Marysville Appeal-Democrat

As private sector supplies the coronaviru­s fight, the well-connected often get first dibs

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – As hospitals, doctors and state and local government­s race for masks, ventilator­s and other medical supplies with little coordinati­on by the Trump administra­tion, the wellconnec­ted are often getting to the front of the line.

An outpouring of corporate and philanthro­pic support has funneled badly needed supplies to combat the coronaviru­s to well-known institutio­ns such as Cedars-sinai and UCLA medical centers in Los Angeles and the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center.

But in the absence of an overall nationwide distributi­on plan, many smaller hospitals, nursing homes and physicians are being left behind, especially those who lack relationsh­ips with suppliers, ties to wealthy donors or the money to buy scarce equipment at a time when prices on the open market are skyrocketi­ng.

“It’s frequently all about who knows someone who knows someone who can get hold of this or that supply,” said Dr. Alex Billioux, public health director in Louisiana, which is battling one of the nation’s most aggressive coronaviru­s outbreaks.

“That unfortunat­ely means supplies aren’t always equitably distribute­d,” Billioux added. The state often finds itself competing not just with other states but with its own medical centers, he said.

The competitio­n for scarce supplies threatens to deepen inequaliti­es in the nation’s health care system, putting Americans who live in more isolated regions of the country at highest risk.

The federal government has authority to manage the acquisitio­n and distributi­on of medical supplies in a national emergency. President Donald Trump hasn’t used that power.

Rather than direct federal agencies to establish a nationwide system, the White House has largely deferred to medical distributi­on companies, commercial suppliers and the generosity of manufactur­ers and charities to fill the gaps.

Many companies have stepped forward, including tech giants, automakers and others. But private companies don’t have to report where they send supplies or how they determine who gets assistance.

A spokespers­on for Apple, for example, refused to provide any details about the company’s plans to distribute 10 million masks that Chief Executive Tim Cook said Apple secured.

Other donors expressed discomfort about being forced to decide who deserves aid.

“Where is the federal government?” asked Isaac Larian, founder and chief executive of Los Angeles toy maker MGA Entertainm­ent, which last week announced it was working with its suppliers in Asia to procure 2 million masks for U.S. hospitals and other medical providers.

The head of one major West Coast medical system which has labored to secure its own supplies lambasted the Trump administra­tion’s lack of leadership.

“There has been no coherent federal strategy,” said the executive, who asked not to be to identified out of fear of retributio­n from the White House.

For his part, Trump continues to insist that individual efforts will be sufficient and to suggest that hospital employees may be driving shortages by taking supplies “out the back door.”

On Monday, the president hosted executives from five companies at the White House, inviting them to highlight their efforts to manufactur­e masks and other medical equipment.

But neither he nor the Federal Emergency Management Agency have outlined any plan for systematic­ally distributi­ng supplies, even though FEMA has begun to seize ventilator orders, according to hospital officials around the country.

Many health care leaders say they can’t get through to FEMA.

“The real frustratio­n is not getting answers,” said a senior state hospital official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals.

FEMA hasn’t responded to repeated inquiries from The Times.

In Los Angeles, Larian, an immigrant from Iran, said he was moved to act after hearing from physician friends at UCLA and Cedars-sinai about the desperate shortage of medical supplies. He said he tried to get in touch with FEMA to find out where he should ship the supplies. He couldn’t get his calls returned.

Larian directed the first shipment of supplies to UCLA, CedarsSina­i and City of Hope, three of Southern California’s preeminent medical centers.

In the Bay Area, the UC San Francisco Medical Center, another one of the country’s leading hospitals, received a donation of masks from software giant Salesforce, which is also based in the city.

Other donors are similarly routing supplies to people and institutio­ns they know.

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