Minnesota has removed race as a preferential factor for determining which COVID-19 patients should receive scarce monoclonal antibodies, which are outpatient infusions that reduce the risk of severe illness and hospitalization.
Updated rationing guidance on Wednesday prioritizes infusions when they are in short supply for people who are immunocompromised or pregnant. It also gives preference to people who are older or have underlying conditions that increase their risk for severe COVID-19, but it switched to a scoring system that no longer considers race.
State leaders had been planning revisions because of the scarcity of monoclonal antibodies that was exacerbated last month when providers stopped using two of three versions because they weren't effective against the omicron variant. The policy switch occurred on the same day a conservative advocacy group, America First Legal, threatened to sue Minnesota and Utah, arguing that the states' racial preference policies were unfair.
The guidance is specific to providers who are part of the Minnesota Resource Allocation Platform (MNRAP), which includes the Twin Cities' largest health systems but not the Mayo, CentraCare or Essentia systems in greater Minnesota. The remaining effective antibody treatment is so scarce right now the scoring system identifies only the highest-need patients who are then chosen for infusions via lottery.
Minnesota's rationing guidance has changed several times. In July, the Food and Drug Administration considered it ethically appropriate to prioritize racial minorities for antibody infusions. The scoring system was added in December, based on a University of Minnesota study showing racial minorities are at elevated risk of poor COVID-19 outcomes even after factoring out age and underlying conditions.
"There is no question that BIPOC Minnesotans are dying of COVID at high rates and at younger ages compared to white Minnesotans," said JP Leider, a U health policy researcher who is overseeing MNRAP.
A weekly state pandemic report on Thursday showed that Black people make up 6% of Minnesota's population but 11% of its COVID-19 hospitalizations.
The America First Legal advocacy group countered that the system was unfair in a letter on Wednesday to state Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm, arguing that "the color of one's skin is not a medical condition akin to hypertension, heart disease, or obesity, which are known to aggravate the risk of death or severe illness among those infected with COVID-19."