Coronavirus: ER doctor details 'travesty' of ill-equipped health workers

Public health officials in the U.S. have continued to stress that worst is yet to come with the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed the lives of more than 500 people in the country and more than 17,000 people worldwide.

On Monday, Surgeon General Jerome Adams said during an interview with NBC that “this week, it’s going to get bad.” And Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and visiting professor at George Washington School of Public Health, agreed with the surgeon general’s comments but noted that “things have already been bad.”

As the situations becomes worse, ill-equipped health care workers are struggling to keep up.

“When I talked to my colleagues who are on the front lines in New York and San Francisco and Seattle and Boston, just wherever it is that the outbreak has already hit us, it’s clear that we are so underprepared, that our beds are already being filled, that our health care workers are going without personal protective equipment, which is such a travesty,” Wen said on Yahoo Finance’s The Ticker.

Two health care employees show homemade masks in a YouTube video titled "DIY Mask for Coronavirus." (Source: screenshot/YouTube/Henry Ford)
Two health care employees show homemade masks in a YouTube video titled "DIY Mask for Coronavirus." (Source: screenshot/YouTube/Henry Ford)

The lack of personal protective equipment is the latest among the numerous challenges that health care workers treating coronavirus patients have had to face. Health care workers are reportedly being asked to reuse disposable masks and gloves or make their own masks. There are severe shortages of N95 masks, which can properly protect these workers treating patients. The CDC said that these workers could use homemade masks, like bandannas or scarves, as a “last resort.”

“I just cannot imagine that we would be in this position now where I have my friends and colleagues begging for masks and goggles and gowns over social media,” Wen said. “I cannot imagine that this is happening here in the U.S. Things are already bad, and we are going to see numbers escalate in the coming weeks and months. Actually, the numbers, as bad as they are now, will seem like a drop in the bucket in just a week or two time.”

‘We need the federal government to step in’

Wen highlighted three areas of need: beds, medical equipment, and staff.

“We need beds because patients are going to need care, so they need intensive care beds, hospital beds, and that’s where hospitals can try to free up as much capacity as they can,” she said. “But we also need the assistance of the federal government, the military to create new hospitals, new field hospitals, which are starting but we need a lot more of that.”

So far, 591 people have died of coronavirus in the U.S. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
So far, 591 people have died of coronavirus in the U.S. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

A 1,000-bed Navy hospital ship is currently en route to Los Angeles to help alleviate the strain of the number of coronavirus patients in the area. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is also planning on converting more than 10,000 empty hotel and college dorm rooms into hospital rooms to treat patients in New York City.