Miami Herald

U.S. has lots of ventilator­s, but few specialist­s to operate them

- BY ANDREW JACOBS

As record numbers of coronaviru­s cases overwhelm hospitals across the United States, there is something strikingly different from the surge that inundated cities last spring: No one is clamoring for ventilator­s.

The sophistica­ted breathing machines, used to sustain the most critically ill patients, are far more plentiful than they were eight months ago, when New York, New Jersey and other hard-hit states were desperate to obtain more of the devices, and hospitals were reviewing triage protocols for rationing care. Now many hot spots face a different problem: They have enough ventilator­s but not nearly enough workers with the years of training to operate them.

Since the spring, U.S. medical device-makers have radically ramped up the country’s ventilator capacity by producing more than 200,000 critical care ventilator­s, with 155,000 of them going to the Strategic National Stockpile. At the same time, doctors have figured out other ways to deliver oxygen to some patients struggling to breathe – including using inexpensiv­e sleep apnea machines or simple nasal cannulas that force air into the lungs through plastic tubes.

But with new cases approachin­g 200,000 per day and a flood of patients straining hospitals across the country, public health experts warn that the ample supply of available ventilator­s may not be enough to save many critically ill patients.

“We’re now at a dangerous precipice,” said Dr. Lewis Kaplan, president of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Ventilator­s, he said, are exceptiona­lly complex machines that require expertise and constant monitoring for the weeks or even months patients are tethered to them. The explosion of cases in rural parts of Idaho, South Dakota, Ohio and other states has forced local hospitals that lack such experts on staff to send patients to cities and regional medical centers, but those intensive care beds are

quickly filling up.

Public health experts have long warned about a shortage of critical care doctors, known as intensivis­ts, a specialty that generally requires an additional two years of medical training. There are 37,400 intensivis­ts in the United States, according to the American Hospital Associatio­n, but nearly half of the country’s acute care hospitals do not have any on staff, and many of those are in rural areas increasing­ly overwhelme­d by the virus.

“We can’t manufactur­e doctors and nurses in the same way we can manufactur­e ventilator­s,” said Dr. Eric Toner, an emergency room doctor and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “And you can’t teach someone overnight the right settings and buttons to push” on ventilator­s for patients who have a disease they have never seen before, he added. “The most realistic thing we can do in the short run is to reduce the impact on hospitals, and that means wearing masks and avoiding crowded spaces so we can flatten the curve of new infections.”

Medical associatio­n message boards in states like Oklahoma, North Dakota and Iowa are awash in desperate calls for intensivis­ts and pulmonolog­ists willing to temporaril­y relocate and help out. When New York City and hospitals in the Northeast issued a similar call for help this spring, specialist­s from the South and Midwest rushed there, but because cases are surging all over the country now, hospital officials say that most of their pleas for help are going unanswered.

Dr. Thomas Dobbs, the top health official in Mississipp­i, said more than half the state’s 1,048 ventilator­s were still available but that he was more concerned with having enough staff to take care of the sickest patients.“If we want to make sure that someone who’s hospitaliz­ed in the ICU with the coronaviru­s has the best chance to get well, they need to have highly trained personnel, and that cannot be flexed up rapidly,” he said Tuesday.

Dr. Matthew Trump, a critical care specialist at UnityPoint Health in Des Moines, Iowa, said the health chain’s 21 hospitals had an adequate supply of ventilator­s for now, but he is worried that out-of-state staff reinforcem­ents were unlikely to materializ­e as colleagues fall ill and the hospital’s ICU beds reach capacity.“People here are exhausted and burned out from the past few months,” he said. “I’m really concerned.”

The domestic boom in ventilator production has been a rare bright spot in the country’s response to the pandemic, which has been marred by shortages of personal protective equipment, haphazard testing efforts and President Donald Trump’s mixed messaging on the importance of masks, social distancing and other measures that can dent the spread of new infections.

Despite an overall increase in the number of ventilator­s, some researcher­s say many of the new machines may be inadequate for the current crisis. Dr. Richard Branson, an expert on mechanical ventilatio­n at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and an author of a recent study in the journal Chest, said that half of the new devices acquired by the Strategic National Stockpile were not sophistica­ted enough for COVID-19 patients in severe respirator­y distress. He also expressed concern about the long-term viability of machines that require frequent maintenanc­e.“These devices were not built to be stockpiled,” he said.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF NYT file | July 4 ?? A nurse assists a patient at Houston Methodist Hospital in July. A burst of production solved the dire shortage of ventilator­s that defined the first wave of COVID-19.
ERIN SCHAFF NYT file | July 4 A nurse assists a patient at Houston Methodist Hospital in July. A burst of production solved the dire shortage of ventilator­s that defined the first wave of COVID-19.

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