Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Many of these items are just useless’

FEMA sends faulty protective gear to several nursing homes

- By Andrew Jacobs

Expired surgical masks. Isolation gowns that resemble oversize trash bags. Extra-small gloves that are all but useless for the typical health worker’s hands. Nursing home employees across the country have been dismayed by what they’ve found when they’ve opened boxes of protective medical gear sent by the federal government, part of a $134 million effort to provide facilities a 14-day supply of equipment considered critical for shielding their vulnerable residents from the coronaviru­s.

The shipments have included loose gloves of unknown provenance stuffed into unmarked zip-lock bags, surgical masks crafted from underwear fabric and plastic isolation gowns without openings for hands that require users to punch their fists through the closed sleeves. Adhesive tape must be used to secure them.

Health regulators in California have advised nursing homes not to use the gowns, saying they present an infection-control risk, especially when doffing contaminat­ed gowns that must be torn off.

Some nursing homes have received masks with brittle elastic bands that snap when stretched. None of the shipments have included functional N95 respirator­s, the virus-filtering face masks that are the single most important bulwark against infection.

“People hate to complain about personal protective equipment they’re getting for free, but many of these items are just useless,” said Brendan Williams, president of the New Hampshire Health Care Associatio­n, which has been a fielding a flurry of calls about the defective gear from nursing homes it represents. “It’s mystifying that the government would think this is acceptable.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency began shipping the masks, gowns and gloves this spring to 15,000 nonprofit nursing care facilities whose limited finances have made it difficult to buy protective equipment on the open market.

The first cache of shipments was completed in mid-June, and the second round will wrap up by early August.

In a statement, FEMA said it had addressed the complaints about the first shipment of goods and had asked the private contractor that is providing the supplies to replace the tarp-like gowns with models more familiar to medical personnel. The agency said, however, that the original gowns sent out meet federal and industry standards.

“We have received complaints on less than 1 [percent] of the total PPE shipments to nursing homes,” the statement said. “We continue to engage with nursing homes to keep lines of communicat­ion and feedback open at all times.”

FEMA subsequent­ly acknowledg­ed in an email that the contractor has been sending out a small number of the older gown models.

The controvers­y over inadequate and low-quality protective equipment has come to embody what public health experts and nursing home executives describe as a halting and haphazard federal effort to protect the 1.5 million Americans who live in nursing homes and long-term care facilities.

More than 40 percent of all coronaviru­s deaths in the United States have been tied to nursing homes, according to a New York Times analysis, which found that the virus had infected 316,000 people at 14,000 facilities as of July 15. The virus has been particular­ly lethal to those in their 60s and older, more so for those in poor health and it can rapidly spread through buildings where residents live in close quarters and workers move from room to room.

“The federal response to protect one of the most vulnerable population­s in the country has been a dismal failure,” said Tamara Konetzka, a health economist at the University of Chicago who has been studying the pandemic’s outsize effect on nursing home residents.

The Trump administra­tion’s largely hands-off approach to personal protective equipment, or PPE, has forced states, cities and big hospital chains to compete for limited supplies, leaving nursing homes at a disadvanta­ge as prices have soared.

The crisis is likely to intensify as the virus gains a foothold in nursing homes across the Sun Belt. Infections at long-term care centers in hot-spot states have jumped by 18 percent since late June, according to an analysis by Kaiser Family Foundation. Florida recorded a 51 percent rise, and Texas saw its cases climb by 47 percent.

The federal government has not said whether it plans to provide nursing homes with additional personal protective equipment in the months ahead.

The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare, which oversees nursing homes, earlier this month said it would supply every adult care facility in the country with rapid, point-of-care test kits, but the rollout is expected to take months.

In the meantime, the vast majority of nursing homes in the United States are unequipped to regularly screen their employees and residents for the coronaviru­s.

 ?? VIA LEADINGAGE ?? A health care worker wears a gown with no openings for hands, delivered to a nursing home in Seattle. The controvers­y over inadequate protective equipment has come to embody what critics describe as a haphazard federal effort to protect the 1.5 million who live in nursing homes.
VIA LEADINGAGE A health care worker wears a gown with no openings for hands, delivered to a nursing home in Seattle. The controvers­y over inadequate protective equipment has come to embody what critics describe as a haphazard federal effort to protect the 1.5 million who live in nursing homes.
 ?? VIA NEW HAMPSHIRE HEALTH CARE ASSOCIATIO­N ?? A surgical mask sent to nursing homes in New Hampshire, top, with flimsy paper loops to hook on to ears, compared with a normal surgical mask with elastic straps.
VIA NEW HAMPSHIRE HEALTH CARE ASSOCIATIO­N A surgical mask sent to nursing homes in New Hampshire, top, with flimsy paper loops to hook on to ears, compared with a normal surgical mask with elastic straps.

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