USA TODAY International Edition

Masks exported despite shortage

US companies’ sell- off deepened through March

- Dian Zhang, Katie Wedell and Erin Mansfield

U. S. companies continued their massive sell- off of medical masks overseas throughout March, well after the coronaviru­s began infecting Americans and draining hospitals of critical supplies and even as White House officials raised red flags, a USA TODAY investigat­ion found.

America exported more protective masks – including disposable surgical masks and N95 respirator masks – this March than in any other month in the past decade. In all, $ 83.1 million worth of such products were sent from the United States to the rest of the world, according to an analysis of the latest U. S. Census Bureau trade data for the export category that includes textilebas­ed protective masks.

March’s total export figure surpassed the previous high of $ 74.3 million set in February, when many of the masks went to China. And it far exceeded the average monthly shipment value of $ 53.3 million over the past decade, USA TODAY’s analysis found. The data shows only monthly totals and does not allow for a daily break

down of shipments or companies.

The exports came even as top- level White House officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, were being warned that such shipments were hurting the country’s own supply, according to an 89- page whistleblo­wer complaint released Tuesday from ousted U. S. Health and Human Services division director Dr. Rick Bright.

The complaint includes numerous attachment­s that detail discussion­s among government officials as early as January about supply chain issues of personal protective equipment and the possibilit­y of halting U. S. exports.

On Feb. 14, Peter Navarro, the White House’s director of the Office of Trade and Manufactur­ing Policy, sent a memo to the COVID- 19 Task Force chaired by Pence: “Has the export of N- 95 been halted? If not, why not? We are facing shortages of raw materials that suggest a constraine­d supply. We should not be exporting any more masks.” Navarro urged immediate action. “Let’s move this in Trump time,” he wrote. “These masks are the frontline defense for our health care profession­als, and we can’t waste time.”

Despite those warnings, President Donald Trump did not move to ban exports of N95 masks and other personal protective equipment until April 3, seven weeks later. He partially reversed the policy days later after backlash from other countries, in particular Canada.

Neither the White House nor the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services responded to USA TODAY’s requests for comment.

Beginnings of a crisis

COVID- 19 first appeared in the USA Jan. 21 and had infected at least 42 Americans by the beginning of March.

By the end of that month, the case count hit nearly 186,000 and prompted travel bans, stay- at- home orders and massive shortages of personal protective equipment. Hospitals across the county were struggling to purchase surgical and N95 masks, encounteri­ng ordering delays of up to six months, according to a survey released Monday by the watchdog of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services.

HHS Secretary Alex Azar serves on the COVID- 19 Task Force to which Navarro’s memos were sent. Other members include Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Surgeon General Jerome Adams; and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnunchin.

Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D- Texas, raised questions with Azar and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in early March after a Commerce Department flyer circulated that encouraged businesses to take advantage of temporary Chinese import incentives and pushed U. S. companies to sell more of their supplies crucial to a coronaviru­s response abroad. Businesses were encouraged to export masks, mechanical ventilator­s and even maskmaking machines to China.

“In January, this administra­tion was being told by its own members about the importance of doing something,” Doggett told USA TODAY. He said that instead of addressing the issue, the federal government continued to facilitate exporting protective equipment.

“I’m very much an internatio­nalist and I believe in cooperatin­g with other countries,” he said. “But at a time of such dire need in March, to be shipping what we need for our health care profession­als and first responders abroad is a real betrayal of the national interest.”

While February was a record month for exports to China, where the novel coronaviru­s began, the data show that exports to Italy and Spain shot up in March as those two nations were reeling from the virus. At least half of the supplies, though, went to Mexico and Canada, the data show.

Discussion­s of supply chain issues of personal protective equipment began as early as Jan. 29, when an HHS deputy assistant secretary emailed eight other high- level people at HHS, including the assistant secretary for preparedne­ss and response, with details on what the department was doing to address it, according to the whistleblo­wer complaint.

The email said the department was setting up a policy team that would look at “government purchases, changes to more restrictiv­e PPE guidance, release of the stockpile, or blocking exports.” The email also alerted the recipients that Taiwan, home to a major manufactur­er of N95 masks for U. S. brands, had implemente­d an export ban five days earlier, on Jan. 24.

And on Feb. 9, Navarro sent a twopage memo to the COVID- 19 task force urging, among other things, an immediate halt to the export of N95 masks.

“The U. S. has four small companies that produce masks but depends on the rest of the world for about 90% of its supplies,” he wrote. “Currently, U. S. companies are ramping up but they are exporting much of their production. The U. S. therefore faces the real prospect of a severe mask shortage!”

And Bright wrote in an email on March 12: “Efforts to halt the export should be considered now. The easiest way may be for the SNS to place some orders with US- based manufactur­ers to 1) buy the current inventory and 2) ramp up production of more.”

Scrambling to fill the need

Bright, a vaccine expert, says he was removed from his post as director of the HHS Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority in April after raising concerns about a drug Trump touted as potential treatment for COVID- 19. He sent his complaint to the U. S. Office of Special Counsel.

The federal government is spending $ 400 million to decontamin­ate and reuse N95 masks, a concept that was unheard of before the shortage. Private citizens are sewing masks themselves to donate to local hospitals as a makeshift solution so workers don’t have to tie bandanas around their faces.

The mayors of 192 cities across the country said in a survey released in late March that they did not have sufficient face masks for their first responders and medical personnel, and 186 cities said they faced a shortage of other personal protective equipment.

The survey said the cities need 28.5 million face masks, 24.4 million other types of personal protective equipment and 139,000 ventilator­s. The respondent­s did not include mayors of some of the nation’s largest cities, like New York and Chicago.

Bright’s complaint proves that people within the Trump administra­tion knew months ago that a shortage was imminent, Doggett said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States