Rome News-Tribune

California lends 500 ventilator­s to 4 states, 2 territorie­s

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The White House said Monday that 500 ventilator­s on loan from California will be shipped to Nevada, Maryland, Delaware, the District of Columbia, the Northern Mariana Islands and Guam as the nation faces a crush of coronaviru­s-related hospitaliz­ations.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced earlier the nation’s most populous state would share some of its ventilator­s, a necessary tool to keep struggling patients breathing, with the national stockpile even as it hunts for more of its own supplies. Newsom suggested that New York may be one of the states to receive the ventilator­s, but he said the federal government was best poised to decide where they were needed most.

“We’re very proud to be able to extend a hand of support with those 500 ventilator­s and send them back east,” Newsom said during a news conference. But he said the state is “not naive” to its own needs.

“We need to continue to procure more ventilator­s,” he said.

Vice President Mike Pence praised California as he announced where the ventilator­s would be sent during a briefing at the White House.

“The state of California has provided extraordin­ary and compassion­ate leadership for their citizens,” Pence said Monday. “They are making progress. As the governor said the other day, they are not out of the woods yet but the numbers speak for themselves and the generosity of the people of California and the governor is gratefully received.”

Newsom’s decision follows Oregon and Washington committing to transfer ventilator­s ventilator­s from the national to New York. Washington stockpile, though it has received Gov. Jay Inslee said none. Los Angeles the state will return more got 170 ventilator­s from the than 400 ventilator­s of the stockpile, though many were 500 it got from the federal broken. The state has roughly government. Inslee, a Democrat, 4,200 ventilator­s in addition said his statewide stayat-home to the hospitals’ tally. order and weeks of California expects to hit its social distancing led to slower peak of cases in mid-may. rates of infections and deaths Hydrogen fuel cell manufactur­er in Washington, which saw Bloom Energy has the first serious coronaviru­s dedicated a portion of its outbreak in the country. production plants in California

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, and Delaware to repairing meanwhile, said 140 ventilator­s old ventilator­s. As of would be sent from her Monday the San Jose-based state to New York because company had repaired 1,000 Oregon doesn’t need them ventilator­s, and a spokeswoma­n right now. said it has the capacity

California has been hunting to refurbish 2,000 for ventilator­s to boost per week. its own supply for weeks. Virgin Orbit, billionair­e

Officials requested 10,000 Richard Branson’s company that makes rockets, has developed a prototype for a “bridge ventilator” designed to help patients breathe until they can be put on a traditiona­l ventilator. The company is awaiting federal approval before it can begin mass producing the model, which was developed in partnershi­p with researcher­s at the University of California, Irvine.

While the federal government hasn’t given California any ventilator­s from the national stockpile, it has sent other supplies. As of last week, California had received roughly 837,000 N-95 masks, 1.31 million gloves, nearly 2 million surgical masks, as well as face shields, surgical gowns, coveralls and 2,000 medical station beds, according to the White House.

California has recorded more than 15,000 cases of COVID-19 virus infections and at least 320 deaths, according to the latest data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Maryland has more than 4,000 cases; Nevada nearly 2,000; the District of Columbia nearly 1,100; and Delaware less than 1,000, according to the university.

“If we need them back in a few weeks, we’ll get them back,” Newsom said of the ventilator­s the state is sharing. If California­ns continue aggressive social and physical distancing, it will give the state time to obtain all of the ventilator­s it needs, he said.

 ?? Ap-beth Laberge, File ?? In this March 28 file photo, staff work in a ventilator refurbishi­ng assembly line at Bloom Energy in Sunnyvale, Calif. The COVID-19 outbreak has prompted companies large and small to rethink how they do business. Bloom Energy in San Jose, Calif., makes hydrogen fuel cells. But recently, they have been refurbishi­ng old ventilator­s so hospitals can use them to keep coronaviru­s patients alive.
Ap-beth Laberge, File In this March 28 file photo, staff work in a ventilator refurbishi­ng assembly line at Bloom Energy in Sunnyvale, Calif. The COVID-19 outbreak has prompted companies large and small to rethink how they do business. Bloom Energy in San Jose, Calif., makes hydrogen fuel cells. But recently, they have been refurbishi­ng old ventilator­s so hospitals can use them to keep coronaviru­s patients alive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States