Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Some states receive masks with dry rot, broken ventilator­s

- By Kim Chandler

MONTGOMERY, ALA. » Some states and cities that have been shipped masks, gloves, ventilator­s and other essential equipment from the nation’s medical stockpile to fight the coronaviru­s have gotten an unwelcome surprise: the material is unusable.

Nearly 6,000 medical masks sent to Alabama had dry rot and a 2010 expiration date. More than 150 ventilator­s sent to Los Angeles were broken and had to be repaired. In Oregon, it was masks with faulty elastic that could cause the straps to snap, exposing medical workers to the disease.

“Several of the shipments we have received from the strategic national stockpile contained (personal protective equipment) well past expiration dates and, while we are being told much of the expired equipment is capable of being used for COVID-19 response, they would not be suitable for use in surgical settings,” Charles Boyle, a spokesman for Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, said in an email.

He said some of the equipment had been purchased during the H1N1 outbreak more than a decade ago and that the masks with the fragile elastic had been among products previously recalled by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The state did not distribute them to medical workers.

A shortage of protective gear has imperiled doctors, nurses and other front-line medical workers. Life-saving ventilator­s have been in short supply as more and more states experience outbreaks of the COVID-19 disease, which typically causes mild or moderate symptoms but can be especially perilous for older adults and people with existing health problems. Many younger adults and medical workers also have succumbed to the disease.

Numerous governors have complained about delays in getting equipment from the Strategic National Stockpile or receiving amounts of gear far below what they had requested. That frustratio­n is compounded when equipment arrives, but can’t be used.

Dr. Don Williamson, president of the Alabama Hospital Associatio­n and the former top public health official in the state, said he received multiple emails from hospitals about stockpile shipments of N95 masks in which the rubber bands that hold the mask tight around the user’s face had dry rot. They couldn’t be used unless the bands were replaced.

Montgomery County received nearly 6,000 medical masks of a different type that had dry rot, a shipment that was replaced about a week later.

 ?? AMANDA RAY/YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC VIA AP ?? Tony Miller, Yakima County emergency management director; Horace Ward, operations manager of Yakima Valley Office of Emergency Management; and Blake
Scully, a resource supply officer, from left, evaluate how many ventilator­s arrived from the weekly supply shipment Thursday, April 2, at the Yakima County Office of Emergency Management in Union Gap, Wash.
AMANDA RAY/YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC VIA AP Tony Miller, Yakima County emergency management director; Horace Ward, operations manager of Yakima Valley Office of Emergency Management; and Blake Scully, a resource supply officer, from left, evaluate how many ventilator­s arrived from the weekly supply shipment Thursday, April 2, at the Yakima County Office of Emergency Management in Union Gap, Wash.

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