
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The covid public health emergency is ending this week after more than three years. Today on “Post Reports,” health reporter Dan Diamond breaks down what this means for our day-to-day lives and our future pandemic preparedness.
Federal vaccine mandates and travel requirements will soon be gone as what’s left of the nation’s pandemic emergency response ends this month. The White House’s covid response team is disbanding, too – all with little to no fanfare.
“It feels like slouching across the finish line of a race,” health reporter Dan Diamond tells “Post Reports.”
“The overall tenor here is not ‘mission accomplished.’ President Biden's not standing on an aircraft carrier with a banner behind him.”
All in all, it’s a confusing moment of hopes and concerns. For millions of people, this period also marks an end to Medicaid coverage they depended on during the pandemic. Covid isn’t the threat it once was back in 2020 – confirmed deaths and cases have dropped in recent months. But the virus also doesn’t appear to be going away, and some disease experts are warning of the possibility of future waves of omicron-like illnesses.
“Covid is something I still think about every day,” Diamond says. “But it doesn't govern my life the way that it did earlier in the pandemic.”
Read more:
As pandemic experts leave the White House, some worry: what’s next?
What the end of the covid public health emergency means for you
Why are we forgetting the pandemic already?
WHO declares covid-19 is no longer a global health emergency
Covid is still a leading cause of death as the virus recedes
By The Washington Post4.2
51935,193 ratings
The covid public health emergency is ending this week after more than three years. Today on “Post Reports,” health reporter Dan Diamond breaks down what this means for our day-to-day lives and our future pandemic preparedness.
Federal vaccine mandates and travel requirements will soon be gone as what’s left of the nation’s pandemic emergency response ends this month. The White House’s covid response team is disbanding, too – all with little to no fanfare.
“It feels like slouching across the finish line of a race,” health reporter Dan Diamond tells “Post Reports.”
“The overall tenor here is not ‘mission accomplished.’ President Biden's not standing on an aircraft carrier with a banner behind him.”
All in all, it’s a confusing moment of hopes and concerns. For millions of people, this period also marks an end to Medicaid coverage they depended on during the pandemic. Covid isn’t the threat it once was back in 2020 – confirmed deaths and cases have dropped in recent months. But the virus also doesn’t appear to be going away, and some disease experts are warning of the possibility of future waves of omicron-like illnesses.
“Covid is something I still think about every day,” Diamond says. “But it doesn't govern my life the way that it did earlier in the pandemic.”
Read more:
As pandemic experts leave the White House, some worry: what’s next?
What the end of the covid public health emergency means for you
Why are we forgetting the pandemic already?
WHO declares covid-19 is no longer a global health emergency
Covid is still a leading cause of death as the virus recedes

25,829 Listeners

4,058 Listeners

3,646 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

4,442 Listeners

112,263 Listeners

56,657 Listeners

2,479 Listeners

2,368 Listeners

107 Listeners

10,287 Listeners

7,264 Listeners

2,409 Listeners

2,779 Listeners

6,075 Listeners

6,403 Listeners

2,372 Listeners

16,331 Listeners

232 Listeners

296 Listeners

1,251 Listeners

995 Listeners

405 Listeners

344 Listeners

173 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

751 Listeners

642 Listeners