Latest News

Evusheld for COVID-19: Lifesaving and free, but still few takers


 

Doctors and patients weigh in

Physicians – and patients – from the United States to the United Kingdom and beyond are questioning why the medication is underused while lauding the recent efforts to expand access and increase awareness.

The U.S. federal government may have underestimated the amount of communication needed to increase awareness of the medication and its applications, said infectious disease specialist William Schaffner, MD, professor of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tenn.

“HHS hasn’t made a major educational effort to promote it,” he said in an interview.

Many physicians who need to know about it, such as transplant doctors and rheumatologists, are outside the typical public health communications loop, he said.

Eric Topol, MD, director of the Scripps Research Transational Institute and editor-in-chief of Medscape, has taken to social media to bemoan the lack of awareness.

Another infectious disease expert agrees. “In my experience, the awareness of Evusheld is low amongst many patients as well as many providers,” said Amesh Adalja, MD, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, Baltimore.

“Initially, there were scarce supplies of the drug, and certain hospital systems tiered eligibility based on degrees of immunosuppression, and only the most immunosuppressed were proactively approached for treatment.”

“Also, many community hospitals never initially ordered Evusheld – they may have been crowded out by academic centers who treat many more immunosuppressed patients and may not currently see it as a priority,” Dr. Adalja said in an interview. “As such, many immunosuppressed patients would have to seek treatment at academic medical centers, where the drug is more likely to be available.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

COVID-19 infection late in pregnancy linked to sevenfold risk of preterm birth
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Biden tests positive for COVID-19: White House
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Science lags behind for kids with long COVID
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Hypertension heightens risk for severe COVID-19, even in the fully vaxxed
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Two distinct phenotypes of COVID-related myocarditis emerge
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Children and COVID: Many parents see vaccine as the greater risk
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
VA foster program helps older vets manage COVID challenges
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Scientists aim to combat COVID with a shot in the nose
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
More evidence that COVID-19 started in Wuhan marketplace
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
‘Striking’ disparities in CVD deaths persist across COVID waves
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management