Alongside a health care crisis, COVID-19 has brought along with it an economic crisis. In the last 2 weeks of March, around 10 million people registered for unemployment insurance which is very high in comparison to any previous month numbers. It is even estimated that the U.S. economy will shrink to about 25% during this financial year's second quarter. The U.S. has already entered a recession period and possibly heading towards a depression. Some experts claim that the economies could surpass the great economic depression growth rate which was somewhere around -15%. If we go back to history, we hardly find the Medicare industry been hit by any sort of recessions. As individuals get sick both during good and bad times and hence demand for healthcare is nearly uniform across the business cycle. Moreover, health insurance limits the out-of-pocket expenses for attention that people face; thus, many infected people—at least those with health insurance—can nevertheless manage to vi...