Baltimore Sun

Feds seizing virus supplies without a word, hospitals say

- By Noam N. Levey

WASHINGTON — Although President Donald Trump has directed states and hospitals to secure what supplies they can, the federal government is quietly seizing orders, leaving medical providers across the country in the dark about where the material is going and how they can get what they need to deal with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Hospital and clinic officials in seven states described the seizures in interviews over the past week. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is not publicly reporting the acquisitio­ns, despite the outlay of millions of dollars of taxpayer money, nor has the administra­tion detailed how it decides which supplies to seize and where to reroute them.

Officials who’ve had materials seized also say they’ve received no guidance from the government about how or if they will get access to the supplies they ordered. That has stoked concerns about how public funds are being spent and whether the Trump administra­tion is fairly distributi­ng medical supplies.

“In order to have confidence in the distributi­on system, to know that it is being done in an equitable manner, you have to have transparen­cy,” said Dr. John Hick, an emergency physician at Hennepin Healthcare in Minnesota who has helped develop national emergency preparedne­ss standards through the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine.

The medical leaders on the front lines of the fight to control the coronaviru­s and keep patients alive say they are grasping for explanatio­ns. “We can’t get any answers,” said a California hospital official who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliatio­n from the White House.

In Florida, a large medical system saw an order for thermomete­rs taken away. And officials at a system in Massachuse­tts were unable to determine where its order of masks went. “Are they stockpilin­g this stuff? Are they distributi­ng it? We don’t know,” one official said.

PeaceHealt­h, a 10-hospital system in Washington, Oregon and Alaska, had a shipment of testing supplies seized recently. “It’s incredibly frustratin­g,” said Richard DeCarlo, the system’s chief operating officer.

Trump and other White House officials, including his adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, have insisted that the government is using a data-driven approach to procure supplies and direct them where they are most needed.

In response to questions from the Los Angeles Times, a FEMA representa­tive said the agency, working with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense, has developed a system for identifyin­g needed supplies from vendors and distributi­ng them equitably.

The representa­tive said the agency factors in the population­s of states and major metropolit­an areas and the severity of the coronaviru­s outbreak in various locales. “High-transmissi­on areas were prioritize­d, and allocation­s were based on population, not on quantities requested,” the representa­tive said.

But the agency has refused to provide any details about how these determinat­ions are made or why it is choosing to seize some supply orders and not others. Administra­tion officials also will not say what supplies are going to what states.

The Defense Production Act also empowers federal agencies to place orders for critical materials and to see that those get priority over orders from private companies or state and local government­s.

Experts say judicious use of this authority could help bring order to the medical supply market by routing critical material from suppliers to the federal government and then to areas of greatest need, such as New York.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Trump and adviser Jared Kushner insist distributi­on of supplies is driven by data.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Trump and adviser Jared Kushner insist distributi­on of supplies is driven by data.

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