The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

PPE pipeline still broken in America

The COVID-19 pandemic has entered a frightenin­g new phase, picking up speed in every state and breaking new records almost daily.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has entered a frightenin­g new phase, picking up speed in every state.

This new wave of infections has hospital resources stretched close to the breaking point in several states, as seriously ill COVID-19 patients crowd critical care units. And experts predict the worst is yet to come, as people ignore public-health warnings and gather to celebrate the holidays.

At least we have enough medical masks, gloves and gowns to keep health care workers safe, right?

If only that were the case. While the acuity of the protective gear shortage has lessened, the supply chain is still unreliable. Too many health care workers, particular­ly those not in hospitals, still lack adequate supplies and are being forced to reuse equipment meant to be thrown away after one wearing. Even the Strategic National Stockpile has only about one-third the N95 masks that the federal government expected to have by now, according to The New York Times.

“People think the problem is solved,” said Dr. Shikha Gupta, executive director of Get Us PPE, a volunteer project connecting donations of protective gear to health care facilities in desperate need. She noted that the need has risen ominously this month and requests have shifted away from hospitals and critical care centers to nursing homes and small medical practices, among others.

The U.S. has had eight months to prepare for the expected autumn surge of coronaviru­s cases, but somehow these basic infection control tools are still in short supply. Add it to the growing list of ways that the Trump administra­tion has bungled the pandemic response and left the U.S. in the unenviable position of having more COVID-19 deaths than any other country.

Admittedly, access to protective gear has improved since the dark days of April, when doctors and nurses were forced to wash out disposable masks for days on end and use garbage bags when gowns ran out. Stocks are more reliable, at least for some facilities. But the PPE pipeline is far from fixed, and it’s likely to be strained again as infections rise in the coming weeks.

Hospitals remain concerned about stable supplies, particular­ly nitrile gloves, isolation gowns, N95s and testing supplies, according to the American Hospital Associatio­n.

Most shocking is the situation at nursing homes, which have been particular­ly hard hit by COVID-19. These facilities have never stopped struggling to secure enough protective gear for their workers. A study of the PPE supplies of nursing homes by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group found that as of late August, 20% lacked a week’s supply of one or more types of protective equipment and about half had come close to running out between May and August.

“We’re talking about surgical masks. We’re talking about gloves,” said U.S. PIRG’s Teresa Murray of the shortages. “We know how to make this stuff. It’s not difficult.”

No, it’s not, and a functional administra­tion would use the Defense Production Act to compel more production and distributi­on of protective gear, as medical organizati­ons have been urging. But we have little hope that’s likely to happen, at least until Joe Biden takes over the White House in January. (Indeed, it’s part of Biden’s pandemic plan.)

President Donald Trump seems to believe he’s already defeated the pandemic, using a briefing last week to tout the progress made on new vaccines and other accomplish­ments. When he mentioned protective gear, it was in passing and to suggest all was well. Tell that to the doctors and nurses still reusing disposable masks. A vaccine would be invaluable to health care workers, but that won’t help keep them from getting infected and possibly dying before it’s widely available.

When the history of the U.S.’s tragic first year of the COVID-19 pandemic is written, it may well be illustrate­d with photograph­s of patients in the wealthiest nation on Earth being treated by doctors dressed in garbage bags. Sad.

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