As the chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, I will be doing everything I can to address this crisis with the sense of urgency that it demands. Last week, I led a hearing on long COVID and heard directly from experts and people struggling with this themselves. There is a lot that we still have to learn about this issue. But a few things are clear:
First, far too many patients have struggled to get their symptoms taken seriously and far too many medical professionals have either dismissed or misdiagnosed their serious health problems. Patients are forced to navigate a dysfunctional health care system that is too confusing and too expensive, with no real answers. This should not be happening in the United States of America.
Second, we must sustain our investment into long COVID research. We need to understand why some people get it and others do not. We must also be aggressive in pursuing potential treatments and cures. We can no longer tolerate patients trying to address their symptoms without any guidance on effective therapies from our nation’s public health professionals.
Third, and critically, as treatments are developed, patients must be able to afford them. No one who needs Paxlovid should go without because they cannot afford it. Good health should not be a luxury.
Fourth, we need to do a much better job educating about the benefits of keeping up-to-date on vaccines, wearing masks when appropriate, and taking rapid tests for those who are feeling sick. The best way to avoid getting long COVID is to prevent people from getting the disease in the first place.
And, finally, we need to address the broader social and economic issues that this pandemic made so evident. Because of the pandemic, Americans all across the political spectrum now understand: Health care should not be a privilege tied to employment or income. When a worker loses a job they should NEVER, under any circumstance, lose their health care. It is a system designed only to make huge profits for the insurance industry and drug companies, while ignoring the needs of ordinary Americans.
The pandemic made this simple truth more clear than perhaps ever before: The time is long overdue to join every major country on earth and guarantee health care as a fundamental human right for all, not a privilege for the wealthy few.
Bottom line is this. We cannot turn our backs on Vermonters and people across our country who are living with long COVID. Or the millions more who may contract it in the future. We must stand with them and address this crisis together.
Sincerely,
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