The Norwalk Hour

Murphy talks COVID, PPE and health care’s future

- By Verónica Del Valle

The state of COVID-19 in the community and the state, the upcoming flu season and other healthrela­ted topics, from the hospital’s stockpile of personal protective equipment to the uncertain future of the Affordable Care Act, were on the agenda as U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, DConn., met with city and health officials at Stamford Hospital on Tuesday.

Connecticu­t has seen a significan­t rise in COVID-19 cases — with more than 8,300 new cases in the past month, according to the Connecticu­t State Department of Public Health and reporting by Hearst Newspapers. But the rise in hospitaliz­ations has been significan­tly slower.

In Fairfield County, Norwalk has seen a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, while in Stamford — at one time the epicenter of the crisis in Connecticu­t — the rise has been relatively modest.

“Thankfully, over the summer we’ve had less than five inpatients, for the most part, at any given time,” Stamford Health CEO Kathleen Silard said. “That is mostly due to the public health measures that we have all worked so hard together to put into place.”

After a slow summer in terms of caseload, the city is now seeing about eight new cases of coronaviru­s a day, according to Stamford Mayor David Martin.

And last week, the

hospital treated its first influenza case of the year, putting a formal start to flu season.

Despite rising case numbers, Martin also spoke to declining interest in coronaviru­s testing, particular­ly in the Stamford’s marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

“[People] are still coming out, but not at the same rate that they were coming out,” said Martin. Overall, the state has seen a rise in testing of late.

The city pushed to increase testing in communitie­s of color earlier in the pandemic. In partnershi­p with the NAACP and Building One Community — a social services provider focused on immigrants — the city had increased testing among the Black community by 18 percent, officials said; and 9 percent among Latinx residents.

This increase was accomplish­ed, in part, through “respirator­y depots” launched by the hospital, a way to meet community members outside of traditiona­l doctors’ officers. The depots test patients for all respirator­y illnesses, not just COVID.

PPE and other challenges

Those testing sites have helped process more than 70,000 COVID-19 tests since March, officials said. But, to maintain that volume, Stamford Health COO Elizabeth Longmore told Murphy a constant supply

of PPE is necessary.

“One of the biggest things that we struggle with, as far as continuing those testing operations, is the predictabi­lity of the supply chain and our ability to really know, week to week, what amount of testing supplies we’re going to receive,” said Longmore.

Even months into the pandemic, the supply of personal protective equipment is volatile, officials said. Sometimes, there is a disruption in production. Other times, according to Longmore, the federal government has redirected PPE to other locations in need.

To remedy that unreliabil­ity, Stamford Hospital began to keep its own stockpiles of PPE in case of another spike of infections.

“That may end up being the right answer inevitably, but I’m worried it shouldn’t be,” said Murphy. When individual entities start amassing PPE, responsibi­lity for keeping institutio­ns stocked becomes becomes hazy, according to the senator

Even Murphy questioned the effectiven­ess of the hospital stockpilin­g equipment. Silard reflected on receiving expired PPE from the state and federal government­s. One shipment from those reserves earlier in the pandemic was completely expired, she said, leaving Stamford Health to use it as leadership saw fit outside of COVID wards.

Keeping care affordable

Throughout the dis

cussion, Murphy also reminded a room full of healthcare profession­als and public servants of one national conversati­on looming over the morning’s discussion — the Affordable Care Act.

“I am convinced, whether you agree with me or not, that the Affordable Care Act is likely to be overturned in the next four months,” said Murphy, referring in part to confirmati­on hearings for Amy Coney Barrett — President Donald Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court.

Murphy claims that ending the ACA would hit providers like Stamford Health hardest, especially because of coronaviru­s. He worries that the state would be left to foot the bill for uninsured patients in the heat of both the pandemic and flu season.

California v. Texas, the Supreme Court case in question, threatens the act’s individual mandate, the provision that requires most people to have a minimum amount of health insurance coverage.

The plaintiffs — a coalition of 18 Republican-led states — are asking for the whole act to be invalidate­d. While the high court could uphold the Affordable Care Act without the individual mandate, if the provision is found to be integral to the act, the entire piece of legislatio­n could be struck down.

California v. Texas is slated for oral arguments on Nov. 10, a week after the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election.

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., speaks during the COVID-19 roundtable at Stamford Hospital on Tuesday.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., speaks during the COVID-19 roundtable at Stamford Hospital on Tuesday.
 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst CT Media ?? Stamford Health President and CEO Kathleen Silard speaks during the roundtable discussion with U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., on Tuesday.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst CT Media Stamford Health President and CEO Kathleen Silard speaks during the roundtable discussion with U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., on Tuesday.

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