The Day

Silence can be deadly

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This editorial was excerpted from the L.A. Times. A tragic number of health workers have been infected, in some cases fatally, after caring for COVID-19 patients. For months now, there have been reports of doctors and nurses working without adequate personal protective equipment, including N95 masks. Often, one mask must suffice for an entire shift, which means it cannot be taken off all day. And those are the workers who even get an N95 mask.

“The hospital wasn’t giving us appropriat­e PPE — the N95s were locked,” said one nurse at Hollywood Presbyteri­an Medical Center, where a colleague died from the virus. One striking detail: This nurse and other hospital staff refused to speak on the record for fear of retaliatio­n from the hospital.

You can’t blame them, considerin­g what’s been happening to other health care workers throughout the pandemic. Here are two examples: A doctor in Washington state was fired after he started posting on social media about the shortage of safety gear at his hospital, including, he said, nurses being told to treat patients without any kind of mask. He took to public postings, he said, only after his complaints to hospital management were dismissed. And 10 nurses at Providence St. John’s Medical Center in Santa Monica were suspended after refusing to work without better protection.

The nonprofit news organizati­on ProPublica has reported that doctors and nurses throughout the country have been fired, suspended, placed on leave or threatened for voicing their concerns. Many don’t complain, fearful of getting into trouble.

It’s not the hospitals’ fault, for the most part, that personal protective equipment has been in such short supply. Blame that on federal and state leaders who failed to plan adequately for a pandemic. But it is not acceptable to discipline workers for complainin­g, either internally or publicly, about such a high-level health risk. Complaints might harm a hospital’s reputation, but the public’s right to know outweighs such considerat­ions.

Whistleblo­wer laws should prevent retaliatio­n for complaints. But it’s not clear whether the whistleblo­wer rules — which vary state to state — are broad enough to protect the frontline workers who risk their health each day to care for us. These are extreme times that call for allowing health profession­als to speak openly and publicly about what’s going on in their workplaces. Governors should issue executive orders to clarify that in a public health emergency, medical workers have the right to speak out without fear.

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