Utah Was Warned Racial Rationing of COVID Drugs Was Illegal. It Did It Anyway. | The Washington Free Beacon

Utah public health officials were warned that allocating COVID drugs based on race violated federal law, but did so anyway with the backing of the Biden administration, emails and documents obtained by the Washington Free Beacon show.

Utah’s points-based system for prioritizing COVID patients, which allocated more points for being non-white than for having congestive heart failure, troubled two law professors specializing in bioethics. They informed the doctors who designed the system in September 2021 that it was probably illegal.

“The use of non-white race really set off alarm bells,” Teneille Brown, a professor at the University of Utah’s S.J. Quinney College of Law, said in an email.

The “consensus among legal academics,” Brown’s colleague Leslie Francis added, is that a system like Utah’s would “violate federal law.”

This piece is based on materials obtained via a third-party public records request and shared with the Free Beacon.

The doctors Brown and Francis emailed were part of the state’s Crisis Standards of Care workgroup, assembled by the Utah Hospital Association at the behest of the health department. When COVID surged in November 2020, the health department asked the group to develop a system for allocating scarce therapies. The group conceded its approach hadn’t been “reviewed legally.” But, they assured the law professors, it did have the blessing of the Biden administration.

The Department of Health and Human Services “has lauded our approach,” said Mark Shah, the director of Utah’s Disaster Medical Assistance Team and a member of the group. In February 2021, Shah’s colleague Brandon Webb presented the race-based allocation system to HHS, according to power point slides reviewed by the Free Beacon. HHS subsequently listed the system as a “promising practice” for other states to consider.

Such race-conscious policies proliferated throughout the pandemic, sparking both moral outrage and legal scrutiny. Like Utah, Minnesota and New York prioritized non-white residents for moncolonal antibodies. Vermont did the same for vaccines. Some states, including Utah and Minnesota, scrapped their policies in the wake of political backlash—and amid threats of legal action from conservative nonprofits.

The emails suggest Utah was ground zero for many of these schemes. The state initially defended its system by invoking guidance from the Food and Drug Administration, which lists race as a risk factor that can qualify patients for monoclonal antibodies. But according to the emails, it was Utah that inspired that guidance in the first place.

“The FDA reviewed our Utah Risk Score and used it as precedent for including ‘race and other risk factors’ as qualifiers,” Shah told the group in June 2021. Minnesota in turn used that precedent to justify its own allocation system.

The emails reflect the race-conscious consensus that has taken hold of medical bureaucracies across the country. As that consensus has consolidated at every level of government, it has emboldened public health officials to flout anti-discrimination law, which they assume won’t be enforced.

The gap between law and policy widened with the pandemic, which provided an emergency pretext for suspending civil rights. Nondiscrimination, the emails suggest, was seen as an obstacle to crisis management.

“I’d prefer just using the ‘we’re too busy trying to save lives during the surge’ excuse,” Webb, an infectious diseases specialist at Intermountain Healthcare, emailed his colleagues after some back and forth with the law professors.

That utilitarian mindset extended to Utah’s Republican governor Spencer Cox, who in January 2022 told health officials to modify the allocation system, a spokesperson for the governor said—but only after it became clear that the drugs weren’t reaching minorities. The problem wasn’t that the system discriminated by race; it was that the discrimination didn’t work.

“Despite the inclusion of race and ethnicity,” the spokesperson told the Free Beacon, “communities of color did not receive monoclonal antibodies proportionate to their share of COVID-test positives.”

“I’m frankly surprised that this has not yet been subject to a legal challenge,” Webb wrote the law professors. He added that in 2020, the group asked “the Office of Civil Rights” for guidance on the use of race but didn’t receive a response.

It is unclear to which office Webb was referring. A draft copy of the group’s inquiry includes no date or letterhead, and Roger Severino, HHS’s director of civil rights at the time, said it never came across his desk.

“Had this been brought to my attention,” Severino told the Free Beacon, “I would have told them they risked violating Title VI and would have merited my office investigating them had they gone through with such explicit race based rationing.”

Reached for comment, Webb said Shah was the one who sent the inquiry. Shah did not respond to a request for comment.

The group, which developed the system in November 2020, took for granted that all racial minorities should receive special treatment. It borrowed heavily from an allocation system used by the Cleveland Clinic, which prioritized African Americans for monoclonal antibodies. The “only knock” against that system, Webb wrote the group, is that “it only gives disparity weighting to black race rather than recognizing elevated risk associated with other race/ethnicities.”

Utah’s system was based on an analysis of 20,000 COVID patients between March and October 2020. Though some minorities are at higher risk than others, according to the state’s own data, the analysis lumped all of them together, comparing hospitalization rates between “white” and “non-white” Utahns.

The result was a “risk score calculator” that gave “non-white race or Hispanic/Latinx ethnicity” two points—more than it gave hypertension, chronic kidney disease, or shortness of breath. Utahns needed to score a certain number of points to be eligible for monoclonal antibodies.

The calculator was first used by the Intermountain hospital system, which employed many members of the group, including Webb and Shah. By September 2021, it was causing controversy among COVID-stricken patients.

“We have been forced into a defense of the scoring system as now constituents are reaching out to elected leaders asking why they are not eligible,” lamented Kevin McCulley, the Preparedness and Response director for the health department.

As pushback mounted, the department’s main concern was semantic rather than substantive. Officials spent days wordsmithing an online “self-screening tool” based on the calculator, in part to ensure it didn’t run afoul of progressive sensibilities.

“Latinex should have the ‘e’ removed (Latinx),” Matthew Plendl, a member of the health department, said of an early draft.

Some exchanges read like parodies of progressive racecraft, with officials attempting to sort out who would count as “non-white.”

The calculator lets “someone select more than one race category,” noted Jenny Johnson, a member of the health department’s communications team. “Would this mean anyone who marks ONLY White would not meet the criteria? And those who mark at least one race category that is not White does meet the criteria?”

Particularly vexing was the status of Hispanics.

“Someone with a high level of cultural competence should help us wordsmith this,” McCulley wrote his colleagues. “Is your race Non-white or Hispanic/Latinex Ethnicity? I don’t think Hispanic is a race.”

The post Utah Was Warned Racial Rationing of COVID Drugs Was Illegal. It Did It Anyway. appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Skip The Scoop | Seek Understanding

American Medical Association CEO calls laws banning kids trans surgeries ‘dangerous governmental intrusion’

Show Me

Uganda Detects Covid-19 Variant From India, Urges Caution

Show Me

Dr. John Eastman to Hold Press Conference Thursday at Noon MDT – After Being Fired for Speaking at a Trump Rally

Show Me

Massachusetts Man Took Over ‘OG’ Social Media Accounts to Steal Cryptocurrency: Justice Department

Show Me

Trump defends ‘great patriot’ Rudy Giuliani after ‘unfair’ FBI raid

Show Me

No, Other People’s Covid Vaccines Can’t Disrupt Your Menstrual Cycle

Show Me

High School Runner About To Set Record Collapses At Finish, Blames Outdoor Mask Mandate

Show Me

Joy Behar Claims Tim Scott ‘Doesn’t Understand’ The Difference Between A Racist Country And Systemic Racism

Show Me

Kamala Harris: America Isn’t a Racist Country — But We Have to ‘Speak Truth’ About History of Racism

Show Me

‘The 1619 Project’ and the Red Meat Project

Show Me

Caught on camera: Liz Cheney fist-bumps Biden before his speech

Show Me

Hawley Introduces Bill to Reduce Pentagon’s Reliance on Technology from China and Other ‘Adversary Nations’

Show Me

Water: The Forgotten Nutrient

Show Me

April 29, 2021 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 52 Minutes 29 Seconds

Show Me

German spies monitor anti-lockdown activists for suspected sedition

Show Me

Purchase Orders Show FDA Bought “Fresh” Livers of Viable Babies Killed in Abortions

Show Me

NC Sheriff: 2 deputies killed, suspect and 2 others dead

Show Me

Trump Floats 2024 Presidential Run Again, Says DeSantis Could Be Potential Running Mate

Show Me

Ashli Babbitt’s family plans to sue Capitol Police, officer who shot her

Show Me

Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded April 29, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 19 Seconds

Show Me

Giuliani’s Lawyer Accuses DOJ of ‘Corrupt Double Standard’ In Executing Warrants Against Him

Show Me

US Catholic bishops may press Biden to stop taking Communion

Show Me

WATCH: Christian Pastor Arrested in London for Quoting ‘Homophobic’ Bible Verses

Show Me

Minneapolis parking app hacked, personal information stolen

Show Me

Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded April 29, 2021 | Video: 47 Minutes 58 Seconds

Show Me

Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded April 29, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 59 Seconds

Show Me

Scott Outshines Biden, Enrages Libs With Inspiring Tale of Overcoming Adversity

Show Me

CCP Arrests Netizen for Posting Vaccine Death

Show Me

Facebook Blocks #ResignModi Posts for Hours as India Crisis Grows

Show Me

Border Patrol Chief Tells Biden: ‘I Cannot’ Comply With Demand To Use Non-Legal Immigration Terms

Show Me

U.S. Tells Citizens to Leave India as Covid-19 Swamps Hospitals

Show Me

Pompeo knocks Biden: He ‘successfully outlined a radical, socialist agenda’

Show Me

Biden Takes Credit for Ending Afghan War – After Extending It – in Speech to Congress

Show Me

Judge Denies Request to Stop Arizona Audit | Recorded April 28, 2021 | Video: 12 Minutes 44 Seconds

Show Me

Pompeo: Trump Changed How We Look at China | Americans’ Distrust in Media at Record High

Show Me

April 28, 2021 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 52 Minutes 29 Seconds

Show Me

Connecticut Lawmakers Vote to Repeal Religious Exemptions to Vaccines, Health Freedom Advocates Vow Legal Challenge

Show Me

Texas Counties Declare Disaster Over Border Crisis

Show Me

Ex-Trump aide sues Biden administration, alleging discrimination against white farmers

Show Me

Astronaut Michael Collins, Apollo 11 pilot, dead of cancer

Show Me