Medical Coding Jobs

Find your dream Job in Medical Coding

Medical Coding Jobs
News

Dramatic Drop in Common Viruses Raises Question: Masks Forever?

Masks and physical distancing are proving to have major fringe benefits, keeping people from getting all kinds of illnesses — not just covid-19. But it’s unclear whether the protocols will be worth the pain in the long run.

This story is part of a partnership that includes WPLN, NPR and KHN. It can be republished for free.

The teachers at New Hope Academy in Franklin, Tennessee, were chatting the other day. The private Christian school has met in person throughout much of the pandemic — requiring masks and trying to keep kids apart, to the degree it is possible with young children. And Nicole Grayson, who teaches fourth grade, said they realized something peculiar.

“We don’t know anybody that has gotten the flu,” she said. “I don’t know of a student that has gotten strep throat.”

It’s not just an anecdote.

A study released this month in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, led by researchers from Vanderbilt University Medical Center, found that across 44 children’s hospitals the number of pediatric patients hospitalized for respiratory illnesses is down 62%. The number of kids in the U.S. who have died of the flu this season remains in the single digits. Deaths have dropped dramatically, too, compared with the past 10 years: The number of flu deaths among children is usually between 100 and 200 per year, but so far only one child has died from the disease in the U.S. during the 2020-21 flu season.

Adults aren’t getting sick either. U.S. flu deaths this season will be measured in the hundreds instead of thousands. In 2018-19, a moderate flu season, an estimated 34,200 Americans died.

Effective Combo

It’s not just the masks and physical distancing that are tamping down communicable disease, said Dr. Amy Vehec, a pediatrician at Mercy Community Healthcare, a Tennessee clinic that gets federal funding. It’s become a serious societal faux pas to go anywhere with a fever — so parents don’t send their ailing kids to school, she said.

“They are doing a better job of staying home when they’re sick,” Vehec said. That includes adults who may feel ill.

Isolating when feeling bad could be kept up after the pandemic. But the isolation, the distance and the masks are not working for many kids, Vehec said.

Children with speech trouble aren’t seeing their teacher’s mouth to learn how to speak correctly, for instance.

“I think it has been a necessary evil because of the pandemic, and I have completely supported it, but it has had prices. It’s had consequences,” she said. “Kids’ education is suffering, among other things.”

And with covid vaccines unavailable to children for a while yet, it may be another year of masks in schools.

Some experts, like researchers trying to improve masks, argue that more societies should embrace masking — as some Asian countries have. But even infectious-disease experts like Dr. Ricardo Franco of the University of Alabama-Birmingham doubt that’s practical.

“I’m a little skeptical that this crisis will be enough for a widespread culture change, given how difficult it’s been to achieve a reasonable culture shift in the previous months,” Franco said.

The most realistic setting for lasting change may be within health care itself.

Doctors and nurses didn’t usually wear masks before covid. Dr. Duane Harrison, who directs an emergency department for an HCA hospital outside Nashville, mentioned a physician colleague who has worn a mask since he got out of medical school.

“We used to joke and clown with him about this,” Harrison said. “Until this.”

Now that everyone wears masks, Harrison’s department has found the same thing many other workplaces have: Employees aren’t calling out sick, unless it’s covid.

“When covid’s done, this is a practice that most of us will probably continue,” Harrison said. “Because we won’t be worried about runny-nose kids and elderly people who don’t know they’re sneezing in your face.”

Some hospital systems, including Nebraska Medicine, have started to relax universal masking requirements for their staffs. But even vaccinated staffers still have to wear a mask when seeing patients. Intermountain Healthcare in Utah has signaled masks will continue to be required when a statewide mandate lifts in April.

‘Is Everyone Going to Need a Break?’

But even believers in the effectiveness of masks have their doubts about the medical community keeping it up.

“The larger question is: Is everyone going to need a break?” asked Dr. Joshua Barocas, who studies infectious diseases at Boston University.

Whatever the future holds, public health officials say, the time has not yet come to drop mask requirements as the U.S. waits for more people to get a covid vaccine. But eventually, even doctors and nurses are ready to see smiling faces again.

“I know I’m going to need to retire my masks at some point in the future,” Barocas said, “for a little bit.”

This story is part of a partnership that includes Nashville Public RadioNPR and KHN.

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/masks-forever-dramatic-drop-in-common-viruses-hospitalizations/

New Jobs
PeopleShores taps Missouri health care talent for new medical billing and coding roles Corti's new Symphony AI beats OpenAI and Anthropic on medical coding - TNW INLEXZO™ (gemcitabine intravesical system) Assigned Permanent Billing Code, Supporting ... Corti Ships Symphony for Medical Coding with more than 25% Accuracy Edge Over OpenAI ... San Jacinto College opens fast-track pathways to high-demand allied health careers How Amazon Connect Health brings agentic AI to the point of care | AWS for Industries A Nurse Worked 17 Hours—What Happened When She Got Home Is Going Viral Clash of insurers, providers takes us into the weeds of the hospital bill - The Boston Globe The 2026 guide to St. Louis health care training and education services 8 careers that can land you best remote jobs - Vanguard News Mayor Chess: 'Welcome to the neighborhood, Cornerstone Medical Training' Your Health Deploys Fathom Autonomous Medical Coding Platform Across All Service Lines UPMC, Microsoft invest in AI medical coding startup - Becker's Hospital Review Healthcare careers in months, not years - Times Republican Pickaway-Ross student's BPA win leads to national competition - Chillicothe Gazette Microsoft Launches Copilot Health 'Hub' to Access and Interpret All Users' Health Data HIMSS26: Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture to Bring Autonomous AI to Medical Coding Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture, Bringing Autonomous Coding to the Frontlines of ... - WFXG Working Iowa: Midwest Technical Institute enrolling Iowans in online medical billing and ... ... Kentucky Career Center to host job fair on March 10 - WPSD Local 6 Medical Coding Market to Grow at 10.5% CAGR by 2031 | Key Drivers: - openPR.com Medical Coding Emerges As A Career Path For Small-Town Women - BW People Clinical Research Data Integration Coordinator job with UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON Compliance Consultant III, Medical Coding - Kaiser Permanente Careers AI and employment law: An introduction to artificial intelligence, human resources — and layo... Redefining the 9-to-5: Finding Work-Life Balance With Rewarding Medical Positions Top Cheapest MSN/MBA Programs | 2026 | Nurse.Org Spalding University launching new health care programs to address workforce shortage in Kentu... Part-Time Medical Coding Specialist-Certified (Dual Posted with Job ID 58799) Nascent tech, real fear: how AI anxiety is upending career ambitions - The Guardian 18 professions dying in 2026 that aren't worth pursuing - AOL.com 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