The
critical shortage of medical supplies across the U.S., including
testing swabs, protective masks, surgical gowns and hand sanitizer, can
be tied to a sudden drop in imports, mostly from China, The Associated
Press has found.
Trade
data shows the decline in shipments started in mid-February after the
spiraling coronavirus outbreak in China led the country to shutter
factories and disrupted ports. Some emergency rooms, hospitals and
clinics in the U.S. have now run out of key medical supplies, while
others are rationing personal protective equipment like gloves and
masks.
The
United States counts on receiving the vast majority of its medical
supplies from China, where the coronavirus has infected more than 80,000
people and killed more than 3,200. When Chinese medical supply
factories began coming back on line last month, their first priority was
their own hospitals.
The
government required makers of N95 masks to sell all or part of their
production internally instead of shipping masks to the U.S.
The
most recent delivery of medical-grade N95 masks arrived from China
about a month ago, on Feb. 19. And as few as 13 shipments of non-medical
N95 masks have arrived in the past month — half as many as arrived the
same month last year. N95 masks are used in industrial settings, as well
as hospitals, and filter out 95% of all airborne particles, including
ones too tiny to be blocked by regular masks.
Governors
across the country are becoming panicked as states run out of
equipment. President Donald Trump has urged them to buy masks on the
open market, but few if any are available.
“Without
adequate protection, more of our hospital staff could become ill, which
would mean there wouldn’t be people to care for patients,” said Nancy
Foster, the American Hospital Association’s vice president of quality
and patient safety policy.
Some hospitals are down to just a day or two of personal protective equipment, she said.
The
AP found that in the past month, hand sanitizer and swab imports both
dropped by 40%, N95 mask imports were down 55%, and surgical gowns,
typically sourced from China, were at near normal levels because the
sourcing was shifted to Honduras.
Typically,
medical supplies are delivered along both coasts. But almost all the
supplies that did arrive in the past month came into Newark, New Jersey,
across the country from the earliest and most severe coronavirus
outbreaks.
The
AP identified the falling imports by looking at shipment data maintained
by ImportGenius and Panjiva Inc., services that independently track
global trade.
In
mid-February, the World Health Organization warned that global demand
for safety gear for medical providers was 100 times higher than normal.
Prices were 20 times higher, stockpiles were depleted and there was a
four- to six-month backlog. Despite this, federal contracting data shows
there was no big effort at that point to submit orders.
Trade
policies haven’t helped. Tariffs on medical supplies made them more
expensive, and they were only lifted March 5, even though health care
associations asked the administration last year to exempt items like
masks, gloves and gowns. And now countries including South Korea, India
and Taiwan are blocking exports of medical supplies to save them for
their own citizens, leaving the U.S. with fewer options.
“The
lag time could be weeks. It could be upward of months,” said Khatereh
Calleja, CEO of the Healthcare Supply Chain Association.
Doctors,
nurses and first responders in the U.S. are resorting to spraying their
masks with bleach at the end of each day and hanging them up at home to
dry to use for another day, according to the American College of
Emergency Physicians.
“There
is a little bit of anxiety, as you can imagine, going to work and not
knowing if you will have enough personal protective equipment,” said Dr.
David Tan, president of the National Association of EMS Physicians.
The
decline in swabs included multiple varieties, not just ones needed to
test for COVID-19. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has
for weeks warned state and local health departments about shortages of
swabs, which are needed for the testing that is critical to containing
the pandemic.
Even
over-the-counter medical shipments are decreasing. Ten shipping
containers filled with medical thermometers arrived at U.S. ports a year
ago this month. But in the last 30 days, there were just five.
Hand
sanitizer, also commonly sourced from China, has disappeared from U.S.
stores, and it may stay scarce. Last year by this time, 223 shipments
had arrived. This year, since January, just 157 shipments have come.
The
shortages affect patients because they can’t get tested and their
providers may be carrying the virus from one person to the next. But the
far greater risk is to medical personnel: Already, there are reports of
dozens of doctors, nurses and medical staff who have contracted the
virus.
Nurses
across the country report that they are not receiving the proper
personal protective equipment and their hospitals don’t have the
isolation rooms they need to safely care for COVID-19 patients,
according to National Nurses United, the largest union of registered
nurses in the U.S.
“It’s
not safe at all. Nobody is safe,” said Consuelo Vargas, an emergency
room nurse at Cook County Hospital in Chicago. On Friday morning, after a
possible exposure at work, she went to a local hardware store and
bought all the painter booties and jumpsuits they had to wear while
caring for people.
“It’s
so frustrating because we feel like health care workers are being asked
for a lot — and that’s fine, we can do our job. We’re just asking for
the equipment we need,” she said.
The
shortage doesn’t affect only health care. The humanitarian medical firm
Direct Relief thought it was heading into 2020 well-stocked, with
several million N95 masks. The organization had increased its orders in
2019 after massive wildfires in the West filled cities with smoke,
squeezing its supplies in recent years.
But
then bushfires overwhelmed Australia with smoky skies and so Direct
Relief began sending the masks there, vice president Tony Morain said.
When
the coronavirus hit China, the organization began shipping the masks to
Wuhan — the outbreak’s epicenter — in an effort to contain the disease.
Morain said
they’ve ordered 2 million more masks and are awaiting the shipments.
Those typically take at least five weeks to arrive: two weeks to make
the masks, two weeks of shipping and a week to get through the port.
Meanwhile, he said, Direct Relief has received well over 100 requests
from hospitals and health centers down to their last boxes.
In
an effort to fill the gap, Minnesota-based 3M is running its Aberdeen,
South Dakota, plant around the clock, producing millions of N95 masks
per month. The company is also ramping up production of surgical masks
and commercial cleaning solutions, CEO Mike Roman said.
Nonetheless,
one federal contract with 3M for $4.8 million of N95 masks dated March
12 says the masks will be delivered April 30 — seven weeks later,
according to public contract data.
A
number of Chinese companies told the AP this week that they will be
resuming exports — which bring higher prices — but that they are
overwhelmed and can’t meet demand.
“Chinese
mask manufacturers have received too many orders from abroad, but have
no time to produce all of them and make a delivery,” said David Peng,
manager of Ningbo Buy Best International Trading Co. Ltd.
Trade
data shows importers have managed to maintain some supplies by shifting
to factories outside China. Shipments of surgical gowns, for example,
have dropped less than 5% since December, since they are now coming from
Honduras. The same is true for medical gloves, which are now primarily
coming from South Korea.
The
federal government said a national stockpile was being made available
at the state level, but governors said they weren’t getting what they
need.
“I think
every governor in the United States has been banging on the door of the
federal government with respect to the stockpile. We certainly have, and
we’re going to continue to,” Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said at a
news conference this week.
Dr.
Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of
California-San Francisco, said he was alarmed by new CDC advice for
hospitals that run out of masks.
“For
the CDC to say people can wear bandanas is actually quite frightening,”
he said. “I never thought the CDC would say something like that. We’re
in the United States of America in 2020, and we have a recommendation to
use bandanas?”
___
AP
researcher Yu Bing in Beijing, reporter Steve LeBlanc in Boston,
reporter Michael Biesecker in Washington and data editor Meghan Hoyer
contributed to this story.
___
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