Boston Herald

Doctors need help with behavior, medical gear

- SPECIAL TO BOSTON HERALD

We want to continue serving you during this pandemic but we need your help.

There is a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) which is typically used to protect us from being infected with lifethreat­ening infections while we care for you. Due to a range of constraint­s, from patents to online profiteeri­ng to excessive use, the shortage of masks, gowns, gloves, and eye gear may become dire.

This means that we will face an enormous risk every time we help a patient who is infected with COVID-19. We have elders in our families who could become infected through us, or young children who could be orphaned if we do not survive a COIVD-19 infection. We face this choice: either help save a patient’s life today or preserve our own life so that we can live to care for our own families and our own children in the future.

The shortage of PPE not only places your doctors and nurses at risk. Other patients in the hospital are at higher risk of infection as well. When another patient needs emergency surgery for a broken hip or a C-section to deliver a baby in distress, the doctors and nurses will not have the masks and gloves that they need to protect the patient from both COVID-19 and other more typical hospital-acquired infections.

This PPE shortage is affecting our colleagues both in the U.S. and elsewhere around the globe. New York City is in crisis and other cities are on a similarly dire trajectory. Desperate, many of us are reaching out on social media and other channels in between hospital shifts to plead for help with the hashtag #GetMePPE. Some of our colleagues have already fallen sick.

Massachuse­tts has been a leader throughout this pandemic. Our governor passed a range of critical executive orders to rapidly expand telehealth so that our patients could be safely treated in their own homes and health care workers could minimize potential exposures. Our universiti­es led the country with their bold moves to evacuate their campuses very early in the pandemic.

Now, Massachuse­tts must come together to provide the masks, gowns and gloves needed for those serving on the front line — not just us, but also clinical aides and assistants, respirator­y therapists, first responders, ambulance personnel, and staff who clean spaces where sick people have gathered for testing or care — who risk their own health to care for you.

We need to keep pulmonolog­y, respirator­y and critical care teams healthy so they can keep serving the sickest patients. If a critical care team cares for your neighbor without adequate protection, they may not be available when you need their help. When we run out of PPE, we will run out of experts. This has already happened in other countries. When you get sick, who will you want to be there to help?

We are enormously grateful for the generosity of the dentists, constructi­on workers and neighbors who have donated masks. We are deeply moved by community members who are sewing masks by hand or producing them on their own 3D printer.

However, we need a largescale, coordinate­d and sustainabl­e effort to protect our entire workforce during the coming weeks to months.

First, we must aggressive­ly eliminate all unnecessar­y use of PPE. Healthy, asymptomat­ic people should be prohibited from wearing N95s while strolling around their neighborho­od. If they are sick, then they should stay home; if they are healthy, then they are wasting a scarce resource.

Similarly, when health care workers are treating asymptomat­ic patients for routine concerns unrelated to COVID-19, you will find that they are not wearing PPE above what is indicated by evidence-based guidelines and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. All patient encounters that can possibly be conducted by either telephone or telehealth must be. We are grateful for the executive order from Gov. Charlie Baker that nonessenti­al elective procedures should be canceled and hope that other states will follow.

Second, we must research which PPE is critical to prevent transmissi­on of COVID-19 from patients to health care workers and to determine if decontamin­ation and re-use of PPE is safe. Many health care workers are already routinely washing and reusing PPE although this is currently not recommende­d. UV germicidal irradiatio­n exposure might allow us to decontamin­ate PPE for reuse, and Taiwan reportedly widely used sleeves over their masks to conserve the mask while replacing the protective outer layer. However, we lack research on whether any of these approaches are safe or effective to protect our health care workers from infection.

Third, we must find new sources of PPE. It is time to distribute our country’s Strategic National Stockpile while we ramp up other sources. We must increase purchasing from China as they scaled up production during their pandemic and now have surplus PPE as their own demands have waned.

The reality is undeniable: the situation is dire and we cannot afford delays in deci

sion-making. Our health care workers, and subsequent­ly, our families, neighbors, and communitie­s are at risk.

The time to act is now. We want you to know and to help.

This appeal was written by Rachel Conrad, MD, a fellow at the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, Christine Mitchell, RN, executive director of the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, Sharine Wittkopp, MD, PHD, a fellow at NYU School of Medicine and Katherine Calaway, MD, a physician at Yale New Haven Health.

 ?? NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF ?? MAKING AN APPEAL: Dr. Rachel Conrad, a fellow at the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, seen at her home in West Yarmouth, is urging people throughout the state to take the coronaviru­s seriously and follow the protocols.
NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF MAKING AN APPEAL: Dr. Rachel Conrad, a fellow at the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, seen at her home in West Yarmouth, is urging people throughout the state to take the coronaviru­s seriously and follow the protocols.
 ?? NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? YANKEE INGENUITY: North Andover science teacher Bennett Ahearn makes masks using a 3D printer in his home in East Kingston, N.H., on Monday.
NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF FILE YANKEE INGENUITY: North Andover science teacher Bennett Ahearn makes masks using a 3D printer in his home in East Kingston, N.H., on Monday.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? MOBILIZING INDUSTRY: New York Mayor Bill de Blasio holds a face shield Thursday as he speaks to the media at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City where firms have begun manufactur­ing personal protective equipment.
GETTY IMAGES MOBILIZING INDUSTRY: New York Mayor Bill de Blasio holds a face shield Thursday as he speaks to the media at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City where firms have begun manufactur­ing personal protective equipment.

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