Medical Coding Jobs

Find your dream Job in Medical Coding

Medical Coding Jobs
News

A Daily Pill to Treat Covid Could Be Just Months Away, Scientists Say

Within a day of testing positive for covid-19 in June, Miranda Kelly was sick enough to be scared. At 44, with diabetes and high blood pressure, Kelly, a certified nursing assistant, was having trouble breathing, symptoms serious enough to send her to the emergency room.

When her husband, Joe, 46, fell ill with the virus, too, she really got worried, especially about their five teenagers at home: “I thought, ‘I hope to God we don’t wind up on ventilators. We have children. Who’s going to raise these kids?”

But the Kellys, who live in Seattle, had agreed just after their diagnoses to join a clinical trial at the nearby Fred Hutch cancer research center that’s part of an international effort to test an antiviral treatment that could halt covid early in its course.

By the next day, the couple were taking four pills, twice a day. Though they weren’t told whether they had received an active medication or placebo, within a week, they said, their symptoms were better. Within two weeks, they had recovered.

“I don’t know if we got the treatment, but I kind of feel like we did,” Miranda Kelly said. “To have all these underlying conditions, I felt like the recovery was very quick.”

The Kellys have a role in developing what could be the world’s next chance to thwart covid: a short-term regimen of daily pills that can fight the virus early after diagnosis and conceivably prevent symptoms from developing after exposure.

“Oral antivirals have the potential to not only curtail the duration of one’s covid-19 syndrome, but also have the potential to limit transmission to people in your household if you are sick,” said Timothy Sheahan, a virologist at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill who has helped pioneer these therapies.

Antivirals are already essential treatments for other viral infections, including hepatitis C and HIV. One of the best known is Tamiflu, the widely prescribed pill that can shorten the duration of influenza and reduce the risk of hospitalization if given quickly.

The medications, developed to treat and prevent viral infections in people and animals, work differently depending on the type. But they can be engineered to boost the immune system to fight infection, block receptors so viruses can’t enter healthy cells, or lower the amount of active virus in the body.

At least three promising antivirals for covid are being tested in clinical trials, with results expected as soon as late fall or winter, said Carl Dieffenbach, director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who is overseeing antiviral development.

“I think that we will have answers as to what these pills are capable of within the next several months,” Dieffenbach said.

The top contender is a medication from Merck & Co. and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics called molnupiravir, Dieffenbach said. This is the product being tested in the Kellys’ Seattle trial. Two others include a candidate from Pfizer, known as PF-07321332, and AT-527, an antiviral produced by Roche and Atea Pharmaceuticals.

They work by interfering with the virus’s ability to replicate in human cells. In the case of molnupiravir, the enzyme that copies the viral genetic material is forced to make so many mistakes that the virus can’t reproduce. That, in turn, reduces the patient’s viral load, shortening infection time and preventing the kind of dangerous immune response that can cause serious illness or death.

So far, only one antiviral drug, remdesivir, has been approved to treat covid. But it is given intravenously to patients ill enough to be hospitalized, and is not intended for early, widespread use. By contrast, the top contenders under study can be packaged as pills.

Sheahan, who also performed preclinical work on remdesivir, led an early study in mice that showed that molnupiravir could prevent early disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes covid. The formula was discovered at Emory University and later acquired by Ridgeback and Merck.

Clinical trials have followed, including an early trial of 202 participants last spring that showed that molnupiravir rapidly reduced the levels of infectious virus. Merck chief executive Robert Davis said this month that the company expects data from its larger phase 3 trials in the coming weeks, with the potential to seek emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration “before year-end.”

Pfizer launched a combined phase 2 and 3 trial of its product Sept. 1, and Atea officials said they expect results from phase 2 and phase 3 trials later this year.

If the results are positive and emergency use is granted for any product, Dieffenbach said, “distribution could begin quickly.”

That would mean millions of Americans soon could have access to a daily orally administered medication, ideally a single pill, that could be taken for five to 10 days at the first confirmation of covid infection.

“When we get there, that’s the idea,” said Dr. Daniel Griffin, an infectious diseases and immunology expert at Columbia University. “To have this all around the country, so that people get it the same day they get diagnosed.”

Once sidelined for lack of interest, oral antivirals to treat coronavirus infections are now a subject of fierce competition and funding. In June, the Biden administration announced it had agreed to obtain about 1.7 million treatment courses of Merck’s molnupiravir, at a cost of $1.2 billion, if the product receives emergency authorization or full approval. The same month, the administration said it would invest $3.2 billion in the Antiviral Program for Pandemics, which aims to develop antivirals for the covid crisis and beyond, Dieffenbach said.

The pandemic kick-started a long-neglected effort to develop potent antiviral treatments for coronaviruses, said Sheahan. Though the original SARS virus in 2003 gave scientists a scare — followed by Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS, in 2012 — research efforts slowed when those outbreaks did not persist.

“The commercial drive to develop any products just went down the tubes,” said Sheahan.

Widely available antiviral drugs would join the monoclonal antibody therapies already used to treat and prevent serious illness and hospitalizations caused by covid. The lab-produced monoclonal antibodies, which mimic the body’s natural response to infection, were easier to develop but must be given primarily through intravenous infusions.

The federal government is covering the cost of most monoclonal products at $2,000 a dose. It’s still too early to know how the price of antivirals might compare.

Like the monoclonal antibodies, antiviral pills would be no substitute for vaccination, said Griffin. They would be another tool to fight covid. “It’s nice to have another option,” he said.

One challenge in developing antiviral drugs quickly has been recruiting enough participants for the clinical trials, each of which needs to enroll many hundreds of people, said Dr. Elizabeth Duke, a Fred Hutch research associate overseeing its molnupiravir trial.

Participants must be unvaccinated and enrolled in the trial within five days of a positive covid test. Any given day, interns make 100 calls to newly covid-positive people in the Seattle area — and most say no.

“Just generally speaking, there’s a lot of mistrust about the scientific process,” Duke said. “And some of the people are saying kind of nasty things to the interns.”

If the antiviral pills prove effective, the next challenge will be ramping up a distribution system that can rush them to people as soon as they test positive. Griffin said it will take something akin to the program set up last year by UnitedHealthcare, which sped Tamiflu kits to 200,000 at-risk patients enrolled in the insurer’s Medicare Advantage plans.

Merck officials predicted the company could produce more than 10 million courses of therapy by the end of the year. Atea and Pfizer have not released similar estimates.

Even more promising? Studies evaluating whether antivirals can prevent infection after exposure.

“Think about that,” said Duke, who is also overseeing a prophylactic trial. “You could give it to everyone in a household, or everyone in a school. Then we’re talking about a return to, maybe, normal life.”

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/oral-antiviral-covid-treatment-on-horizon/

New Jobs
This Week's Health IT Jobs – February 11, 2026 | Healthcare IT Today Top 3 Reasons Nurses Should Become a FINE Fellow Nursing a Career in Tech: Why Nurses Can Become Healthtech's Most Important Product Leader Global Medical Coding Market Set to Reach USD 14.01 Billion by 2030 - Yahoo Finance BEA's BPA continues history of developing leaders - Faribault County Register Unlock AI's Potential Now: How Artificial Intelligence Is Transforming Jobs and Industries in... Some health care staff laid off in Washtenaw County as Trinity Health outsources Why Attention to Detail Matters More Than Ever in Medical Coding - Daijiworld The World's First Blood Collecting Robot Is Here, Meet Aletta | Nurse.Org Clinical Data Management Career Guide for Freshers: Skills, Jobs, Roadmap & Free I... Medical Coder Compliance Spec in Ann Arbor, MI for University of Michigan Mayo Clinic's Ambient Nursing Documentation: A Game-Changer for Nursing Practice EAH creates blueprint for solving workforce shortages - Opelika Observer Nurse.org Is Hiring! Short-Form Video Creator (Nurse-Focused) – Contract, Part-Time IntelyCare Acquires CareRev = More Shift Options for Nurses Trinity Health to cut 10% of billing jobs - MLive.com Don't Go to Medical or Law School Drug Safety Analyst with Italian from Accenture Services s.r.o. | Expats.cz - Prague Jobs ser... Drug Safety Analyst with Swedish/Nordic language - Expats.cz East Alabama Health Creates Blueprint for Solving Workforce Shortages Research Job at CDRI | Life Sciences Candidates, Attend The Walk-In-Interview What are the Best Short Certificate Programs That Pay Well in the U.S.? Check List! Fatal Motorcycle Accident Delaware State Police Investigating Crash In Frederica- Identogo Savannah Ga Updated January 2025 Greenwood Village Colorado- 10 Jobs for Introverts Who Struggle With Social Burnout - Money | HowStuffWorks Portable PCR & Isothermal Amplification Devices for Rapid Infection Screening - BioTecNika Medical Coding Jobs The Easiest Job Youll Love No Experience Necessary Complete ... Indeed Medical Coding Jobsforum Open Topic Jobs Latest Jobs Job Vacancy 2023- When Nurses Have a Voice, Job Satisfaction Rises, Cleveland Clinic Finds 15 Remote Entry-level Jobs That Pay at Least $65,000 a Year - AOL.com Fake Nursing Professor Taught 10+ Months—Asst. Dean Says Speaking Up Got Her Fired Got a confusing medical bill? We've got tips that can help. - Facebook AMBCI Expands Affordable Medical Billing and Coding Training With Weekly Live Webinars ... NHS Nurse Sentenced After Working Second Job While Out on Paid Sick Leave - Nurse.org Generative AI Crucial for Coding Complex Conditions - Healthcare IT Today 50 ASPIRANTS CHEATED IN FAKE JOB SCAM - PressReader @thedudenurse's Nurse Holiday Giveaway is Here – And It's All Month Long! | Nurse.Org This Week's Health IT Jobs – December 3, 2025 | Healthcare IT Today Nursing Community Rallies as Ohio RN Suffers Severe Injuries in Suspected DUI Collision Are high-paying AI-proof jobs shifting from tech to healthcare? - India Today 7 Remote Jobs That Pay Well and Can Be Started Today - Yahoo The Great Decoupling: MIT Data Reveals 11.7% of U.S. Jobs Are Now Economically Obsolete Medical Billing Software Market Size, Share, Future Growth, Top Key Players and Forecast till... Could Nursing's 'Non-Professional' Degree Actually Lower Tuition Costs? Some Nurses Say So R1 to Acquire Phare Health, a Leading AI Platform for Automating Inpatient Coding and ... University of Maryland is Seeking a Registered Nurse – Apply Before 12 December 2025 Reimagining Nursing Through Professional Development, Advancement, and Purpose | Opinion LA-based medical billing company to relocate HQ to CT, add 150 jobs; gets tax rebate d... Medical Billing & Coding Programs Face Federal Aid Cuts in 2026 - Country Herald California Healthcare Worker Minimum Wage Lawsuits | $25 an Hour?