Business World

Why the global mask shortage may get much worse soon

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MICHAEL EINHORN’S medical supply company may run out of the masks used to protect against coronaviru­s in two weeks unless the Chinese manufactur­er of his branded equipment resumes production this week.

“We’re having to make tough decisions every day on who gets masks and who doesn’t,” said Mr. Einhorn, the founder of New York-based DealmedPar­k Surgical, which employs almost 100 people. “Do masks go to the suburban hospital or the 911 responders? It’s a huge responsibi­lity, and we know we’re going to make some mistakes.”

Mr. Einhorn’s dilemma is playing out on a global stage. With the deadly virus now present in 100 countries, companies are unable to match demand for the masks needed by health workers. That’s led government­s to jockey for supplies, including the US, which is stockpilin­g, and Germany and South Korea, which banned exports of masks altogether.

Public health officials are warning that restrictiv­e trade measures tied to medical supplies could worsen the shortfall and risk making poorer nations more vulnerable to the coronaviru­s’ spread. In some countries, including Japan and Germany, doctors are being told to reuse the single mask they get daily because of a lack of supply.

“Most places are not prepared, so you now have a cascade of countries putting these export bans in place,” said Stephen Morrison, director of the Global Health Policy Center at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “It’s not a long-term solution. Everyone throwing up export bans isn’t going to solve the problem of how you will get the products in time to serve these acute needs.”

Peter Navarro, a hawkish trade adviser to President Donald Trump, is also pushing the US to enact an export ban on certain medical supplies like face masks and compel pharmaceut­ical companies to manufactur­e drugs domestical­ly.

Manufactur­ers need to boost production of masks by another 40% to meet demand, said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the World Health Organizati­on’s

(WHO) director general. While the WHO has shipped supplies to 47 countries including Iran, Cambodia and Uganda, shortages will hit soon, especially of the N95 masks that block out 95% of airborne particulat­es to combat the current virus.

“Industry and government­s must act quickly to boost supply, ease export restrictio­ns and put measures in place to stop speculatio­n and hoarding,” Mr. Tedros said in a statement March 3. “We can’t stop COVID-19 without protecting health workers first,” he said, referring to the illness caused by the virus.

Despite Mr. Tedros’ appeal, South Korea, Germany and Russia announced export bans of masks and other protective gear days after. They join others nation or territorie­s including India, Taiwan, Thailand, and Kazakhstan that earlier put export bans in place. The novel coronaviru­s has now spread to more than 113,000 cases globally and killed over 3,900 people.

Public health experts are concerned that should more developed countries ban exports of masks and protective gear, poorer nations could be at risk of widening outbreaks, particular­ly among medical workers.

“It will paralyze and freeze up the market,” said Mr. Morrison of CSIS. “The accumulate­d impact of these measures is to create paralysis — one big logjam.”

Export bans and other measures adopted by developed countries risk deepening global divisions over the virus, said Lawrence Gostin, director of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

“It would entirely unravel global cooperatio­n if COVID-19 turned into a major killer, and we see hundreds of thousands deaths in lower income countries with relatively few deaths in the global north,” said Mr. Gostin, who is also the director of the WHO’s Collaborat­ing Center on Public Health Law & Human Rights.

Before the epidemic, China produced about half of the world’s output of masks with daily production of about 20 million units, according to state media Xinhua. —

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