Los Angeles Times

Free PAs to fight the virus

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Re “Brutal choices could await doctors,” Dec. 19

I am a critical care physician assistant. PAs are medical practition­ers, trained like generalist physicians; we diagnose and treat most illnesses and conditions. We are licensed to provide education, perform procedures, prescribe medication­s, order and interpret medical studies and create treatment plans.

Currently there are more than 13,000 PAs in California who are being excluded from pandemic service. This is an egregious oversight.

I am trained in critical care, I work in a hospital intensive care unit every day, and I am not allowed to contribute my knowledge and skill set to pandemic victims.

Why? Because outdated laws have not kept pace with modern- day medical practice.

Last week I volunteere­d for and received a denial from the Disaster Healthcare Volunteers of California, which told me it is not currently hiring PAs. My education and training are being wasted right now.

I have already implored Gov. Gavin Newsom to unbridle PAs during this period of emergent need. To deny us the ability to act as we are trained is to tie our capable hands and deprive many of our citizens, who already fall victim to healthcare disparitie­s, access to providers who are trained and ready to serve.

Rebecca Dodd Sacramento

Seven months ago the Mercy, a naval hospital ship, departed the Port of Los Angeles. Local hospitals had handled the first surge and its services were no longer needed.

Where is the Mercy now?

Los Angeles ICUs are full. Hospitals are juggling patients in desperate need. Heart attacks are still occurring, and patients who are critically ill from other causes must receive important care too.

This is the moment for our representa­tives to push for the support that could be so effectivel­y provided by the Mercy. I called my representa­tive in Congress about this; I hope other readers join me and call theirs. Karen Weinstein Los Angeles

President Trump and some of his closest associates, including his lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, survived what appeared to be bad cases of COVID- 19. They recovered because a Compassion­ate Use Advisory Committee said that they should be allowed to survive.

There is a treatment for COVID- 19 that can save lives, but this committee has not made it available to the rest of us. So why have more than 300,000 Americans been allowed to die when the federal government knows there is a proven treatment available?

You should be as angry as I am. We need full access to Regeneron’s monoclonal antibodies, just as Trump and his friends had. Linda Bradshaw Carpenter Los Angeles

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