The Denver Post

Hospitals continue to stockpile face masks

- By Jason Dearen, Juliet Linderman and Martha Mendoza

One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of medicalgra­de N95 face masks are pouring out of American factories and heading into storage, yet doctors and nurses say there still aren’t enough to keep them safe.

An Associated Press investigat­ion found a logistical breakdown at the heart of the perceived mask shortage, rooted in federal failures to coordinate supply chains and provide hospitals with clear rules about how to manage their medical equipment.

Exclusive trade data and interviews with manufactur­ers, federal regulators, hospital procuremen­t officials and frontline medical workers reveal a communicat­ion breakdown — not an actual shortage — that is depriving doctors, nurses and others risking exposure to COVID-19 of first-rate protection.

In Fort Worth, Texas, medical

grade mask manufactur­er Prestige Ameritech’s warehouse is piled high with cases of N95s. It can churn out 1 million every four days. But there aren’t orders for nearly that many, so Prestige recently got government approval to export them.

“I’m drowning in these respirator­s,” owner Mike Bowen said.

Meanwhile, Mary Turner, a COVID-19 intensive care nurse at a hospital outside Minneapoli­s, strapped on the one disposable N95 respirator allotted for her entire shift.

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic, Turner threw out her mask after each patient to prevent the spread of disease. Now she wears one mask from each infected person to the next because N95s — which filter out 95% of infectious particles — have supposedly been in short supply since last March.

Turner’s employer, North Memorial Health, said in a statement that supplies have stabilized, but the company is still limiting use because “we must remain mindful of that supply” to ensure everyone’s safety.

Internal government emails obtained by The Associated Press show there were deliberate decisions to withhold vital informatio­n about new mask manufactur­ers and availabili­ty.

Before the pandemic, medical providers followed guidelines that called for N95s to be discarded after each use. As the masks ran short, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention modified guidelines to allow for extended use and reuse if supplies are “depleted,” a term left undefined.

Hospitals have responded in a variety of ways, the AP has found. Some are back to preCOVID-19, one-use-per-patient N95 protocols, but most are doling out one mask a day or fewer to each employee. Many hospital procuremen­t officers say they are following guidelines for depleted supplies, even if their own stockpiles are robust.

Denver hospitals didn’t report major problems finding N95 respirator­s. Dan Weaver, spokesman for UCHealth, said the supply was “very strong.” Rachel Hirsch, spokeswoma­n for Denver Health, said employees still use one N95 per shift, but they no longer need to disinfect and reuse the respirator­s.

A HealthOne representa­tive also reported the network isn’t dealing with an N95 shortage.

Chester “Trey” Moeller, a political appointee who served as the CDC’s deputy chief of staff until President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on last month, said efforts to increase U.S. mask production succeeded, but the government has failed to connect new suppliers with customers.

“We are forcing our health care industry to reuse sanitized N95s or even worse, wear one N95 all day long,” he said.

Before the pandemic, the U.S. demand for N95s was 1.7 billion per year, with 20% for medical use, trade groups say. In 2021, demand for medical use is estimated by industry sources to be 5.7 billion.

Manufactur­ers such as Bowen stepped in to fill the need.

Still, many hospitals are restrictin­g masks for workers while building their stockpiles over fears of a future COVID-19 surge.

The AP spoke with a dozen procuremen­t officers who buy supplies for more than 300 hospitals, and all said they have enough N95s now, between two and 12 months worth, sitting in storage.

Even so, all but two are limiting workers to one mask per day, or even one per week.

To boost domestic supply, the federal agency that oversees N95 manufactur­ers, the National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health, has approved 94 new brands, including 19 domestic manufactur­ers, according to the internal government emails.

But in December, Moeller, an appointee of President Donald Trump, grew frustrated.

“(NIOSH) had approved almost 20 U.S. manufactur­ers to make N95 masks, but had not published any guidance or notice of what is ultimately more than 100 million N95 maskmaking capacity a month going unsold,” Moeller told the AP.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion was monitoring N95 supply chains, and received $80 million in emergency pandemic funds “to prevent, prepare for and respond to coronaviru­s.” Of that amount, about $38 million was for efforts related to tracking medical product shortages.

But the agency has still not solved the problem. “There have been a good number of new NIOSH (mask) approvals that have been granted,” said Suzanne Schwartz, director of the FDA’s Office of Strategic Partnershi­ps & Technology Innovation. “Yet the access to those new manufactur­ers, there seems to be a hurdle there. FDA ... is trying to identify that blockage.”

The internal emails show that Moeller in December alerted NIOSH head Dr. John Howard about the unused U.S. N95s.

In a Dec. 22 email, Howard acknowledg­ed he was still hearing of shortages: “Apparently, there is a significan­t domestic production capacity going unused for the lack of orders and we have tried to address this supplier/purchaser disconnect.”

NIOSH was not actively promoting the new mask producers, Howard wrote, saying that “to avoid the perception of inequitabl­e treatment and because of the dynamic production landscape, we have not posted informatio­n on our website regarding respirator availabili­ty.”

Howard, through an agency spokespers­on, declined a request for an interview. In a statement, NIOSH also acknowledg­ed “a supply and demand disconnect” exists and said it is working to better connect purchasers with U.S.-made masks.

Meanwhile, the U.S. finds itself in a paradox. The more N95s are rationed to alleviate a perceived shortage, the fewer masks are actually reaching the front lines.

Dr. Robert Hancock, an emergency room doctor and president of the Texas College of Emergency Physicians, said hospitals are taking risks by rationing N95s, even when they have enough. He said some doctors tell him they get one N95 mask every five to seven days.

“All the N95s currently out there were designed to be worn once. They were never designed to be reused,” Hancock said.

 ?? Jim Mone, The Associated Press ?? Nurses picket Friday in Faribault, Minn., during a health care worker protest of a shortage on protective masks.
Jim Mone, The Associated Press Nurses picket Friday in Faribault, Minn., during a health care worker protest of a shortage on protective masks.
 ?? Scott McIntyre, © The New York Times Co. ?? Employees assemble surgical masks in the production area at DemeTech, which also makes N95 masks, in Doral, Fla., on Feb. 5.
Scott McIntyre, © The New York Times Co. Employees assemble surgical masks in the production area at DemeTech, which also makes N95 masks, in Doral, Fla., on Feb. 5.

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