Viewpoint: Healthcare Workers Not Being Protected from COVID
Faced with greater than three times the number of cases as the last surge, along with exponential growth with no end in sight, there is little hope healthcare workers can safely treat patients without a drastic change in policy and a more productive and secure supply line.
The United States is currently undergoing a horrific escalation in Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients and it is evident that the healthcare industry has learned far too little from previous spikes, apparently adopting a strategy of simply hoping the virus would go away. We have not yet seen COVID-19’s peak and are already experiencing alarming supply and medical staff shortages. The Governor of North Dakota advocated for allowing asymptomatic COVID-19 nurse carriers to return to work, taking care of
At the same time we are facing a shortage of
This lackadaisical attitude toward the pandemic is not only evident by our inadequate preparedness and failure to gear up for the “dark winter,” but also by our flagrant ignoring of public health guidance as evidenced by the all too willing public participation in massive events to advocate for candidates and to celebrate victories. Punches were pulled and the silence heard from our leaders to condemn these activities was deafening. The virus wins and spreads throughout our communities.
All frontline workers have been put in harm’s way. One study from Massachusetts evaluated 104 employees of a single grocery story in Boston. They found 20% tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and being young, 76% had no symptoms. Thus, they were working and potentially spreading the virus. Let’s not forget that having no symptoms from a viral infection which damages every organ of the body, may well cause symptoms decades later as cardiac and pulmonary
For healthcare workers the situation is even worse. Taking care of COVID-19 patients exposes them to a much higher viral load which places them at higher risk for developing severe COVID-19. In Scotland, one-sixth of all COVID-19 hospitalizations are healthcare workers or their
Thus, frontline workers are not only placing themselves in danger, but also their families. And unlike earlier supposition, once a household member becomes infected, SARS-CoV-2 spreads rapidly within the family unit. A recent study found that 53% of 191 household contacts developed a secondary infection from another household member, and that 75% of these infections occurred within 5 days of
And no one is accurately tracking the dead. On October 25, 2020, National Nurses United estimated that approximately 2000 frontline healthcare workers’
Despite these deaths, effective tracking and investigation of worker safety is not taking place. OSHA oversees worker safety in 28 states. As of August 13, 2020, OSHA has only issued 4 citations related to SARS-CoV-2 and of September 18, 2020, OSHA has only opened inspections on only 191 out of 8909 worker complaints related to
Many workers are demanding
The healthcare workers in the United States have a long history of placing their lives at risk to save their patients, but we need to give them the safest possible working environment and the supplies they need. At a minimum, presumptive disability should be available for frontline workers who do incompletely recover from COVID-19. And if we are unwilling to provide this protection for them and their families, we should at least activate the Defense Production Act to assure adequate PPE and N95 masks and give our workers a fighting chance.
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