General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIf the hospitals aren't overrun yet, how are we already out of personal protective equipment?
mucifer
(23,609 posts)milestogo
(16,829 posts)BusyBeingBest
(8,059 posts)treated as if they have the virus--even if they're in medical facilities for other reasons. Testing isn't keeping up so you don't really know who has it and who doesn't, and you aren't supposed to reuse your protective gear between patients. That will burn through your isolation/PPE stockpiles in a hurry. Edit to add: lots of other reasons to use PPE, it's not just for this virus, it's for MRSA, C. difficile, VRE, and just basic universal precautions.
Quemado
(1,262 posts)The number 1 goal of the for-profit health care system in the US is to maximize profit. It costs money to have an excess supply of PPE for an emergency like this pandemic.
Patient care is not the highest priority.
It's obvious: the for-profit health care system in the US can't deal with a pandemic.
kckc
(305 posts)There is also another issue that isn't mentioned much, but the privatization of healthcare really shines a light on it, and that is the idiotic system of "just-in-time" inventory. The best way for any industry to cut costs is obviously in labor, but before it gets to that point, an inventory system is set up that keeps very very little supply of anything on hand- basically, it is manufactured when ordered, and in a crisis, well, you see the result. In healthcare, this could mean PPE, or reagents for the lab to do, you know, actual testing. This keeps costs down and makes stockholders very happy. It makes me very grumpy.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/supply-chains-and-coronavirus/608329/
Midnight Writer
(21,845 posts)to ensure that we have stockpiles of emergency equipment.
Running government like a business is insanity. It is not a business.
ProfessorGAC
(65,381 posts)But, at current rate of increase we might. So the alarms have to be sounded now, not when they actually run very low.
We might be critically low now, I don't actually know. But, I'd rather have them be ramping up now than scraping for them later.
BluesRunTheGame
(1,623 posts)Theres been heavy demand from other places that are ahead of us in this crisis. Global supplies are low and we dont make it here.