'It didn't have to be this way': Nurses describe brutal toll of treating coronavirus patients in America

Members of a prominent nurses union shared ongoing struggles involving coronavirus patients recently at a virtual roundtable with former Second Lady Jill Biden.

“We have a supply person who comes to our unit and hands out the N95s for that shift,” Christine Valenzuela, a registered nurse (RN) based in Arizona, said on the September 12 video chat organized by National Nurses United (NNU). “One time in the ICU, our supply person was over 40 minutes late getting to my unit. My patient was crashing and about to code. And I didn’t have a respirator to go into that room.”

At that point, Valenzuela added, “we had to quickly scramble and were able to find another nurse who had an N95 so that they could go save the patient. I’ve been a nurse for 13 years, and I have never experienced this before where everyone’s safety is at risk because we can’t easily retrieve a respirator when we just simply need one.”

Nurses shared their stories with Dr. Jill Biden. (Picture: National Nurses United)
Nurses shared their stories with Dr. Jill Biden. (Picture: National Nurses United)

Although the U.S. is now more than six months into the pandemic, there are still shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE), particularly N95 respirators, which are considered the safest masks for health care providers to use while treating patients.

Public officials have stated that at least 3.5 billion masks are needed this year, and the U.S. is still lacking.

“We are eight months into this pandemic, and you still don't have the protective equipment you need,” Biden said to the roundtable of nurses. “We're still hearing stories about nurses not having the supplies they need, or reusing N95 masks. It's a disgrace to the people working on the front lines and all Americans. It didn't have to be this way.”

A July 2020 survey from NNU over more than 21,200 nurses found that 87% of nurses reported having to reuse at least one piece of PPE while working at a hospital. Only 24% of respondents thought their employer is providing a safe workplace.

Registered Nurses and members of National Nurses United (NNU), the largest U.S. nurses union, rally on behalf of health care workers nationwide who have become infected with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and call on the Trump administration to order the mass production of personal protective equipment (PPE) during a protest outside of the White House in Washington, U.S., April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
RNs rally on behalf of healthcare workers who have become infected with the coronavirus and call on the Trump admin. to order the mass production of PPE outside of the White House, April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis

‘A single N95 respirator’ to reuse

When the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) changed its guidance on protective gear in March, some hospitals were immediately affected.

According to Vanessa Evans, a nurse who works in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of MountainView Hospital in Las Vegas, all of the hospital’s PPE was locked up in storage, which she described as “unnerving” for her and her colleagues.

Evans admitted one of the first suspected coronavirus patients to the ICU, but “due to the confusion, lack of protocols, and lack of testing in place to address this pandemic, I was told by our administration to not implement precautionary measures for my patient until they tested positive for COVID-19,” she said. “Instead, I was to test them for every other type of virus that we currently had a test for. And if they tested positive for any of those, we were not to test them for COVID-19.”