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Report: Trump-era policies damaged US health care system: Decades of bad policy laid groundwork

Mark Barna
The Nation's Health April 2021, 51 (2) 15;
Mark Barna
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An already-weakened health safety net, capped by devastating policies, actions and inactions during the Trump era, made America especially vulnerable to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new report from The Lancet Commission.

U.S. deaths from COVID-19 could have been 40% lower had the country’s rates mirrored the level of other high-income nations, saving at least 180,000 lives, according to the Feb. 11 report. But even before the pandemic, U.S. health was deteriorating.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has shown how woefully inadequate the country’s health care and public health system has been in protecting the nation’s health,” Richard Horton, FRCP, FRCPCH, FMedSci, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, said in a news release.

The report, “Public Policy and Health in the Trump Era,” is the product of four years of research by a 33-member commission of medical, public health, law and other experts from the U.S., U.K. and Canada.

The 40-page report examines the health impact on Americans from former President Donald Trump’s policies, while also looking at four decades of actions that undermined U.S. social and health safety nets. Commission members examined issues such as immigration policies, the opioid epidemic, access to health care, nutrition and racism.

America’s health began a downward spiral in 1980 under former President Ronald Reagan, the commission found. Gains from the New Deal and the civil rights movement were undermined by Reagan-era policies. Inequities continued and grew for decades through both Republican and Democrat presidencies, even with the Affordable Care Act becoming law in 2010.

Many Trump-era policies, such as tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations and funding cuts to the social safety net, can be traced to Reagan’s political philosophy, the report noted. An income gap began that today has become a yawning chasm between the wealthy and the middle class.

Meanwhile, health care costs rose as overall health declined. Pre-pandemic, life expectancy in the U.S. was 3.4 years shorter than the average of G-7 nations — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom. In 2018, America had 460,000 excess deaths relative to those countries.

When the pandemic hit, America was not prepared, the commission said. Public health infrastructure and workforce had been gutted, with funding cuts decreasing the front-line public health workforce by 20%. Profit-based health care systems were not ready for a national health emergency. U.S. life expectancy had fallen, substance use deaths were up and 11% of the nation was food insecure.

The Trump administration dismantled economic, health and social safety nets, making it harder for people to obtain health insurance. In 2019, over 34,000 U.S. deaths were associated with lack of health coverage, the commission estimated.

When the pandemic escalated in 2020, Trump mocked masking, spread disinformation and undermined science. He also blocked public health measures that would have helped protect people from the disease and forced states to compete for safety supplies for health workers.

The Lancet Commission report and accompanying commentaries are available at www.thelancet.com.

  • Copyright The Nation’s Health, American Public Health Association
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The Nation's Health: 51 (2)
The Nation's Health
Vol. 51, Issue 2
April 2021
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Report: Trump-era policies damaged US health care system: Decades of bad policy laid groundwork
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The Nation's Health April 2021, 51 (2) 15;

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The Nation's Health April 2021, 51 (2) 15;
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