughly three months, paving the way for    a vaccine to go to the market this year. (Deng, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Who Gets The Covid-19    Vaccine First? Heres One Idea    When a coronavirus vaccine becomes available, who should get it    first? A preliminary plan devised by the Centers for Disease    Control and Prevention this spring gives priority to health    care workers, then to people with underlying medical conditions    and older people. The C.D.C. has not yet decided whether the    next in line should be Blacks and Latinos, groups    disproportionately affected by the coronavirus .But lets    suppose that health care workers and people with underlying    medical conditions use up the first doses of the available    vaccine. Should some be held in reserve for Black and Latino    people? What about bus drivers and train conductors? Perhaps    teachers or schoolchildren should get it so they can return to    classrooms with peace of mind. (Kolata, 7/23)  
    Stat: Ruling Threatens To Upend Patents On    Modernas Covid-19 Vaccine    Moderna, racing to develop a vaccine for Covid-19, lost a key    patent decision Thursday, one that could delay the companys    progress or force it to hand over a cut of profits. The U.S.    Patent and Trademark Office denied Modernas claim that a    patent held by a rival company was invalid. The patent, which    covers technology used to deliver messenger RNA treatments, is    held by the Canadian firm Arbutus. (Garde, 7/23)  
    Stat: Covid-19 Streamlined FDA Rules, And    Pharma's Pushing To Keep It That Way    The pharmaceutical industry made it clear to the Food and Drug    Administration that it wants the regulatory flexibilities the    agency has embraced during the Covid-19 pandemic to be made    permanent  and its ready to push to make sure it    happens.There is a pressing need for FDA and industry to    identify actions taken during the Covid-19 pandemic and    evaluate their effectiveness and applicability to innovative    drug development beyond the public health emergency, said Lucy    Vereshchagina, vice president of science and regulatory affairs    at PhRMA. (Florko, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Coronavirus Testing Labs    Again Lack Key Supplies    Labs across the country are facing backlogs in coronavirus    testing thanks in part to a shortage of tiny pieces of tapered    plastic. Researchers need these little disposables, called    pipette tips, to quickly and precisely move liquid between    vials as they process the tests. As the number of known    coronavirus cases in the United States passes 4 million, these    new shortages of pipette tips and other lab supplies are once    again stymieing efforts to track and curb the spread of    disease. (Wu, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: Testing Bottlenecks    Threaten N.Y.C.s Ability To Contain Virus    Nearly four months after the pandemics peak, New York City is    facing such serious delays in returning coronavirus test    results that public health experts are warning that the    problems could hinder efforts to reopen the local economy and    schools. Despite repeated pledges from Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and    Mayor Bill de Blasio that testing would be both widely    accessible and effective, thousands of New Yorkers have had to    wait a week or more for results, and at some clinics the median    wait time is nine days. One prominent local official has even    proposed the drastic step of limiting testing. (Goldstein and    McKinley, 7/23)  
    The Wall Street Journal: Baseballs Opening Day    Rocked By Covid-19 Tests For Nationals Star Juan    Soto    After months of detailed drafting, Major League Baseballs    return-to-play plan couldnt make it to the seasons first    pitch before facing a problem that demonstrates the enormous    challenge of playing amid the coronavirus pandemic. About five    hours before the Washington Nationals were set to play the    first game of the shortened 2020 campaign against the New York    Yankees, the team announced that star outfielder Juan Soto had    tested positive for Covid-19. Upon finding out Thursday, the    21-year-old Soto took multiple rapid-response coronavirus tests    that came back negative, a person familiar with the matter    said. Nonetheless, Soto must sit out until he produces two    lab-confirmed negative tests, spaced 24 hours apart. The entire    episode provided insight into the fragility of baseballs    carefully crafted protocolsand how difficult it will be to    avoid an outbreak of infection over the next three months.    (Diamond and Radnofsky, 7/23)  
    CIDRAP: Chronic Conditions Put Nearly Half Of    US Adults At Risk For Severe COVID-19    About 47% of US adults have an underlying condition strongly    tied to severe COVID-19 illness, researchers at the Centers for    Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have found. The    model-based study, published today in the CDC's Morbidity and    Mortality Weekly Report, used self-reported data from the 2018    Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and the US Census.    (Van Beusekom, 7/23)  
    CIDRAP: Live COVID-19 Virus Isolated From Human    Nose-Throat, Saliva Specimens    A small study published yesterday in Clinical Microbiology and    Infection found live SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes    COVID-19, in one nose-throat swab and two saliva specimens of    five infected hospital patients in Korea 11 to 15 days after    symptom onset. Researchers collected nose-throat swabs, saliva,    urine, and stool samples from the patients hospitalized from    Feb 25 to Mar 5 on days 8, 11, 13, 15, and 30 after study    enrollment. They performed quantitative reverse    transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) to detect    SARS-CoV-2 RNA and cell culture to detect viable virus. No live    virusonly viral RNAwas isolated on cell culture from five    urine, two saliva, four nose-throat, and three fecal specimens.    (7/23)  
    Stat: Scientists Are Developing Synthetic    Biosensors To Monitor Lung Disease    Imagine inhaling a sensor that could monitor lung disease    patients response to therapy, emitting a signal when they    breathe out. Like a breathalyzer that recognizes alcohol, such    a device could sniff out compounds released only by specific    illnesses to gauge how well treatment is working. Biomedical    engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have    developed a synthetic biosensor using specialized nanoparticles    to detect and then report the presence of molecules indicating    bacterial pneumonia or the genetic disease alpha-1 antitrypsin    deficiency. (Cooney, 7/24)  
    AP: FDA Tells Doctors To Discuss Overdose Antidote    With Patients    Prescribing instructions for all opioids, such as Percocet and    OxyContin, will recommend doctors discuss how to get the    overdose-reversal drug, which can be obtained from pharmacists    without a prescription. For patients with a higher risk of    overdose, such as those with a history of opioid addiction,    doctors should consider prescribing naloxone alongside the    opioid. The same recommendations will appear on drugs used to    control opioid addiction, such as methadone. (Perrone, 7/23)  
    Stat: FDA Says Opioid Labels Must Include    Information About Naloxone    The Food and Drug Administration announced Thursday that it    would require drug manufacturers to include information about    naloxone, the overdose-reversal medication, on the labels of    opioid painkillers. The move comes just weeks after the federal    government released new data showing that U.S. drug overdose    deaths reached an all-time high in 2019, surpassing the    previous peak recorded two years earlier. (Facher, 7/23)  
    The New York Times: How Play Energizes Your    Kids Brain    To the untrained eye, play can seem aimless, repetitive, wild    or foolish. But play can offer a window into the developing    mind. Piaget viewed certain kinds of play as milestones, signs    that a child had reached a new stage of development. Studies    conducted over the past few decades suggest play serves a more    crucial role. Play can help kids learn, plan and even persevere    in the face of adversity. (Willyard, 7/21)  
    The New York Times: Should 5-Year-Olds Start    School This Year?    Alka Tripathy-Langs 5-year-old son is supposed to start    kindergarten this fall, but her district in suburban Phoenix    has already delayed its start and announced that classes, when    they do start, will be online for at least the first couple of    weeks. What those lessons will look like is unclear, as are    details about how much parental involvement will be required,    and how or when the school is going to implement the dual    immersion Mandarin program her son is supposed to begin.    Tripathy-Langs current plan is to start him in an online-only    option, but if its not working, shell pull him out to be home    with her 3-year-old, who she and her husband have already    decided not to send to preschool this year. (Sohn, 7/23)  
    The Washington Post: Librarians Alarmed About    Coronavirus Safety At D.C.s Reopened Public    Libraries    When the Districts public libraries began gradually reopening    in late May, many residents rushed to check out books for the    first time in six weeks. By mid-July, the library was opening    its doors for six hours a day, five days a week, for patrons    who could come inside to borrow items and spend time using    public computers at 14 locations. But librarians say the    reopening has been poorly handled, exposing both staff members    and the public to potential coronavirus risks. They also say    library managers have kept staff in the dark about colleagues    who come down with the virus and have struggled with cleaning    protocols and mask requirements. (Zauzmer, 7/23)  
    The Wall Street Journal: Face Masks And A    Mohel: Parents Figure Out How To Host A Bris During    Coronavirus    When Ben Sass and Aliza Jaffe Sass learned in January that they    had a baby boy on the way, preparations for a bris started    immediately. Along with the rest of the logistical advance work    of pregnancy, they now had to decide which family members would    have the honors of escorting their new son into the ceremony,    who would hold the child during the circumcision procedure, and    what they would serve their guests at the reception afterward.    They didnt plan for how they would facilitate a surgery on an    infant in their Philadelphia apartment during a global    pandemic. (Rubin, 7/23)  
    CIDRAP: Nearly 60% Of US Parents Say They Won't    Vaccinate Their Kids Against HPV    Nearly 60% of the parents of about 4.3 million US children    don't intend to have them vaccinated against the highly    infectious and sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV),    according to survey results published earlier this week in The    Lancet Public Health. Researchers at the University of Texas at    Houston analyzed the data of parents of 82,297 children 13 to    17 years old from the 2017-18 National Immunization Study. They    found even higher vaccine hesitancy rates (higher than 65%) in    Idaho, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota,    Oklahoma, and Utah. (7/23)  
    Stat: New Research Finds A Wide Gulf In    Engagement With Mental Health Apps    A first-of-its-kind analysis, conducted in collaboration with    researchers at Microsoft, paints a detailed picture of how    people do  or dont  engage with virtual mental health tools,    a step toward expanding the use of digital therapeutics.    Lackluster engagement has long been a thorn in the health tech    industrys side: As mental health tools proliferate, their    uptake and long-term use remain relatively low. That problem    has taken on new urgency as the pandemic shunts patients from    in-person to online treatment. (Isselbacher, 7/24)  
    AP: Lawyer Defends Actions Of Vets Home Boss Amid    Outbreak    A Massachusetts home where nearly 80 aging veterans sicked with    the coronavirus have died was denied emergency aid as    leadership and staff frantically worked to protect the    residents, an attorney for the ousted superintendent said    Thursday. The attorney said state officials initially refused    in March to send National Guard aid even as the home was    dealing with dire staffing shortages. The lawyer for former    Holyoke Soldiers Home Superintendent Bennett Walsh called him    a good and honorable man who would never do anything    intentional to harm the vets. (Durkin Richer, 7/23)  
    AP: Restraining Order Barring Nursing Home Closing    Extended    A southern Illinois judge on Thursday extended a temporary    restraining order barring a nursing home from executing its    closure plan until it has fulfilled all its obligations to    residents. When Aperion Care Cairo announced its intention to    close last week, families complained to Alexander County    officials they felt rushed to select alternative placement for    loved ones. (7/23)  
    The Washington Post: Meatpacking Workers File    Lawsuit Against OSHA, Accusing Agency Of Failing To Keep Them    Safe    The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is failing to    do its job properly, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday by    three meatpacking workers, who say the agencys inaction has    left them in danger. The lawsuit accuses OSHA of leaving the    workers in imminent danger due to what they say are hazardous    working conditions at the factory where they work, run by    Maid-Rite Specialty Foods in Pennsylvania, in the midst of the    coronavirus pandemic. (Rosenberg, 7/23)  
    Los Angeles Times: How To Say No To Parties    During The COVID-19 Pandemic    Of course you are allowed to say no. You are allowed to say    that at all times, to all invitations, under all circumstances.    But especially right now, in the middle of a pandemic. So its    less about whether you can say it and more about how, experts    say. Tone matters. Put a smile on your face when you make the    call and keep it simple: Thank you for the invitation, Im so    sorry but I cant make it. (Roy, 7/23)  
    Reuters: Georgia's Governor And Atlanta's Mayor    Ordered To Mediate Coronavirus Mask Fight    A Georgia judge on Thursday ordered the governor and Atlantas    mayor to enter mediation over the governors lawsuit aimed at    stopping the city from enforcing its requirement that people    wear masks in public during the coronavirus pandemic. Fulton    Superior Court Judge Jane Barwick ordered Governor Brian Kemp    and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to attend mediation with another    judge and try to resolve the dispute before an emergency    hearing scheduled in the case for Tuesday. (McKay, 7/23)  
    AP: Anchorage Mayor To Impose New Restrictions Amid    Virus Cases    The mayor of Anchorage is limiting gathering sizes and the    number of people allowed in bars, restaurants and entertainment    venues in response to rising coronavirus cases. The order, by    Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, takes effect Friday and says that due to    a resurgence in cases there is a need for increased    restrictions on public interactions to preserve health and    save lives in our community. (Bohrer, 7/23)  
    AP: North Dakota Governor Blasts Party's Anti-LGBTQ    Resolution    North Dakotas Republican governor on Thursday blasted an    anti-LGBTQ resolution that was passed by hundreds of his    partys delegates, calling it insulting and divisive. The    resolution  one of dozens of party policy statements in a    passed by this spring by mail-in ballot  states that many    LGBT practices are unhealthy and dangerous, sometimes    endangering or shortening life and sometimes infecting society    at large. Gov. Doug Burgum issued a statement Thursday    denouncing the resolution. (MacPherson, 7/23)  
    The Hill: Two Florida Mayors Urge Residents To    Wear Masks At Home    Two Florida mayorswho governMiami and Miami-Dade    County encouraged their residents on Thursday to wear masks    inside to lower the transmission rate of COVID-19 between    family members. Miami Mayor Francis Suarez (R) explained that    while the city's number of daily new cases is down, the virus    is still being spread easily through households, as    multigenerational households are commonplace in Miami.    (Johnson, 7/23)  
    Stat: San Francisco Official Pushes City To    Condemn Hospitals Zuckerberg Name    A San Francisco city official is introducing a resolution to    condemn the citys public hospital for naming itself after Mark    Zuckerberg  the latest escalation of a five-year quest, led    mostly by nurses and other health care workers, to disassociate    the institution from the controversial Facebook founder. The    resolution, introduced late Thursday by San Francisco    supervisor Gordan Mar, wouldnt strip the hospital of the    Zuckerberg name, bestowed on the hospital after he and his    wife, pediatrician Priscilla Chan, donated $75 million to the    institution in 2015. (Ortolano, 7/24)  
    AP: 6 Downstate Illinois Counties Sue Over COVID-19    Restrictions    Residents in six central and southern Illinois counties,    including the state capitals home, filed lawsuits Thursday    against Gov. J.B. Pritzkers restrictions on social interaction    prompted by the coronavirus pandemic. The actions taken in    Bond, Clay, Clinton, Edgar, Richland and Sangamon counties seek    court orders declaring there is no public health emergency as    defined by Pritzkers Public Health Department. Springfield,    the state capital, is in Sangamon County. (7/24)  
    AP: Inslee Shuts Indoor Service At Bars, Restricts    Indoor Dining    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said Thursday he is tightening    restrictions throughout the state in restaurants and bars, for    weddings and funerals, and at gyms in a further effort to stem    a surge in COVID-19 cases. I care about businesses opening and    people getting back to work, but public health and economic    activity go hand in hand, Inslee said. If we let this virus    get even more out of control, it will have devastating effects    on our health and on our economy. (Baumann, 7/24)  
Link:
First Edition: July 24, 2020 - Kaiser Health News