Although President Trump has directed states and hospitals to secure what supplies they can, the federal government is quietly seizing orders, leaving medical providers across the country in the dark about where the material is going and how they can get what they need to deal with the coronavirus pandemic.
Hospital and clinic officials in seven states described the seizures in interviews over the past week. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is not publicly reporting the acquisitions, despite the outlay of millions of dollars of taxpayer money, nor has the administration detailed how it decides which supplies to seize and where to reroute them.
Officials who’ve had materials seized also say they’ve received no guidance from the government about how or if they will get access to the supplies they ordered. That has stoked concerns about how public funds are being spent and whether the Trump administration is fairly distributing scarce medical supplies.
“In order to have confidence in the distribution system, to know that it is being done in an equitable manner, you have to have transparency,” said Dr. John Hick, an emergency physician at Hennepin Healthcare in Minnesota who has helped develop national emergency preparedness standards through the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.
The medical leaders on the front lines of the fight to control the coronavirus and keep patients alive say they are grasping for explanations. "We can't get any answers," said a California hospital official who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation from the White House.
In Florida, a large medical system saw an order for thermometers taken away. And officials at a system in Massachusetts were unable to determine where its order of masks went.
“Are they stockpiling this stuff? Are they distributing it? We don’t know,” one official said. “And are we going to ever get any of it back if we need supplies? It would be nice to know these things.”
PeaceHealth, a 10-hospital system in Washington, Oregon and Alaska, had a shipment of testing supplies seized recently. “It’s incredibly frustrating," said Richard DeCarlo, the system's chief operating officer.
“We had put wheels in motion with testing and protective equipment to allow us to secure and protect our staff and our patients,” he said. “When testing went off the table, we had to come up with a whole new plan.”
Although PeaceHealth doesn’t have hospitals in the Seattle area, where the first domestic coronavirus outbreak occurred, the system has had a steady stream of potentially infected patients who require testing and care by doctors and nurse in full protective equipment.
Trump and other White House officials, including his close advisor and son-in-law Jared Kushner, have insisted that the federal government is using a data-driven approach to procure supplies and direct them where they are most needed.
In response to questions from The Times, a FEMA representative said the agency, working with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense, has developed a system for identifying needed supplies from vendors and distributing them equitably.
The representative said the agency factors in the populations of states and major metropolitan areas and the severity of the coronavirus outbreak in various locales. “High-transmission areas were prioritized, and allocations were based on population, not on quantities requested,” the representative said.
But the agency has refused to provide any details about how these determinations are made or why it is choosing to seize some supply orders and not others. Administration officials also will not say what supplies are going to what states.
Using the Defense Production Act, a Korean War-era law that allows the president to compel the production of vital equipment in a national emergency, Trump last month ordered General Motors to produce ventilators to address shortfalls at hospitals.
The law also empowers federal agencies to place orders for critical materials and to see that those get priority over orders from private companies or state and local governments.
Experts say judicious use of this authority could help bring order to the medical supply market by routing critical material — ventilators, masks and other protective gear — from suppliers to the federal government and then to areas of greatest need, such as New York.
Yet there is little indication that federal officials are controlling the market, as hospitals, doctors and others report paying exorbitant prices or resorting to unorthodox maneuvers to get what they need.
Hospital and health officials describe an opaque process in which federal officials sweep in without warning to expropriate supplies.
Jose Camacho, who heads the Texas Assn. of Community Health Centers, said his group was trying to purchase a small order of just 20,000 masks when his supplier reported that the order had been taken.
Camacho was flabbergasted. Several of his member clinics — which as primary care centers are supposed to alleviate pressure on overburdened hospitals — are struggling to stay open amid woeful shortages of protective equipment.
“Everyone says you are supposed to be on your own,” Camacho said, noting Trump's repeated admonition that states and local health systems cannot rely on Washington for supplies. “Then to have this happen, you just sit there wondering what else you can do. You can’t fight the federal government.”
Trump’s own trade representative, Peter Navarro, warned Trump in January and in early February that the “…COVID-19 pandemic could infect as many as 100 million Americans with a loss of life of as many as 1.2 million souls.” Our intelligence agencies (the ones that Trump publicly “dishonored” the day before he publicly “honored” Vladimir Putin) warned Trump in November of this likely pandemic which led Germany to take immediate action but not Mr. Trump. Despite those warnings Trump continued to argue that the corona virus was no deadlier than the common flu when in fact the corona virus is 10 to 20 times more likely to be fatal and spreads far more quickly and quietly and pervasively than even the common cold. Nevertheless, Trump rebuffed the offer of Democratic Senators in early February to fight in the Senate for immediate funding of those masks, gloves, and test kits that we all need NOW. Incredibly to this day, Trump is pondering whether to fully implement the Defense Production Act that would require applicable private industries to produce those masks, gloves, and test kits that we all need NOW. Instead, thanks to his months of doing little or nothing except lying and deceiving us, he is using the military to seize the limited supplies needed by our doctors and nurses in our hospitals. Go figure. GO VOTE.
ReplyDeleteSo basically the government is buying all the protective gear from the manufacturers and picking winners, a handful of second party distributors who they will send the supply to. These distributors will then sell to the highest bidder. Problem is, the government has not identified the distributors and given out the PPE. So nothing is happening regardless of the hospitals ability to pay.
ReplyDeleteTrump held onto all aspects of his businesses and stock portfolios despite the long standing norms for presidents to take steps to assure the people of leadership being based on welfare of the nation's people without influence of personal gain. Trump refuses to disclose taxes and investment interests, again going against the modern norms for assuring the country of uninfluenced/unselfish abuse of position. We are seeing reports of trump having stock in the company selling the drug he's hyping as the COVID-19 miracle cure going against the country's lead physician's advice; so trump is apparently using the crisis to ramp up sales of a drug, unproven for effective use on this virus (new trials to date showing mixed results, so possibility that the folks who improved may have improved without the drug) - because he profits if sales increase. Now we have to wonder why, during a national crisis with people suffering and dying, he and his administration are basically stealing vital protection products that our medics and hospitals need to avoid further contamination and deaths - confiscating all products to NOT go to FEMA for organized distribution based on need, but to ensure that all products are put into the Profit-over-people corporations warehouses to then force states, hospitals and clinics to be subject to greed-based increased pricing and delays in delivery (given the time for the trump admin's rerouting of incoming shipments to corporations followed by the time required for orders being placed and then finally distributed to the highest bidders). Does trump have stock in these companies also? Or is there closed door dealing or kickbacks happening? The truth will come out eventually, but how many more people will be infected and how many more will have died than would have been the case if we had a federal administration that was focused on protecting people instead of being focused on protecting stock portfolios and profiteering off of this crisis?
ReplyDeleteI have never witnessed a President fight so hard against the states he is supposed to be leading. Looks like Trump's priority is making sure other countries have the supplies they need before our country.
ReplyDeleteJared Kushner making an impact stockpiling "our" supplies at the expense of Americans.
At day 0 of infection and an incubation period of about 5 days. Day 5-12 is the symptomatic period on average. About 80% of people will exit this period with no intervention, no need for oxygen no ER visit. A portion of the 20% that come in ill with COVID-19 here is what they look like as far as characteristics/demographics date of source is 4/4/2020. Report coming from 2249 patients with COVID-19