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What your doctor is reading on Medscape.com:
MAY 01, 2020 — Here are the coronavirus stories Medscape’s editors around the globe think you need to know about today:
Remdesivir Emergency Use Authorization
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Friday issued an emergency use authorization for the drug remdesivir to treat suspected or laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 in adults and children hospitalized with severe disease. The emergency use authorization is not the same as an FDA approval, and may be revised or revoked.
In its press release, FDA acknowledged that there is limited information available about remdesivir’s safety and effectiveness for this use, but cited the findings of a National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases-sponsored trial, announced earlier this week, that patients who received remdesivir had a shorter recovery time than patients who received placebo.
Pay Parity for Telehealth Services
Physicians who are conducting telephone visits during the COVID-19 pandemic will be paid at a higher rate, more closely aligned with rates for face-to-face visits, officials at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced Thursday. Rates for telephone visits will increase from $14 to $41 per visit to about $46 to $110, and the pay increase is retroactive to March 1, 2020.
Telemedicine use grew quickly in the early days of the pandemic in the United States, new data indicate. For the week ending March 20, telemedicine visits grew about 400% compared with the week before, according to data from the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science. But this initial growth spurt has since slowed down. The week ending April 10 saw an 18% increase in telehealth visits compared with the week before. These stats reflect the claims in IQVIA’s database, and are not projected to represent the entire US population.
Yale’s Treatment Protocol
Yale New Haven Health System has updated its treatment algorithm for COVID-19 patients several times since the virus first hit Connecticut weeks ago, MDedge News reports.
Hydroxychloroquine is first-line, based on in-vitro data that show potent inhibition of the virus and a possibility for clinical benefit. Newer iterations of the algorithm have physicians watching patients’ QTc intervals more closely and prioritizing reading ECGs from patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19.
Continued
Much of what’s being done at Yale and elsewhere is empiric because there are simply not much data to rely on. “We are trying to do the best we can” in “the haze of battle,” says a Yale cardiologist who is helping to coordinate the health system’s response to COVID-19. “People really came together quickly to develop this. One hopes we never have to go through anything like this again.”
Virtual March for Masks
A coalition of Yale resident physicians and other medical providers calling themselves “NeedMasksToday” is holding a virtual march on Saturday, May 2, to draw attention to frontline healthcare workers’ need for adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) and advocate for the White House to invoke the Defense Production Act to manufacture and equitably distribute masks and other PPE.
In Memoriam
As front-line healthcare workers care for patients with COVID-19, they commit themselves to difficult, draining work and also put themselves at risk for infection. Hundreds throughout the world have died.
Medscape has published a memorial list to commemorate them. We will continue updating this list as, sadly, needed. Please help us ensure this list is complete by submitting names with an age, profession or specialty, and location through this form.