Trump has COVID-19. So do more than 7 million Americans. Compare your care

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By Emma Specter

Early Friday morning, news was announced that President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump had tested positive for COVID-19. in an open debate about the degree of empathy that should be enlarged by a politician who has left a mark on hatred.

Shortly before Friday’s reporting of Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis, global e-commerce giant Amazon, despite everything published, it appeared that the company had noticed that 19816 showed or suspected cases of COVID-19 among its frontline workers in the United States since March. Prior to the announcement, workers at the multimillion-dollar company were following COVID-19 instances because Amazon refused to publish figures.

Amazon presented unique bonuses to frontline staff in June, however, since the average cost of treating a patient hospitalized with COVID-19 is $30,000, it’s hard not to wonder what kind of money record the disease will entail. The struggle of many Americans with COVID-19: the difficulty of navigating an overburdened unemployment formula as a result of the loss of a task or the pain of wasting one they enjoyed while still suffering to meet fundamental needs.

Let’s see how the average American can behave with a positive diagnosis of the president.

As president of the United States, Trump is entitled to world-class physical care (paid through American taxpayers) and the world’s most productive physicians.

Other unsafe people, about 12. 5% of American adults, a number that is higher under the Trump administration, can expect to pay between $42,486 and $74,310 if they are hospitalized with COVID-19.

Trump’s $400,000 annual source of income is about 8 times the average American’s salary, which puts him well to avoid the economic consequences of COVID-19. At this point in the pandemic, the inventory market and space costs are sometimes high, helping the most sensitive employees regain their wealth before the recession. No one will question the president’s desire to take as much time as they want. At least until November, you have security on the task.

Meanwhile, less of the jobs lost this spring returned for those earning less than $20 an hour. COVID-19, as it is now known, is a disease that disproportionately affects low-income communities, including those contracted Threaten to waste their source of income and in all likelihood their jobs if they are in poor health. For example, Amazon workers diagnosed with COVID-19 get only two weeks of paid leave, even though symptoms can persist much longer. Licensing policy appears to be beneficial compared to other giant US employers. McDonald’s (many establishments do not offer paid licenses for health problems).

Even transitory assistance provided through the federal government through measures such as the CARES Act is unsuccessful in all who want it: transitional staff, undocumented immigrants, sex staff, and many other marginalized U. S. teams are excluded from success and more vulnerable. to slide through the cracks.

Wages earned are not the only points that a person’s ability to respond to COVID-19, of course; those with protective nets, such as wealth or family circle assets, are more likely to have safe and remote options to get out of their 40s. COVID-19 is also increasingly out of success for those who have gone through their paid days in poor physical condition simply by recovering from the initial presentation of the disease.

In his debatable, to say the least, debate with Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden on Tuesday, Trump himself said that “a user [who dies of COVID-19] is too much. “Maybe now he’ll behave like he’s believing in this. statement, to denounce Medicare for all, and even Obamacare, while reaping the benefits of a health care point that our country reserves only for the rich.

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