The Medicaid work requirements were championed by Trump appointee SEEMA VERMA — even as the pandemic worsened.
Here’s Verma defending the policy at an Aspen Institute talk in October 2020, arguing work requirements could help lift people out of poverty.
But the Biden administration will release its own analysis critical of Trump’s policy, steered by former @HarvardChanSPH standout BEN SOMMERS — one of the nation’s most prominent researchers on Medicaid — two officials told the Post.
The Biden administration has pulled down the webpage on Medicaid work requirements, as the unwinding of Trump’s policy begins. medicaid.gov/medicaid/secti…
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NEW: The House @COVIDOversight panel is renewing its probe into Trump political interference in covid response, alleging further meddling in testing and treatments.
In one internal email obtained by the panel, a Trump appointee argued that widespread testing for covid was backfiring by hurting efforts to reopen the economy.
“The purpose of testing is NOT to detect low risk and asymptomatic people,” Paul Alexander wrote.
In another email, Alexander pushed FDA officials on boosting access to hydroxychloroquine, touting an embargoed BMJ analysis on the supposed benefits of a drug favored by Trump.
(However, the analysis later published by BMJ found “no evidence” of those benefits.)
SCOOP: Biden is set to a tap a nurse, SUSAN ORSEGA, as acting surgeon general — a role traditionally filled by a doctor. washingtonpost.com/health/2021/01…
While VIVEK MURTHY is Biden’s pick as full-time surgeon general, he must be confirmed and his hearings aren’t scheduled yet.
Meanwhile, @JeromeAdamsMD defended doctors’ decisions to stay, not quit Trump’s task force.
“If Dr. Birx or I weren’t there, many medical/ public health conversations would’ve had no input whatsoever from a woman, or a person or color,” Adams writes.
I wrote one last story for POLITICO, about the crash landing of Operation Warp Speed.
Officials last year hoped it would be the greatest success of the Trump administration. Team Biden has instead deemed it a failure and just announced they’ll rename it.
In interviews last year, officials talked about their optimism that “MP2” (short for “Manhattan Project 2,” an early name for what became Warp Speed) would deliver an end to the pandemic.
And they insisted history would bear them out, even after Trump lost.
Operation Warp Speed clearly achieved some goals — they helped deliver two working vaccines in 2020, an achievement that would’ve been seen as implausible a year ago.
But as problems piled up in recent weeks, officials have started blaming a familiar punching bag: the CDC.
I’ve written often on the mismanaged response to COVID-19.
But for this story, I tried to get out of DC and show the collateral damage: how COVID surprised and then devastated a community of Pacific Islanders across the United States.
1. The story focuses on people from the Marshall Islands, who I’ve tracked for the past year.
The US used their homeland to test dozens of nuclear bombs; as the islanders resettled in places like Iowa and Arkansas, they were promised Medicaid before Congress yanked it away.
2. You might think you don’t know the Marshallese or their story. But you’ve probably seen footage of their struggles without realizing it.
Here’s video of the Castle Bravo nuclear test in 1954 — which exposed islanders to fallout — and was recycled for movies like Godzilla.