When it comes to the coronavirus outbreak, it’s easy to have confidence in core elements of the health care system. After all, the United States has among the finest medical professionals and medical facilities in the world.
It’s far more difficult, however, to have confidence in Americans’ access to that system. Tens of millions of Americans remain uninsured — a preventable disaster that was improving better before Donald Trump’s presidency. Complicating matters, many Americans are also under-insured — a problem the Republican White House made worse by expanding the availability of “junk plans.”
Under normal circumstances, this is both a serious policy challenge and frightening hazard for millions of families. But when there’s a viral outbreak, the conditions are anything but normal. As the public-health emergency surrounding the coronavirus intensifies, the United States is confronting a dynamic unfamiliar in most developed nations: citizens with the relevant symptoms aren’t sure whether they can afford to seek medical care.
What’s more, if uninsured or under-insured Americans go to the emergency room, hospitals have to take on the financial burden of providing expensive treatments for patients who have no way of paying their bills.
It’s against this backdrop that Donald Trump participated in a roundtable coronavirus briefing yesterday at the National Institutes of Health, where the president made an unscripted comment.








