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Demand Appropriate Personal Protective Equipment for Healthcare Workers
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Hospital staff are being forced to reuse disposable masks and other gear, increasing the risk of infection.
As the number of COVID-19 cases around the world continues to climb exponentially,1 the American healthcare system is being heavily taxed by the influx of patients. In some parts of the nation, there are not enough hospital beds for patients, not enough healthcare staff to treat them, and not enough personal protective equipment to keep nurses and doctors safe and healthy.
Personal protective equipment (PPE) includes equipment worn to minimize exposure to hazards that could cause illness or injury. In the healthcare field, PPE may refer to masks, gloves, face shields, gowns, and more.2
In the U.S., access to PPE is in short supply. While doctors and nurses working with COVID-19 patients should be wearing full-body protective gear, many of them are wearing only a disposable isolation gown, a pair of gloves, and a mask.3 These items are meant to be discarded after a single use, but **healthcare workers in many parts of the nation are being forced to reuse disposable PPE for days due to extreme shortages.**4
As the situation becomes more dire, the government has stopped the shipment of domestically produced PPE to other countries4 and requested that companies donate masks to healthcare facilities and begin producing PPE if they are able.5 The FDA has also begun accepting NIOSH-approved industrial respirators for use in healthcare settings6, and PPE from the American stockpile has been sent to some of the areas most in need. But it isn’t enough. President Trump has said he has no plans to order drastically ramped up production of PPE in the U.S. via the Defense Production Act.7
We can’t wait for PPE production to be scaled up, which may take months. It’s time to make it easier to import these items, which are already available from other countries, so that they can be used immediately.
95% of surgical masks and 70% of ventilators used in the U.S. are produced in China and are subject to high duties upon entering the states.8 The supply of these items was disrupted even before COVID-19 spread globally, and now is the time to act to repair the supply chain and get PPE where it’s needed most. Not all medical supplies have been exempted from duties, and parties who wish to have an item exempted must manually submit a request form.9 This is something we simply don’t have time for during this crisis. Healthcare workers are already falling ill and even dying of this preventable disease.
We must protect our healthcare workers with ferocity. Let’s demand that duties on imported PPE items be lifted so they can get to the people who need them.