Brown knows Oregon needs more PPE to return to business-as-usual but can’t say how much

Published 10:00 am Wednesday, April 15, 2020

SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown said Tuesday that securing enough personal protective gear is one of the five components necessary for putting an end to her stay-at-home order imposed more than three weeks ago to slow the spread of the new coronavirus.

But the governor and state epidemiologist Dr. Dean Sidelinger said they still don’t know how many masks, gowns, face shields and gloves they’ll need to launch Oregon on its return to normal daily life — not only for health care workers but for a wide array of other people like hair stylists to go back to work.

“We don’t have a sense for what that need is … We do know that we need more,” Brown said.

Those last words — the need for more personal protective equipment, known as PPE — remain a common refrain across the state.

Many health care workers have said they believe they’ve been given inadequate PPE — one surgical mask to last an entire shift, for example, when the masks are meant for single uses and aren’t designed to filter out tiny droplets floating in the air.

But several of the major hospital systems in the greater Portland area have told The Oregonian/OregonLive over the past week that they have adequate PPE supplies, although they’re working every day to buy more.

None of the hospital systems — Kaiser Permanente, Legacy Health, Providence Health & Services and PeaceHealth in Southwest Washington — would say exactly how much protective equipment they have in stock and how many days they estimate their supplies will last. (Oregon Health & Science University didn’t respond to questions from The Oregonian/OregonLive.)

Their reluctance to share hard numbers could be because that’s a tough question to answer with so much uncertainty about how many COVID-19 patients will flock to hospitals in coming weeks. The hospitals don’t want to be wrong about how much protective gear they may need.

Another reason cited by a person associated with one Oregon hospital system: fear the federal government might seize incoming shipments of PPE if the hospitals are specific about how much they have on hand. According to a story in The Los Angeles Times, the federal government has been quietly taking some shipments with no explanation. The news organization reported that PeaceHealth recently lost out on a shipment of testing supplies.

PeaceHealth spokesman Jeremy Rush didn’t respond to questions from The Oregonian/OregonLive about that seizure, including whether it has led the health system to be more cautious about sharing information about its supply levels.

Meanwhile, some health care workers continue to express worry that they’re not adequately protected on the job.

Within the past two weeks, one worker at the oncology pharmacy at Kaiser’s Interstate Central medical offices and one worker at Kaiser’s Beaverton medical offices on Western Avenue tested positive for COVID-19, said Esai Alday, who works for UFCW Local 555, a union representing more than 1,000 Kaiser Permanente employees.

That’s on top of seven staffers who tested positive at Kaiser’s Westside Medical Center in Hillsboro starting in March.

Alday said just this week, Kaiser began handing out masks to pharmacy employees, but they weren’t surgical grade. Alday described them as “almost like a piece of cloth.”

“What our members have told us is they are not getting what they need,” Alday said.

A Kaiser spokesman didn’t immediately comment.

Rachel Gumpert — a spokeswoman for the Oregon Nurses Association, a union representing 15,000 members across the state — said nurses also are still experiencing “major issues” getting PPE.

“Management is rationing it so even if it’s in the building, nurses across the state are still not being given adequate access, resulting in wearing old masks over and over and over beyond the point of effectiveness,” Gumpert said.

This article was originally published by The Oregonian/OregonLive, one of more than a dozen news organizations throughout the state sharing their coverage of the novel coronavirus outbreak to help inform Oregonians about this evolving heath issue.

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