Feature

Biden to end COVID emergencies in May


 

The two national emergency declarations dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic will end May 11, President Joe Biden said on Jan. 30.

Doing so will have many effects, including the end of free vaccines and health services to fight the pandemic. The public health emergency has been renewed every 90 days since it was declared by the Trump administration in January 2020.

The declaration allowed major changes throughout the health care system to deal with the pandemic, including the free distribution of vaccines, testing, and treatments. In addition, telehealth services were expanded, and Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program were extended to millions more Americans.

Biden said the COVID-19 national emergency is set to expire March 1 while the declared public health emergency would currently expire on April 11. The president said both will be extended to end May 11.

There were nearly 300,000 newly reported COVID-19 cases in the United States for the week ending Jan. 25, according to CDC data, as well as more than 3,750 deaths.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

Recommended Reading

Long COVID clinical trials may offer shortcut to new treatments
Federal Practitioner
New Omicron subvariant is ‘crazy infectious,’ COVID expert warns
Federal Practitioner
Long COVID comes into focus, showing older patients fare worse
Federal Practitioner
Cardiac Adverse Events Following COVID-19 Vaccination in Patients With Prior Vaccine-Associated Myocarditis
Federal Practitioner
How Well Does the Third Dose of COVID-19 Vaccine Work?
Federal Practitioner
Is it time for yet another COVID booster? It’s complicated
Federal Practitioner
Doctors’ happiness has not rebounded as pandemic drags on
Federal Practitioner
PCSK9 inhibitors for severe COVID? Pilot trial signals of benefit
Federal Practitioner
How does SARS-CoV-2 affect other respiratory diseases?
Federal Practitioner
FDA wants annual COVID boosters, just like annual flu shots
Federal Practitioner