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Billions spent on coronavirus fight, but what happens next?
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Billions spent on coronavirus fight, but what happens next?
mynorthwest.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mynorthwest.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Billions spent on coronavirus fight, but what happens next?
MICHELLE R. SMITH, LAUREN WEBER and HANNAH RECHT, Associated Press and KHN
April 19, 2021
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1of5Dr. Mysheika W. Roberts, the health commissioner for Columbus Public Health, poses for a portrait in Columbus, Ohio, on Wednesday, April 14, 2021. Public health officials who have juggled bare-bones budgets for years are happy to have the additional money prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet they worry it will soon dry up as the pandemic recedes, continuing a boom-bust funding cycle that has plagued the U.S. public health system for decades. If budgets are slashed again, they warn, that could leave the nation where it was before covid: unprepared for a health crisis. “We need funds that we can depend on year after year,” says Roberts.Paul Vernon/APShow MoreShow Less
Mon 10:21 a m : Public health seeks steady funding, not feast or famine | News, Sports, Jobs
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Billions spent on coronavirus fight, but what happens next?
MICHELLE R. SMITH, LAUREN WEBER and HANNAH RECHT, Associated Press and KHN
April 19, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail 3
1of3Dr. Mysheika W. Roberts, the health commissioner for Columbus Public Health, poses for a portrait in Columbus, Ohio, on Wednesday, April 14, 2021. Public health officials who have juggled bare-bones budgets for years are happy to have the additional money prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet they worry it will soon dry up as the pandemic recedes, continuing a boom-bust funding cycle that has plagued the U.S. public health system for decades. If budgets are slashed again, they warn, that could leave the nation where it was before covid: unprepared for a health crisis. “We need funds that we can depend on year after year,” says Roberts.Paul Vernon/APShow MoreShow Less