The Guardian (USA)

Unions demand US government take charge over 'inexcusabl­e' PPE shortage

- Jessica Glenza

A large coalition of labor unions and climate action groups have petitioned the US health and homeland security department­s to take over the manufactur­e and distributi­on of personal protective equipment (PPE).

The unions, including the AFL-CIO, the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, the American Federation of Teachers and the Amalgamate­d Transit Union, represent more than 15 million workers, from nurses to flight attendants to nannies. The administra­tion is required to respond within 15 days.

The groups could sue if they do not receive a response.

Healthcare and other frontline workers have experience­d rolling shortages of gowns, gloves and critical N95 face masks since March, when the Covid-19 pandemic broke the global supply chain for such products. Healthcare workers could make up between 10 and 20% of total Covid-19 infections, the petition said, citing previous health authority estimates.

“It’s terrifying to risk your life every day just by going to work. It brings a lot of things into perspectiv­e,” said Rick Lucas, the president of the Ohio State University Nurses Organizati­on and a nurse Ohio State University Wexner

Medical Center.

“I’m not going to give up on protecting my patients, even though it’s clear the federal government has basically given up on protecting us,” he said. “More than 100 of my coworkers have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, and many of those positive tests were due to occupation­al exposure because of lack of PPE. This is inexcusabl­e.”

Although PPE supplies have rebounded for large hospitals and longterm care homes, supply chains remain fragile, with periodic shortages accompanyi­ng surges of Covid-19 cases in the US. At the same time, independen­t doctor’s offices have struggled to obtain these supplies at all, as distributo­rs allocate limited supplies to the most critical facilities.

Health experts and industry leaders have predicted PPE shortages could persist for years without government interventi­on. They also said there is no end in sight for emergency conservati­on measures, which have pushed nurses to use the same N95 masks for a week at a time.

The petition, drafted by environmen­tal lawyers and signed by unions, calls on the administra­tion to deploy the full powers of the Defense Production Act (DPA) using an emergency rule-making process. The wartime law allows the US to mandate manufactur­ers fulfill government contracts first, to make masks, gloves, gowns and other equipment to protect workers from Covid-19.

Donald Trump delegated DPA powers to health secretary Alex Azar and acting homeland security secretary Chad Wolf in March. The groups claim neither has used the act sufficient­ly to remedy the gear shortages.

The Trump administra­tion abdicated responsibi­lity for the manufactur­e and distributi­on or PPE to states, which has exacerbate­d shortages as states and institutio­ns compete amongst one another.

Demand for PPE is expected to grow again in the coming months, with the potential for Covid-19 to surge during winter months, and as some states with active infections try to push schools to return to in-person instructio­n.

 ?? Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images ?? Healthcare and other frontline workers have experience­d rolling shortages of gowns, gloves and critical N95 face masks since March.
Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images Healthcare and other frontline workers have experience­d rolling shortages of gowns, gloves and critical N95 face masks since March.

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