Free COVID-19 tests ending for uninsured Americans

Free COVID-19 tests ending for uninsured Americans
Free COVID-19 tests ending for uninsured Americans
Images by Tang Ming Tung/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Americans who don’t have health insurance will now start to see some of the free COVID-19 testing options disappear, even if they are showing symptoms.

Quest Diagnostics, one of the largest testing companies in the country, told ABC News that patients who are not on Medicare, Medicaid or a private health plan will now be charged $125 dollars ($119 + a $6 physician fee) when using one of its PCR tests either by ordering a kit online or visiting one of the 1,500 Quest or major retail locations that offer the tests, such as Walmart or Giant Eagle.

More than 30 million Americans had no insurance during the first half of 2021, according to CDC estimates.

This week, federal funding to cover the cost of COVID-19 testing and treatment for uninsured Americans officially dried up; any further infusion of cash hinges on Congress passing the White House’s request for billions more in COVID relief, which is still stuck at an impasse.

Quest has begun notifying its clients and partners they can no longer expect to be reimbursed for uninsured claims, barring additional funding from Congress.

For some of the major retail pharmacies, things are still in flux.

Walgreens told ABC News no firm decisions have yet been made. The company said it is waiting on further guidance from the White House and federal agencies and is remaining “hopeful for a path forward that ensures uninterrupted access to COVID-19 services.” CVS told ABC News it is “fully confident” a solution will be found between Congress and the administration.

But unless Congress agrees to more COVID-19 funding, it is likely companies will have to either absorb the cost of uninsured customers — or begin charging them.

Meanwhile, groups such as the National Association of Chain Drug Stores, which represents major retail drug stores and supermarkets such as CVS, Costco Wholesale, Hy-Vee and Albertsons, have been sounding alarm bells on the issue and pushing the Biden administration and Congress to sort things out.

“Any premature lapse in funding that splinters care access threatens to disintegrate the robust, equity-driven COVID-19 pandemic response that has so far saved more than a million lives,” NACDS wrote in recent letters to the White House as well as Senate and House leadership.

With funding for the uninsured expired, the support structure to provide equitable access to COVID-19 testing and treatment is “in imminent jeopardy,” the group wrote, warning the funding cut “could create extreme confusion at the pharmacy counter” and “result in the tragedy of increasing disparities in access to critically needed care and patients forgoing care.”

Fostering equitable access to COVID-19 care for vulnerable groups is contingent on making sure sick people get the treatment they need in time, because antiviral therapies such as monoclonals or Paxlovid must be taken within a short infection timeframe. So, getting treated is contingent upon getting tested in that limited window, to receive what is already a shrinking supply of free treatments. Getting tested in time is also contingent on being able to afford the service, which is not a given, especially for lower income families.

“The loss of access, as a result of expiring COVID-19 care programs, could undermine the nation’s broader, comprehensive response efforts, and NACDS agrees that inaction at this pivotal time could set the nation back, leave the nation less prepared, and may cost the nation more lives,” the letter read.

The American Clinical Laboratory Association — the national trade association representing some of the leading clinical labs responsible for COVID-19 diagnostics (including Quest and LabCorp) — is similarly raising concerns.

“Without question, the exhaustion of these funds will threaten access to testing for the most vulnerable Americans at a critical time in our nation’s response effort,” Tom Sparkman, ACLA’s senior vice president of government affairs and policy, wrote to House and Senate leadership this week.

Sparkman told ABC News in an interview Wednesday the funding cuts for the uninsured is two steps backward in the pandemic progress.

“We are still in a public health emergency. We’re not out of the woods yet — we don’t want to start taking apart pieces of the response. We need to remain strong and vigilant, and the uninsured funding is a critical component of that,” Sparkman said. “It’s extremely concerning.”

“We can’t start rolling up the carpet,” he said. “Not learning the lessons from past surges — of keeping a higher level of surge capacity for testing, keeping those lines warm and available — I think that would be a mistake.”

ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett and Anne Flaherty contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

A$AP Rocky announces whisky venture, Drake donates $1 million in Bitcoin, and more

A$AP Rocky announces whisky venture, Drake donates  million in Bitcoin, and more
A$AP Rocky announces whisky venture, Drake donates  million in Bitcoin, and more
Arturo Holmes/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

Rapper and fashion icon A$AP Rocky announced on Thursday his new alcohol venture, Mercer + Prince. The Canadian whisky was developed in partnership with Global Brand Equities and E. & J. Gallo.

“I have wanted to launch a whisky for a few years, but it was difficult to find partners willing to innovate to the level I envisioned,” A$AP said. “Fortunately, I found those partners in Global Brand Equities and Gallo.”

The name, Mercer + Prince, represents two of the rappers’ favorite cross streets in New York, where people of all walks of life intersect.

“I’m so excited and grateful to finally introduce Mercer + Prince to the world,” A$AP said. 

Drake seems to be in a giving mood lately. According to Billboard, the “God’s Plan” rapper gifted $1 million in Bitcoin to The LeBron James Family Foundation, after winning big in roulette. The mission of the foundation is to invest time, resources and attention in the kids of LeBron’s hometown of Akron, Ohio.

“Anytime I get blessed like that, I always think it’s good karma that needs to be transferred,” the rapper said in an Instagram video

Fans of the popular TV show Bel-Air have all the more reason to enjoy the franchise. 

Peacock, the service that streams the Fresh Prince spinoff, is teaming up with livestream app NTWRK to drop an exclusive collection of Bel-Air-inspired sneakers, set-used props and wardrobe items, and fan collectibles.

The pack includes a Will Smith Bel-Air basketball jersey, a blazer, a school uniform, Jordan sneakers and more. 

All proceeds will go to Coded by Kids, a Philadelphia-based tech education nonprofit that focuses on tech startup-focused entrepreneurship programs for underrepresented groups.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Music notes: Billie Eilish, Rihanna and more

Music notes: Billie Eilish, Rihanna and more
Music notes: Billie Eilish, Rihanna and more
Momodu Mansaray/WireImage

Billie Eilish has just hit a new YouTube milestone: She’s racked up more than 45 million subscribers on her official artist channel. That makes her one of only nine artists who have that many subscribers. The others are, in descending order, BlackPinkJustin BieberBTSMarshmelloEminemEd SheeranAriana Grande and Taylor Swift.

Is Rihanna engaged?  The “Diamonds” singer laughed off an answer about a giant rock on THAT finger on Tuesday and told reporters, “‘This old ring?”  Daily Mail says she didn’t confirm whether or not she’s engaged to boyfriend A$AP Rocky, with whom she’s expecting her first child.

Camila Cabello is rocking a mullet, it seems.  She took to Instagram to show off a haircut — or is it a wig? — that screams, “Business in the front, party in the back.”  Camila’s hair is chopped short in the front and on the top of her head while she sports long tresses in the back.  Lil Nas X commented with two fire emojis.

Mariah Carey is taking you to school with her upcoming Master Class on how to use your voice like an instrument.  She confirmed her course runs on April 14 and encouraged fans to sign up now. “I’ve never let cameras into my musical oasis before—but that’s all about to change. My class on the voice as an instrument is coming soon,” she teased.  “Hope to see you there!”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Music notes: Mariah Carey, Camila Cabello and more

Music notes: Mariah Carey, Camila Cabello and more
Music notes: Mariah Carey, Camila Cabello and more
Christian Vierig/GC Images

Mariah Carey is taking you to school with her upcoming Master Class on how to use your voice like an instrument. She confirmed her course runs on April 14 and encouraged fans to sign up now. “I’ve never let cameras into my musical oasis before—but that’s all about to change. My class on the voice as an instrument is coming soon,” she teased. “Hope to see you there!”

Camila Cabello is rocking a mullet, it seems. She took to Instagram to show off a haircut — or is it a wig? — that screams, “Business in the front, party in the back.” Camila’s hair is chopped short in the front and on the top of her head while she sports long tresses in the back. Lil NasX commented with two fire emojis.

Is Rihanna engaged? The “Diamonds” singer laughed off an answer about a giant rock on THAT finger on Tuesday and told reporters, “‘This old ring?” Daily Mail says she didn’t confirm whether or not she’s engaged to boyfriend A$AP Rocky, with whom she’s expecting her first child.

Michael Bublé is getting ready to introduce you to his new studio album, Higher, which comes out Friday, but that pales in comparison to the best news he just received about his young son Noah.  He told USA Today while tearing up, “Last week Noah had his final scan after five years and you can imagine how that felt.”  Noah, who is eight, was diagnosed with liver cancer and is now in remission.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Amy Schumer predicts she’ll be “canceled” thanks to Sunday night’s live Oscars telecast

Amy Schumer predicts she’ll be “canceled” thanks to Sunday night’s live Oscars telecast
Amy Schumer predicts she’ll be “canceled” thanks to Sunday night’s live Oscars telecast
ABC/Art Streiber

Amy Schumer sat down with Ellen DeGeneres for a taping of an April segment for the final season of Ellen’s chat show, during which Amy admitted she’s expecting some blowback from her Oscars gig this Sunday night. 

Schumer, fellow comic Wanda Sykes and actress Regina Hall are co-hosting the 94th installment of the awards ceremony, airing on ABC. 

Amy emerged from backstage wearing an exact copy of the outfit Ellen was wearing — a cream-colored jacket over a white shirt and jeans. To literally top it off, Schumer wore a short-cropped wig approximating Ellen’s ‘do. 

“Am I not taking over the show?” Amy asked in mock confusion. “They invited me, and you’re wrapping things up, and I thought I was becoming…taking over the show. Is that not the plan?”

Ellen joked, “I would love it, but I didn’t know anything about it,” then told the audience, “But let’s have her take over the show,” who applauded.

After Amy ditched the wig, Ellen asked Schumer about her upcoming Oscars stint. By the time the interview airs April 20, Amy predicted she’ll be “freshly canceled.” 

“Are you gonna be edgy?” Ellen asked.

Amy answered, “It’s not that I make the plan, it’s just I have no impulse control, so…I think it, and then it’s too late, I’m over.”

Amy said she’s not nervous about the show, crediting her background in stand-up, but she admitted that she’s had trouble sleeping lately.

Schumer asked for some advice from Ellen, a former Oscars host herself. “I think just have fun,” Ellen offered. “You’re gonna look out there [at the audience] and you know everybody, and everybody knows you. That helps.”  

The pair jokingly agreed that if Oscar nominee Javier Bardem catches Amy’s eye, she should just stare at him.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ed Sheeran responds to Ukrainian band asking to perform remotely at upcoming benefit: “I stand with you”

Ed Sheeran responds to Ukrainian band asking to perform remotely at upcoming benefit: “I stand with you”
Ed Sheeran responds to Ukrainian band asking to perform remotely at upcoming benefit: “I stand with you”
Christopher Polk/Getty Images for Wonderwall

Ed Sheeran will have some special guests when he performs at the upcoming Concert for Ukraine — a band of musicians currently serving as front-line soldiers there.

The band, called Antytila, armed and dressed in combat gear, took a moment from fighting the Russian invasion of their country to contact the Grammy winner, who is headlining the two-hour benefit concert.

“In peacetime, our concerts gathered stadiums. The war has changed our lives and now we are fighting with weapons against the Russian occupiers,” they explained. “Today we learned about your charity concert for Ukraine, which will take place in Birmingham. And we offer to make a live broadcast between Kyiv and Birmingham with Antytila temporary joining the gig remotely.”

“Our band will play our music in Kyiv, a city that has not surrendered and will never surrender to the Russian occupiers. You will play in Birmingham,” they continued. “We are not afraid to play under the bombs. Through music, we want to show the world that Ukraine is strong and unconquered. We will fight and sing for victory in front of the whole world that supports us.”

They closed saying they are “ready” to perform on March 29, where the benefit concert is set to air on ITV.

Ed was moved by Antytila’s plight and reached out to them on Thursday, saying, “I love you.  I stand with you and I’m so proud to be playing this fundraising event next week.  I can’t wait to check your music out, guys, and I’m sending you lots of love.”

The Concert for Ukraine will benefit ongoing humanitarian efforts there.  Camila CabelloSnow Patrol and others are also expected to perform.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“I was a drunk” — ‘Full House’ alum Dave Coulier announces he’s two years sober

“I was a drunk” — ‘Full House’ alum Dave Coulier announces he’s two years sober
“I was a drunk” — ‘Full House’ alum Dave Coulier announces he’s two years sober
Gerardo Mora/Getty Images

Full House alum Dave Coulier is opening up about how he cut alcohol out of his life, by sharing a throwback photo of his cut-up face.

“I was a drunk. Yes. An alcoholic,” the 62-year-old actor said in a lengthy Instagram post Thursday. But then he shared the good news, writing, “I’ve been alcohol free since January 1, 2020.”

“When I drank, I was the life of the party. I could make people laugh until they fell down. In this picture I was the one who fell down,” he recounted. “Not because I was playing hockey or doing the things I love — like chopping wood or doing construction, golfing, fishing or flying airplanes. I was hammered and fell up some stairs made of stone.”

Coulier said he loved having “beers with the boys,” but he eventually came to the realization that, as he put it, “I loved booze, but it didn’t love me back.”

He went on to note that he decided to quit drinking “for my own well-being, my family and for those around me who I love so dearly.”

Coulier gave a shout-out to his wife of nearly eight years, Melissa, specifically for supporting his sobriety and staying by his side throughout the journey.

“The psychological and physical transformation has been amazing,” he concluded. “The sky is more blue, my heart is no longer closed, and I enjoy making people laugh until they fall down more than ever before.”

Melissa, who married the comedian in July 2014, replied in the comments section, “SO proud of you. I love you and your strength so much!!”

She wasn’t alone in her support: Coulier’s heartfelt post has more than 120,000 likes as of Thursday afternoon.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

DOJ charges Russian officials over hacking campaigns that targeted critical infrastructure

DOJ charges Russian officials over hacking campaigns that targeted critical infrastructure
DOJ charges Russian officials over hacking campaigns that targeted critical infrastructure
Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — The Justice Department unsealed two indictments Thursday charging four Russian government employees with two separate conspiracies — outlining their alleged involvement in hacking campaigns that targeted critical infrastructure networks in the U.S. and across the globe between 2012 and 2018.

Altogether, DOJ says the hacking campaigns “targeted thousands of computers, at hundreds of companies and organizations, in approximately 135 countries.”

The unsealing of the cases and their detailed hacking schemes, according to the Justice Department, are intended to serve as a warning amid the current tensions with Russia about the “urgent ongoing need for American businesses to harden their defenses and remain vigilant.”

“The conduct alleged in these charges is the kind of conduct that we are concerned about under the current circumstances and has been addressed by various parts of the federal government,” a senior FBI official told reporters Thursday. “These charges show the dark art of the possible when it comes to critical infrastructure.”

In the first case (reported earlier on this DL after its unsealing in D.C. district court), the Justice Department unsealed charges from June of last year against Russian government employee Evgeny Gladkikh who, along with unidentified co-conspirators, carried out hacking attacks that caused two separate emergency shutdowns at a foreign energy facility. They later failed when they allegedly sought to carry out a similar attack on a U.S. company that managed similar critical infrastructure entities.

In a separate case charged in August of last year, the Justice Department charged three officers in Russia’s FSB with carrying out a two-phased campaign to “target and compromise the computers of hundreds of entities related to the energy sector worldwide.”

“Access to such systems would have provided the Russian government the ability to, among other things, disrupt and damage such computer systems at a future time of its choosing,” the Justice Department said Thursday.

The hacking attempts, according to investigators, were part of Russia’s efforts to “maintain surreptitious, unauthorized and persistent access to the computer networks of companies and organizations in the international energy sector, including oil and gas firms, nuclear power plants, and utility and power transmission companies.”

The indictment alleges that in the first phase of the attacks, the FSB officers were able to install malware on “more than 17,000 unique devices in the United States and abroad, including computer networks used by some power and energy companies. In the second phase, they carried out targeted spearphishing attacks against more than 3300 individuals from more than 500 U.S. and international companies, including U.S. agencies like the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

According to DOJ, they were actually able to successfully compromise servers that hosted websites visited by energy sector engineers — when engineers visited a compromised website their login credentials would in some cases be secretly captured by the Russian malware.

None of the individuals publicly identified by DOJ in the new indictments reside in the U.S., making it unlikely they will face arrest or extradition over the charges.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scathing evaluation of Sweden’s COVID response reveals ‘failures’ to control the virus

Scathing evaluation of Sweden’s COVID response reveals ‘failures’ to control the virus
Scathing evaluation of Sweden’s COVID response reveals ‘failures’ to control the virus
Cris Canton/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — A scathing review has been released evaluating the “failures” of the policies that guided Sweden’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The review, published in the journal Humanities & Social Sciences Communications Tuesday, discusses how, throughout the pandemic, Sweden attempted to avoid lockdowns and stay-at-home orders implemented by many of its neighboring countries.

The authors — from Sweden, Belgium, Norway and the U.S. — said Sweden was able to achieve this by portraying advice from independent scientists as “extreme,” keeping the public in the dark regarding facts about how COVID-19 spreads and not issuing any mandates.

This is despite the country’s history of collaboration between authorities and the scientific community and the general public’s high level of trust of those in power.

As a result, Sweden had a higher COVID death rate than the surrounding Nordic nations.

“The Swedish response to this pandemic was unique and characterised by a morally, ethically, and scientifically questionable laissez-faire approach, a consequence of structural problems in the society,” the team wrote. “There was more emphasis on the protection of the ‘Swedish image’ than on saving and protecting lives or on an evidence-based approach.”

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Sweden’s Public Health Agency had published two pandemic planning documents in the last decade to prepare for such an event, according to the review.

Although both focused on the value of antiviral drugs and vaccines to treat and prevent cases, they also emphasized the importance of “limiting the consequences for individuals and society” and how “the negative effects on society must be as small as possible.”

So, when COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organization in March 2020, Sweden was determined to keep its economy up and running and emphasized individual responsibility rather than collective responsibility.

According to the review, the Prime Minister and Minister of Health and Social Affairs “mainly referred to the authority of the Public Health Agency,” a stark contrast from past collaboration between the government and scientists.

Unlike the strict lockdowns implemented by most of Europe, the PHA merely recommended staying at home if feeling ill, washing hands regularly, social distancing and avoiding unnecessary travel.

Meanwhile, restaurants, bars and shops remained open; children under 16 were required to attend school in person with no exceptions for those with at-risk family members; and no mask mandates were ever implemented.

The review noted that the PHA did eventually recommend face masks in hospitals and care homes in June 2020, but only when treating confirmed or suspected COVID patients.

The authors said the PHA discouraging the use of masks and claiming they were ineffective helped spread fear in the population and misinformed the public about how COVID spreads, that asymptomatic people can be infectious and that masks protect the wearer and those around them.

According to the review, there was also a lack of transparency from public health authorities. The number of ICU beds per region was not publicly available and schools often did not inform parents or teachers when students tested positive for the virus.

Then there were efforts to actively squash medical researchers who criticized Sweden’s strategy and accused authorities of not being properly prepared.

When researchers voiced their criticisms on social media, in interviews or in scientific papers, they were often reprimanded by their superiors for reasons such as not being allowed to use their university affiliation, even though this is against Sweden’s right of Academic Freedom of Speech, according to the review.

Additionally, the PHA also “discredited any critique and national/international scientific evidence” and the authors say the agency “cherry picked” scientific papers that agreed with its viewpoint.

Ultimately, this led to Sweden having worse COVID-19 outcomes than its neighboring Nordic countries.

In late December 2020, Sweden was recording an average of 44 COVID-19 deaths per 1 million people, according to Our World in Data.

By comparison, Denmark was recording 5 deaths per 1 million, Norway was recording 0.5 deaths per 1 million and Finland was recording 0.3 deaths per 1 million, the data shows.

One month earlier, a report from the Swedish Inspectorate of Health and Social Services found half the country’s deaths at the time were among nursing home residents.

About one year later in January 2022 — during the omicron wave — Sweden was faring better and recording 5 deaths per 1 million.

However, the other three countries were recording half as many deaths with Denmark recording the highest at 2.4 per 1 million, Our World in Data shows.

“The cost in terms of infections and deaths of this pandemic in Sweden has been larger in some other more densely populated and more centrally located countries, yet is still markedly higher than in the other Nordic countries,” the authors wrote. “This Swedish laissez-faire strategy has had a large human cost for the Swedish society.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Search goes on for 2nd black box in China Eastern Airlines crash

Search goes on for 2nd black box in China Eastern Airlines crash
Search goes on for 2nd black box in China Eastern Airlines crash
Wang Yizhao/China News Service via Getty Image

(NEW YORK) — The commercial passenger jet that crashed Monday in southern China plunged into a mountainside with such force it created a 66-foot deep crater and shattered into pieces, officials said Thursday.

Search crews have recovered 183 pieces of the China Eastern Airlines plane and the remains of 21 of the 132 people killed in the air disaster, Zhu Tao, director of the Aviation Safety Office of the Civil Aviation Administration of China, said at a news conference.

One piece of the aircraft roughly 4 feet long and 4 inches wide was found on farmland 6.2 miles from the core crash site in China’s Guangxi region. Officials would not speculate on how it ended up there but said they are expanding the search area.

Zhu said search crews were still looking Thursday for the Boeing 737-800’s second black box, believed to be the flight data recorder that was installed above the ceiling of the aircraft’s rear cabin.

The plane’s cockpit voice recorder, installed in the plane’s rear cargo compartment, was recovered from the wreckage on Wednesday and is expected to be analyzed at a lab, officials said.

Zhu said most of the wreckage of Flight 5735 is concentrated in and around an impact crater measuring nearly 100 feet wide and 66 feet deep.

Among the pieces recovered are an engine blade and engine pylon, the left and right horizontal stabilizers, pieces of the wings and the plane’s aileron autopilot actuators.

“We also found crew escape ropes and fragments of crew manuals and some crew documents normally found in the cockpit,” Zhu said.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

The plane crashed after taking off from Kunming, the capital of China’s Yunnan province. The flight was headed to Guangzhou, a port city northwest of Hong Kong, Chinese officials said.

Early data shows the airliner plunged from 29,000 feet to 8,000 feet, leveled off and then went into a freefall, exploding into a fireball that was seen and filmed by people nearby. One video showed the plane nose-diving into the ground.

Air traffic controllers made repeated attempts to radio the flight crew when they noticed the aircraft’s rapid descent but were unable to restore communications with the crew before the crash, Chinese officials said.

U.S. intelligence doesn’t have a clear theory on what led to the plane crashing. A source tells ABC News they aren’t ruling anything out, including a possible intentional downing.

During Thursday’s news conference, Chinese officials said more than 300 family members of passengers on the doomed plane were gathered in Wuzhou in the Guangxi region and that China Eastern Airlines had dispatched 161 staff members to meet with them and provide assistance and comfort. More than 200 of the family members have been taken near the crash scene to mourn their lost loved ones, officials said.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.