How healthcare will change post-coronavirus...
[Morning Brew] [Read in Browser]( [The New Normal: Healthcare](
TOGETHER WITH
[Cariuma](
Good morning. A few important housekeeping notes before you read the Brew and check on your garden.Â
- Today weâre resuming our New Normal series, which explores COVID-19âs long-term impact on different industries. Last week, we asked you what you wanted to read about. The most popular response was healthcare. So today we wrote about healthcare.Â
- On Sunday, you will be receiving Light Roast. Typically, this newsletter is reserved for readers with 3+ referrals, but we wanted to give everyone a taste in case you want Light Roast in your inbox permanently.Â
Hope you all have a great weekend, and see you tomorrow morning.
MARKETS
NASDAQ
9,588.81
+ 1.01%
S&P
3,041.31
+ 1.31%
DJIA
25,605.54
+ 1.90%
GOLD
1,737.30
- 0.14%
10-YR
0.703%
+ 3.00 bps
OIL
36.45
+ 0.30%
*As of market close
- Markets: Stocks [rebounded]( just a bit following the worst trading day in months. Investors tried to swallow a new report from the Fed, which warned âthe path ahead is extraordinarily uncertainâ for the U.S. economy.
- World: One thing is certainâthe UK's economy [tanked]( in April. By shrinking more than 20%, the economy essentially wiped out all growth from 2002.
TELEMEDICINE
[Waiting Rooms, We Wonât Miss You](
[Telemedicine]
Francis Scialabba
The coronavirus pandemic has resulted in never-before-seen experiments around remote work, the metaverse, and finally embracing leggings as real pants. Itâs also created a budding star in healthcare: telemedicine.
- The U.S. government defines telemedicine as the use of information and communication technologies to provide clinical healthcare services. âTelehealthâ implies both clinical and non-clinical services, though it's often used interchangeably with telemedicine.
COVID-19 could be the tipping point. Virtual doctor visits jumped from ~12,000/week to more than 1 million/week during the pandemic. âPhysicians have now basically crossed the rubicon,â NY Presbyterian CEO Steven Corwin [told Fortune](.
So what's in the way?
While it's not new, telemedicine hasnât been a top priority for providers or insurers. Virtual visits can be [less profitable]( than in-person services, especially for rural hospitals. Regulatory barriers have also [created uncertainty]( around telemedicineâs future. Â
For patients, Medicare, Medicaid, or insurance donât always cover the cost of virtual care. In rural areas (where telehealth is especially helpful in plugging healthcare gaps), many people lack tech or broadband access.
The COVID-19 pilotÂ
When the pandemic began, federal officials relaxed telemedicine rules. They [waived]( certain Medicare requirements and allowed doctors to practice across state lines and virtually prescribe more medications.Â
- Many states also expanded Medicaid telehealth coverage and relaxed licensing restrictions. Some required that private insurance plans cover and reimburse telemedicine as much as in-person visits.Â
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma is pleased with early results and wants the U.S. to continue [expanding]( telemedicine access. But there are still some wrinkles to iron out, including...
- Whether Medicare/Medicaid should pay out the same for virtual appointments
- Expanding eligible services to include emergency care, physical therapy, and mental healthÂ
- Bringing virtual care to home consults, hospices, and nursing homes
- Easing licensing rules so telemedicine can cross state lines Â
Looking ahead...Verma said health officials are searching for ways to boost telemedicine. However, only Congress can permanently expand it to more patients and healthcare plans.
   mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew!&body=Telemedicine%20Soars%20Under%20Pandemic%20Restrictions:%200A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%E2%80%94Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley,%20daily.%20
INEQUALITY
[COVID-19 Gives U.S. Healthcare a C-](
[Medical workers hug]
Noam Galai/Getty Images
The coronavirus pandemic has made painfully clear all the ways the U.S. healthcare system hasnât lived up to Miranda Baileyâs expectations.Â
No. 1: Unequal outcomesÂ
Preliminary data shows black Americans were disproportionally harmed in this crisis. For example, black people [account for]( 14% of Illinoisâs population, but more than 40% of its confirmed coronavirus deaths in mid-April.Â
What happened? Inequalities that existed pre-pandemic (less flexible working arrangements, greater likelihood of pre-existing conditions, less access to medical care) amplified the virusâs impact on vulnerable populations.Â
No. 2: Employer-based healthcareÂ
With businesses caught between a tanking economy and a workforce that needs reliable healthcare, some policy wonks [are proposing]( major changes.Â
Some conservatives advocate for health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs), where employers pay workers for healthcare costs directly rather than offering insurance through a company-based plan. Progressives say the crisis shows itâs time for universal healthcare.
No. 3: Doctor burnout and misaligned incentives
âFor years the U.S. healthcare system has strained doctors and nurses with demands that place financial interests above patient care, making the practice of medicine unbearable,â a Rhode Island emergency and critical care doctor [wrote]( for STAT.Â
Bottom line: Medical experts think that COVID-19, by exposing the numerous flaws in the U.S.' current healthcare system, could accelerate significant policy shifts in the industry.
   mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew!&body=Coronavirus%20Exposes%20U.S.%20Healthcare%20Flaws:%200A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%E2%80%94Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley,%20daily.%20
LONG-TERM CARE
[Homes > Nursing Homes](
[Senior in wheelchair on his porch]
Getty Images
As of last month, one-third of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. were residents or workers at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, [according to the NYT](.Â
How did it happen?
- Lack of protection: One-fifth of U.S. nursing homes reported a [shortage]( of personal protective equipment in late May, per a Kaiser Health News analysis.Â
- Lack of staff: A [Reuters analysis]( of federal data found that about a quarter of nursing homes reported direct-care staffing shortages in the second half of May.Â
The problem isnât confined to the U.S. In Canada, nursing homes [accounted]( for 81% of COVID-19 deaths as of May 18.Â
What might change
The model underpinning the long-term care industry. Nursing homes are valuable because they consolidate care for the elderly.Â
- But with consolidation acting as coronavirus kindling, the nursing home as we know it might never return.Â
- We'll likely see a [huge shift in demand]( toward home-care. By 2026, the U.S. home-care industry will need to fill 4.2 million jobs, per PHI research. And that forecast was made before the pandemic.
Bottom line: Grace-Marie Turner, president of the free-market think tank Galen Institute, thinks the shift is fueled by more than coronavirus fears. âPeople want their own independent life,â she told STAT.
   mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew!&body=Coronavirus%20Poses%20an%20Existential%20Threat%20to%20Nursing%20Homes:%200A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%E2%80%94Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley,%20daily.%20
SPONSORED BY CARIUMA
[Are Your Feet Ready for the Heat?](#)
[Cariuma](
Summertime is upon us, and hot days call for even hotter sneakers. Thatâs why the Brew Crew is gearing up for summer with [CARIUMAâs sustainable sneaks](.
This summer treat for your feet is the most sustainable, comfortable, and stylish thing that has ever happened to traditional footwear. [CARIUMA]( sneakers bring summer wherever you are with a variety of bright colors that are just as good-looking as they are consciously-made.Â
With [CARIUMAs](, your feet will be hotter than the summer sun and cooler than an ice cold drink by the pool. Theyâll be fresher than the smell of fresh-cut grass. Ready for a vacation from this metaphor yet?Â
Nowâs the time to [get these sneaks]( before theyâre gone. Brew readers can get their feet summer-ready with an exclusive [15% off for a limited time](.
MENTAL HEALTH
[Will Our Brains Ever Be the Same?](
[Patrick meditating]
Giphy
According to health psychologist Elke Van Hoof, worldwide lockdowns brought on by COVID-19 have [set the stage]( for "arguably the largest psychological experiment ever conducted."
- As they cope with isolation, an economic recession, and stress about the virus itself, 45% of U.S. adults told the Kaiser Family Foundation their mental health [got worse](.Â
The hypothesis: When this is all over, researchers will know how well human brains cope with a long-lasting traumatic eventâwithout the benefit of frequent human contact, established routines, and in-person mental health care.Â
It doesnât help that when it comes to government support...
Mental healthâs getting the short end of the stethoscope
The $425 million set aside in the CARES Act for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration is less than a [quarter of 1%]( of the $185 billion invested in healthcare providers altogether.
- Nearly two-thirds of community behavioral health organizations say theyâll shut down in three months or less.Â
Meanwhile...teletherapy services are booming. Talkspace and BetterHelp [reported a surge]( in new users this year, and meditation app Headspace [secured]( $47.7 million in new funding. We donât know yet if virtual appointments and aids can replace in-person care, but experts are optimistic.
   mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew!&body=Mental%20Health%20During%20&%20After%20a%20Pandemic:%200A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%E2%80%94Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley,%20daily.%20
PREPAREDNESS
[The Next Pandemic: When, Not If](
[Bill Gates]
World Economic Forum
In a 2015 Ted Talk, Bill Gates [declared](, âIf anything kills over 10 million people in the next few decades, itâs most likely to be a highly infectious virus.âÂ
He probably should have said âviruses.â As humans crisscross the globe with increasing frequency, dive deeper into natural ecosystems, and contribute to climate change, medical experts warn itâs basically inevitable weâll experience more viral outbreaks.Â
- âYou asked what keeps me up at night,â CDC Director Robert Redfield [told]( a House committee. âI know itâs a pandemic flu.â
So what have we learned from COVID-19?Â
That we need to do a lot better next time around. Here are a few proposed solutions from medical experts...
- More funding: Redfield told Congress that his agency didnât have the money to fulfill the âcore capabilities of public health.â The UN says we need to spend [$11 billion more]( to fight global pandemics.
- Reforming the WHO: Global cooperation is critical to fighting a pandemic, but critics argue the World Health Organization has [serious flaws]( in its design.
- Strengthening the medical supply chain to ensure critical drugs are available [when needed](.
- More surveillance: As David Ecker [writes]( in Scientific American, âThe best way to prevent pandemics is to apply the same principles as we use to prevent catastrophic forest fires: survey aggressively for smaller brush fires and stomp them out immediately.â
   mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew!&body=Medical%20Community%20Tries%20to%20Learn%20From%20Coronavirus%20Mistakes:%200A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%E2%80%94Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley,%20daily.%20
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
- [The CDC](: The U.S. may have to institute severe lockdown restrictions again if cases rise dramatically. It stressed Americans should wear masks, stay six feet apart, and wash hands.
- [Hertz]( shares soared 37% after the bankrupt company unveiled a truly crazy plan to sell up to $1 billion in stock. A court gave it the green light.Â
- [Starbucks]( will now let employees wear Black Lives Matter apparel, reversing an earlier stance.
- [Fox News host Tucker Carlson]( is losing big-name advertisers following comments about BLM protests, including Disney and Papa Johnâs.
- [Matt James]( is the first black male lead cast on The Bachelor.
BREW'S BETS
Two free stocks, we kid you not. [Webull]( is serious about making stock trading less complicated, less expensive, and more accessible. And with a $0 minimum deposit, you can get started investing with little investment. Plus, get [two free stocks right here](.*
The cheat sheets of billionaires, icons, and world-class performers. Two of Tim Ferrissâ books, [Tools of Titans and Tribe of Mentors](, were released on Audible this month. Start listening to tactical life and business advice from the best in the world [here](.*
Make the most of meetings:Â Here's rule #1...no agenda and briefing doc, no meeting! [See more tips here](.Â
Weekend Conversation Starters:
- What do you think of Dave Chapelle's [new comedy special](?
- Can you [outrun zombies](?Â
- Type âbell ofâ¦â and [let autofill]( do its thing
*This is sponsored advertising content
FROM THE CREW
[Brewnited States of America](#)
[Flag flying on American beach]
Giphy
Before you head to the beach, check out some of our favorite Morning Brew reads recently.
Social media: 20 [Finance Twitter]( accounts to follow.
Morning Brew Originals: We wrote about the ultra-confusing policies around [refunds]( during the pandemic and the [future of the face mask]( as a consumer product.
Crossword: Try out our [latest puzzle]( before Mondayâs hits.
Recipes: Our [Memorial Day cooking guide]( is useful for the entire summer. Check out our tips for grilled pizza and the vaunted âdirty horchata.â
SATURDAY HEADLINES
While all these video game headlines appear to be a glitch in the Matrix, only one is actually fake. Can you spot it?Â
- "Man wearing [VR headset]( exits apartment, walks into CVS before being confronted by store clerk"
- "New Sims 4 patch adds ladders but also a bug where [Sims pee fire]("
- "A government in Japan [limited video game time](. This boy is fighting back."
- "Fortnite glitch lets players build [customized exploding drone]("
SHARE THE BREW
Step 1: Share the Brew.
Step 2: Earn rewards.
It's that simple. Start sharing [your link]( to get some free Brew swag.
[Click here to get free swag.](
Your referral count: 0
[Click to Share](
Or copy & paste your referral link to others:
[morningbrew.com/daily/r/?kid=4904f90a](
SATURDAY HEADLINES ANSWER
No one was roaming the streets with a VR headset.Â
           Â
Written by [Eliza Carter](, [Alex Hickey](, [Neal Freyman](, [Toby Howell](, and [Jamie Wilde](
Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up [here](.
WANT MORE BREW?
Quarantine newsletter â [The Essentials](
 Retail newsletter â [Retail Brew](
 Tech newsletter â [Emerging Tech Brew](
 Business podcast â [Business Casual](
[ADVERTISE]( // [CAREERS]( // [SHOP](
Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here](.
Change your email address [here](.
View our privacy policy [here](.
Copyright ©2020 Morning Brew. All rights reserved.
40 Exchange Pl., Suite #300, New York, NY 10005