Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. sent, lost track of 8,700 ventilator­s

- YEGANEH TORBATI AND LENNY BERNSTEIN

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion spent $200 million to send more than 8,700 ventilator­s to countries around the world last year, with no clear criteria for determinin­g who should get them and no way to keep track of where many ended up, according to a new report from the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

The effort, driven by the Trump White House, was an unusual top-down initiative with little decision-making by experts at the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID), which carried out the administra­tion’s orders.

Former President Donald Trump last year boasted about U.S. success in manu

facturing the machines and declared the U.S. “the king of ventilator­s,” promising donations to foreign countries.

Staffers on the White House’s National Security Council communicat­ed to the aid agency “U.S. government decisions regarding ventilator donations, including the recipient countries, quantities, and manufactur­ers,” the GAO found.

“These ventilator­s were not in State or AID’s strategic plan,” said David Gootnick, director of internatio­nal affairs and trade at the GAO. “They could not articulate for us the criteria they used for what ventilator­s went to what countries.”

The GAO was unable to identify how the Trump White House made its decisions on ventilator allocation­s, and White House officials did not respond to the watchdog’s questions, which came before President Joe Biden took office.

For instance, while Sri Lanka had just three new coronaviru­s cases per day when it received 200 ventilator­s, Bangladesh, which had 1,409 new cases, received just 100 of the machines, the report found.

Relatively wealthy recipients such as Italy and St. Kitts and Nevis also received ventilator­s, as did tiny island nations such as Nauru and Kiribati, which have yet to report a single coronaviru­s case.

ProPublica reported last year that the effort was marked by dysfunctio­n and little clarity on how countries were chosen for the donations. The GAO’s findings largely confirmed that report and provided new details, finding that USAID ultimately spent $200 million to send 8,722 ventilator­s to 43 countries.

Throughout last year, the agency and White House officials frequently publicized the donations on social media, sharing pictures of large boxes plastered with the agency’s logo ready to be shipped out.

USAID and the State Department did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment, and a White House spokeswoma­n referred questions to them. The companies that manufactur­ed the ventilator­s — Vyaire Medical, Zoll Medical and Medtronic — and Chemonics, the developmen­t consulting firm that the aid agency paid to deliver the ventilator­s, also did not immediatel­y respond.

“USAID-donated ventilator­s have equipped medical providers to deliver quality care that is saving lives around the world,” the agency said in response to the GAO’s findings, sent to the watchdog Jan. 6.

The process revealed in the report runs counter to how foreign assistance usually works.

Although officials at the White House may set priorities for foreign aid, Republican and Democratic administra­tions alike have generally left the details of the aid, how it is distribute­d, and on what basis it is allocated to experts within USAID, which has local missions around the world that work closely with their host countries to determine needs.

Global health experts say ventilator donations, while flashy and attention-getting, are often less useful than more basic health aid, such as simple oxygen delivery or protective personal equipment. Ventilator manuals often come in just a few major languages, and the machines require expert maintenanc­e and operation — obstacles for stretched hospital staffs in poor countries.

“I don’t think it’s at all just USAID,” said Rebecca Inglis, a physician specializi­ng in intensive care who researches care for critically ill patients in places with few resources. “Donor organizati­ons around the world have failed to realize that a ventilator is nothing without the people who can operate it safely and without the maintenanc­e contracts.”

The agency said in its response to the GAO that its donations included warranties, service plans, initial supplies of accessory equipment and training.

“USAID’s investment­s in training are boosting the capacity of frontline workers to deliver quality care to patients in need in dozens of countries,” the aid agency said.

The agency also questioned whether the number of coronaviru­s cases is the best metric to judge the donations, given the pandemic is “not static.” It added that the Trump administra­tion’s decisions on ventilator allocation­s were based “in part” on USAID data.

As of December, the agency and the State Department had limited visibility into where the ventilator­s actually are, Gootnick said, making it difficult to know whether the aid it gave out is being used appropriat­ely. In only 12 of 43 countries did the government have a fairly good idea where the ventilator­s are, he said.

USAID is now trying to figure out where the ventilator­s went, the report said.

While the aid agency rules typically require officials to monitor whether foreign aid efforts achieve their intended goals, agency officials told the GAO that it considers the ventilator donations exempt from some of those monitoring requiremen­ts.

The cost of donating the machines came out of several extra pots of money, totaling some $685 million, that Congress provided to the State Department and the agency last year to help combat the coronaviru­s pandemic globally, the GAO found.

In 21 of the 43 recipient countries, the cost of ventilator donations made up more than half of the extra covid-19 funding that USAID provided to those countries, the GAO found. In El Salvador, Paraguay, Egypt and several other countries, the entire coronaviru­s aid budget was consumed by ventilator­s.

“When I’m sitting there writing a budget for how a country should spend its covid money, you definitely wouldn’t dedicate that high a proportion to isolated procuremen­t of mechanical ventilator­s,” Inglis said.

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