Royal Oak Tribune

U.S. medical supply chains failed, deaths followed

- By Juliet Linderman and Martha Mendoza

Nurse Sandra Oldfield’s patient didn’t have the usual symptoms of COVID-19 — yet. But then he tested positive for the virus, and it was clear that Oldfield — a veteran, 53-year-old caregiver— had been exposed. She was sent home by Kaiser Per manente officials with instructio­ns to keep careful notes on her condition. And she did.

“Temperatur­e 97.1,” she wrote on March 26, her first log entry. Normal.

She and her colleagues said they had felt unsafe at work and had raised concerns with their managers. They needed N95 masks, powerful protection against contractin­g COVID-19. Kaiser Permanente had none for Oldfield. Instead, she was issued a less effective surgical mask, leaving her vulnerable to the deadly virus.

Many others were similarly vulnerable, and not just at this 169-bed hospital in Fresno. Fromthe very moment the pandemic reached America’s shores, the country was unprepared. Hospitals, nursing homes and other health care facilities didn’t have the masks and equipment needed to protect their workers. Some got sick and spread the virus. Some died.

Medical supply chains that span oceans and continents are the fragile lifelines between raw materials and manufactur­ers overseas, and health care workers on CO--VID-19 front lines in the U.S. As link after link broke, the system fell apart.

This catastroph­ic collapse was one of the country’s most consequent­ial failures to control the virus. And it wasn’t unexpected: For decades, politician­s and corporate officials ignored warnings about the risks associated with America’s overdepend­ence on foreign manufactur­ing, and a lack of adequate preparatio­n at home.

As the pandemic rolled into the U.S., Asian factories shut down, halting exports of medical supplies. Meanwhile, government stockpiles were depleted from a flu outbreak a decade earlier, and there was no way to rapidly restock. The federal government dangerousl­y advised people not to wear masks, looking to preserve the supply for health care workers. Counterfei­ts flooded the market.

Now, with more than 210,000 Americans dead and the president himself infected with the virus, the U.S. grieves the consequenc­es. And nurses are still being told to reuse masks designed to be thrown away after each patient.

At home with her aged dog Freckles at her side, Sandra Oldfield recognized the symptoms as she recorded themin her log over 11 days: “Chills”

“Weakness”

“Dizziness”

She lost her appetite. Her handwritin­g grew shaky. Someone called an ambulance. Others came for her pets.

Although itwill take years for researcher­s to understand why the pandemic was disproport­ionately worse in the U.S., early studies that compare different countries’ responses are finding that shortages of masks, gloves, gowns, shields, testing kits and other medical supplies indeed cost lives.

The lack of early testing was a major stumble. First, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s tests were faulty. Then there weren’t enough. The Food and Drug Administra­tion raced to approve more tests, but without access to cheap, disposable swabs — made almost entirely in Italy and now in very short supply — they were useless. U.S. public health department­s’ worst fears were quickly realized.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? NursesMich­ael Gulick, center, and Angela Gatdula, right, hold their arms up in protest outside of Providence Saint John’s Health Center in SantaMonic­a, Calif.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO NursesMich­ael Gulick, center, and Angela Gatdula, right, hold their arms up in protest outside of Providence Saint John’s Health Center in SantaMonic­a, Calif.

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