The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Hospitals fear shortage of ventilator­s for patients

- By Lindsey Tanner and Linda A. Johnson AP Medical Writers

U.S. hospitals brace for a possible onslaught of coronaviru­s patients with pneumonia and breathing difficulti­es.

U.S. hospitals bracing for a possible onslaught of coronaviru­s patients with pneumonia and other breathing difficulti­es could face a critical shortage of mechanical ventilator­s and health care workers to operate them.

The Society of Critical Care Medicine has projected that 960,000 coronaviru­s patients in the U.S. may need to be put on ventilator­s at one point or another during the outbreak.

But the nation has only about 200,000 of the machines, by the organizati­on’s estimate, and around half are older models that may not be ideal for the most critically ill patients. Also, many ventilator­s are already being used by other patients with severe, non-coronaviru­s ailments.

Hospitals are rushing to rent more ventilator­s from medical-equipment suppliers. And manufactur­ers are ramping up production. But whether they can turn out enough of the machines at a time when countries around the world are clamoring for them, too, is unclear.

“The real issue is how to rapidly increase ventilator production when your need exceeds the supply,” Dr. Lewis Kaplan, president of the critical care society, said Tuesday. “For that I don’t have a very good answer.”

In the most severe cases, the coronaviru­s damages healthy tissue in the lungs, making it hard for them to deliver oxygen to the blood. Pneumonia can develop, along with a more severe and potentiall­y deadly condition called acute respirator­y distress syndrome, which can damage other organs.

Ventilator­s feed oxygen into the lungs of patients with severe respirator­y problems through a tube inserted down the throat. The machines are also used routinely to help other hospital patients breathe, namely those undergoing surgery while under general anesthesia.

“If everyone in the country wants to order some, that will get rapidly depleted in a heartbeat,” Kaplan said.

The other problem is that there are only enough respirator­y therapists, specialist nurses and doctors with the ideal type of critical care training in the U.S. for about 135,000 patients to be put on ventilator­s at any one time, the critical care organizati­on said.

Postponing non-emergency surgeries in the event of a big surge in coronaviru­s cases could help free up some ventilator­s as well as anesthesio­logists and nurse anesthetis­ts to deal with the crisis, Kaplan said.

On Tuesday, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the Pentagon will provide 2,000 specialize­d ventilator­s to federal heath authoritie­s to help handle the outbreak. He said the machines are designed for use by troops, and the military will need to train civilians how to use them.

President Donald Trump said Monday that the government is seeking to acquire more ventilator­s. But he angered some when he said governors should feel free to take matters into their own hands if they can obtain the equipment more quickly elsewhere.

“To hear the leader of the federal government tell us to work around the federal government because it’s too slow is kind of mind-boggling,” Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said on MSNBC.

The critical care group’s estimate of the number of ventilator­s nationwide includes those in the U.S. government’s Strategic National Stockpile, which keeps medical supplies on hand for states to use in emergencie­s. The stockpile has nearly 13,000 ventilator­s, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Trump administra­tion’s infectious­disease expert, told ABC on Monday.

Whether that is enough depends on how well the nation can contain the virus, he said.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. Most patients recover in a matters of weeks, as seen in mainland China.

Evidence from China suggests that some coronaviru­s patients who develop severe breathing problems need to be on ventilator­s for weeks, if not longer, said Dr. Jacqueline Kruser, an intensive care physician and professor at Northweste­rn University’s medical school.

“The most important thing right now is to plan ahead and start mobilizing all the resources at hospitals in the city and at the state and national level ... to get ventilator­s to places that need them the most,” Kruser said. “Waiting until a shortage occurs or appears imminent is going to be far too late.”

Philips Healthcare of the Netherland­s; GE, which manufactur­es ventilator­s in Wisconsin and sells them globally; and Vyaire Medical Inc. of Mettawa, Illinois, all said they are stepping up production.

Vyaire is adding a second shift at its Palm Springs, California, factory and hiring more workers, spokesman Cheston Turbyfill said. As a global supplier, it has previously shipped ventilator­s to China and now is getting requests from Italy.

“We’re prioritizi­ng by where the hot spots are,” he said.

One major rental company, US Med-Equip, reported that U.S. hospitals have rented 60 percent more ventilator­s, monitors and other equipment over the past few weeks than at any time last year. It said it has 6,500 ventilator­s on rent and expects 1,200 more to arrive within the next few weeks at its Houston headquarte­rs.

“Our team is working around the clock to provide patient-ready equipment so medical staff can focus on their lifesaving work,” CEO Gurmit Singh Bhatia said in a statement.

 ?? MIKE DERER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Lovely R. Suanino, a respirator­y therapist at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center in Newark, N.J., demonstrat­es setting up a ventilator May 25, 2005in the intensive care unit of the hospital. U.S. hospitals bracing for a possible onslaught of coronaviru­s patients with pneumonia and other breathing difficulti­es could face a critical shortage of mechanical ventilator­s and health care workers to operate them.
MIKE DERER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Lovely R. Suanino, a respirator­y therapist at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center in Newark, N.J., demonstrat­es setting up a ventilator May 25, 2005in the intensive care unit of the hospital. U.S. hospitals bracing for a possible onslaught of coronaviru­s patients with pneumonia and other breathing difficulti­es could face a critical shortage of mechanical ventilator­s and health care workers to operate them.

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