HealthCoronavirus

Actions

What will change when the COVID-19 public health emergency expires?

Costs for testing and vaccination are expected to change. Work requirements for food assistance may be reinstated.
Posted

After more than three years, the COVID-19 public health emergency is set to end, after the federal government chose not to renew it. This means a lot of changes are on the way, which will affect everything from free vaccines and tests to food assistance programs.

While COVID-19 no longer dominates the headlines, this is as much of a symbolic end to the pandemic as it is a concrete end to many of the pandemic-era programs to which we've grown accustomed.

Under the public health emergency, COVID-19 vaccines were free, and they still will be — regardless of insurance coverage — as long as those federally purchased supplies last. Once those run out, you might start seeing copays and other fees. The cost will depend on what type of coverage you have, so experts suggest asking about those fees before you get a vaccine, so you're not surprised.

COVID-19 vaccines

US COVID vaccine policy ending for federal workers, foreign travelers

The relaxed COVID-19 policy extends to federal employees, contractors, Head Start educators and Medicare- and Medicaid-certified providers.

LEARN MORE

The same goes for tests. After Thursday, there will be no guarantee that tests are free, and there may be some costs for the associated doctor's visit if the test is administered somewhere other than at home. The costs and other details will vary by state and depending on what kind of insurance coverage a patient has.

There will also be more cost for pharmaceutical COVID-19 treatments like Paxlovid — but that's once federally purchased supplies run out.

Something else that will come to an end are certain food assistance program benefits. Under the public health emergency, work requirements for federal food assistance programs were paused in more than two dozen Republican-controlled states, but those requirements will go back into effect.

There are also health risks associated with the end to the public health emergency, according to experts. The Kaiser Family Foundation has noted that people may delay or go without care due to cost, which it says could have broad implications for people's ability to get timely COVID-19 diagnoses or prevent transmission. 

Someone uses a device to monitor their blood oxygen level

As COVID health emergency ends, long haulers fear being forgotten

The CDC estimates 1 in 5 Americans who have had COVID have at least one lingering symptom. One woman shares how her life has changed with long COVID.

LEARN MORE

As for what's ahead with the disease itself, doctors are currently watching two descendant strains of Omicron, nicknamed Arcturus and Hyperion, which are on the rise in the U.S.

Dr. James Lawler told Scripps News they're new and different enough to pass prior immunity — both from the virus and vaccines.

"We're still seeing over a thousand people die every week in the U.S., and I think that number is likely to go up here in the next couple of months because of this new surge that we seem to be on the cusp of," Lawler said.

Lawler predicts a wave of cases every three to five months as variants change, which, he notes, means more people getting sick with long-COVID. Over time, medical experts have learned long-COVID affects not only the lungs but human blood vessels as well, which can contribute to blood clots, stroke and heart attacks.

The bottom line is: Doctors say COVID-19 is in a far different place now that the public health emergency stage is over, but the virus is not gone.

"The greatest risk, to be perfectly frank, is the capacity of the virus to evolve faster than we can believe or respond to, but more importantly it's the apathy of the general public," Lawler said.