Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Shortages Of N95 Masks, Other Gear Still A 'Huge Problem,' Especially For Hospitals In Minority Communities
Amy Arlund, an intensive care unit nurse in California, starts every overnight shift hoping her supervisors will give her a fresh N95 respirator. 鈥淵ou are asked to reuse them for weeks on end,鈥 Arlund, 45, told NBC News. 鈥淵ou have to justify to your manager repeatedly why you need a new one.鈥 Nearly 100 days after the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, health care workers across the country are still facing major shortages of personal protective equipment, or PPE, including crucial equipment such as masks, gowns, gloves and N95 respirators. (Dunn and Fitzpatrick, 6/12)
Kaiser Health News: Health Workers Resort To Etsy, Learning Chinese, Shady Deals To Find Safety Gear
A nursing home worker in New Jersey rendezvoused with 鈥渢he parking lot guy鈥 to cut a deal for gowns. A director of safety-net clinics in Florida learned basic Chinese and waited outside past midnight for a truck to arrive with tens of thousands of masks. A cardiologist in South Carolina tried his luck with 鈥渟hady characters鈥 to buy ingredients to blend his own hand sanitizer. The global pandemic has ordinary health care workers going to extremes in a desperate hunt for medical supplies. (Cahan and Varney, 6/12)
On a rare quiet evening in late May, Dr. Dahlia Rizk asked her staff to join her by a campfire. They sat together for more than an hour, sharing the overwhelming horrors and occasional triumphs they鈥檇 experienced while treating the coronavirus, as the sounds of burning logs crackled in the background and a bright orange glow filled the room. 鈥淚t was a moment to realize that this all happened, this is real,鈥 said Dr. Kamana Pillay, one of those employees in the room. 鈥淎nd to try to get back to some level of normal as a person.鈥 (Elliot, 6/12)
A group of New York City emergency medical service workers who gave interviews to the news media, including NPR, are suing the city for allegedly retaliating against them after speaking about their experiences responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. In a federal lawsuit filed Wednesday with the federal court in Manhattan, four EMS workers allege the city is violating their right to speak on issues of public concern under the First Amendment, as well as their due process rights. (Wang, 6/11)
As the country continues to see new cases of the novel coronavirus, recent medical school graduates are stepping up to fight the pandemic in the front lines. Graduates from the University of California at Irvine's School of Medicine shared scenes from their drive-through commencement and told ABC News what that moment meant to them. (McCarthy and Noll, 6/11)
When news reports emerged about a novel coronavirus in China, 23-year-old Stephanie Garcia, a funeral director at International Funeral Service of New York in Brooklyn, didn鈥檛 know what to make of them. She felt scared and confused, unsure as to how such a distant and invisible threat might affect New York. But then the virus arrived in the U.S. and New York City quickly became its epicenter. (Petri, 6/11)
Daisy Doronilla was the youngest of five sisters born in Manila. She came from humble beginnings, said her daughter, Denise Rendor. Nursing was a way to rise above her circumstances. She ended up loving it. Doronilla worked as a nurse in Abu Dhabi for a few years before coming to the United States, where she had always dreamed of living. Her first jobs were in California, at a medical center serving mostly the poor in South Los Angeles and at a juvenile detention facility. (Cha and Shammas, 6/11)
Kaiser Health News/The Guardian: Lost On The Frontline
A traveling nurse who pitched in after retirement. A phlebotomist who loved her job and was loved by her patients. A driver transporting senior care residents to medical appointments. These are the people just added to 鈥淟ost on the Frontline,鈥 a special series from The Guardian and KHN that profiles health care workers who died of COVID-19. (6/12)
A nurse who went missing nearly two weeks ago after leaving her shift at Cottage Hospital in Santa, Barbara, California, has been found safe, according to the Santa Barbara Police Department. SBPD spokesperson Anthony Wagner told Dateline in an email that Ashley Zachman was located 鈥渟afe and unharmed鈥 on Wednesday, June 10. Details of Ashley鈥檚 whereabouts were not released. (Cavallier, 6/11)
Healthcare workers across the state joined together Thursday afternoon to show support for the Black Lives Matter movement and stand up against police brutality, honoring the victims who have died at the hands of police. At noon, the healthcare workers, from over 25 facilities, united in a moment of silence lasting eight minutes and 46 seconds 鈥 the amount of time a white police officer pressed his knee to George Floyd鈥檚 neck before he died in Minneapolis over two weeks ago. (Berg, 6/11)
He couldn't breathe, so he went to the busy emergency room at Detroit's Sinai-Grace Hospital in late March. But instead of getting lifesaving treatment, the man became a victim of an overwhelmed hospital without the resources or staff to properly care for聽him, said Catherine Gaughan, a clinical coordinator who oversaw the emergency department the night of March 25. (Shamus, 6/11)
In fact, 23% of primary care providers surveyed in late May and early June are considering closing their practices, according to preliminary results released by the state鈥檚 Health Policy Commission (HPC). The Massachusetts Chapter of the American College of Physicians, working with researchers at the state's medical schools, gathered information from more than 400 practices聽representing primary care, behavioral health, specialists and other practices. Among specialists, 42% say closing is an option under review and 23% are looking at consolidation. (Bebinger, 6/11)
A new survey of physician practices in Massachusetts finds a startling number of them in financial trouble due to the coronavirus crisis, in which potential patients are staying home. Findings show 42% of specialists and 23% of primary care physicians are considering closing their practices as losses pile up. (Oakes, 6/11)
Kaiser Health News/The Guardian: A Family With Five Doctors 鈥 And Two COVID Deaths
On the morning of April 1, Dr. Priya Khanna inched her way from the bedroom to the front door, using walls, doors and railings to hold herself up long enough to get to the stretcher waiting outside. She had been battling COVID-19 for five days and was struggling to breathe. Her mother, also COVID-positive, watched helplessly as EMTs in full personal protective equipment guided Priya into the ambulance. Priya waved to Justin Vandergaag, a childhood friend walking alongside her. 鈥淚鈥檒l see you later,鈥 he said. (Megas, 6/11)
Kaiser Health News: Using Stories To Mentally Survive As A COVID-19 Clinician
Dr. Christopher Travis, an intern in obstetrics-gynecology, has cared for patients with COVID-19 and performed surgery on women suspected of having the coronavirus. But the patient who arrived for a routine prenatal visit in two masks and gloves had a problem that wasn鈥檛 physiological. 鈥淪he told me, 鈥業鈥檓 terrified I鈥檓 going to get this virus that鈥檚 spreading all over the world,'鈥 and worried it would hurt her baby, he said of the March encounter. (Stephens, 6/11)