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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
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Visit me on the Web!
www.ronkoval.com
quote:Originally posted by rontuner:
Testing everyone - repeatedly - COULD be an important part of the containment because people are contagious before they show any symptoms. The earlier a country can keep a contagious person from interacting (even at social distance) with others, the better chance to slow the spread...
The way America is doing testing? Not so good.
quote:Originally posted by piqué:
As I said " assuming it is possible to meet demand"
Why couldn't we do what the Chinese did? Build hospitals in ten days? Mass produce thousands of respirators and millions of masks on a dime? Has anyone here actually looked into why not? Or are you just repeating what you've read?
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If you think looting is bad wait until I tell you about civil forfeiture.
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
quote:As demand spikes for medical equipment, this Texas manufacturer is caught in coronavirus’s supply chain panic
An executive at a U.S. firm that makes surgical masks had warned for years that there could be a shortage, learning a painful lesson years ago about the boom and bust of health scares
As the number of coronavirus cases in China skyrocketed in the past week, a small Texas manufacturer was inundated with orders from 8,000 miles away. Then, Stephen K. Bannon reached out.
Prestige Ameritech, the largest full-line domestic surgical mask manufacturer, was producing 600,000 masks each day but struggling to meet demand. Mike Bowen, the company’s executive vice president, received cold calls on his cellphone from people saying they represented foreign governments and wanted to make bulk purchases. The Hong Kong government and Hong Kong International Airport wanted more. Everyone was hunting for masks.
Instead of celebrating the business boom, Bowen was indignant. This is the precise scenario he began warning about almost 15 years ago, when he pleaded with federal agencies and lawmakers to boost U.S. production of medical masks. He had predicted an eventual health scare and not enough manufacturers. He was right.
So there Bowen was on Wednesday as a guest on Bannon’s “War Room: Pandemic” podcast, tormented that no one in power had listened. Bannon, a former top adviser to President Trump, has long cautioned about the decline of U.S. manufacturing.
“What I’ve been saying since 2007 is, 'guys, I’m warning you, here’s what is going to happen, let’s prepare,’” Bowen said on the program. “Because if you call me after it starts, I can’t help everybody.”
The coronavirus outbreak has led to a health crisis, a diplomatic fiasco and, increasingly, an economic mess. It has also exposed major vulnerabilities in the medical supply chain. Many U.S. companies, especially hospitals and pharmaceutical firms, rely on Chinese manufacturers for products ranging from the active ingredients of prescription drugs to protective gear like masks and gloves.
Now, much appears upended.
There is no global, centralized plan for fast-tracking production of what’s known as personal protective equipment. There is no streamlined process for deciding where to send masks, disposable gowns, goggles and gloves. There is Bowen and his cellphone, and Bannon’s podcast, and Asian governments and people scrambling for masks on Amazon and eBay, and the stack of letters Bowen sent White House officials over three administrations — but that he’s not sure anyone ever read.
“Prestige Ameritech is presently the lone voice warning of the insecure U.S. mask supply,” Bowen wrote to President Barack Obama in June 2010. “Apathy and inertia are our biggest hurdles.”
“The U.S. protective mask supply could — and mostly likely would — be disrupted, confiscated or diverted in the event of a pandemic,” Bowen wrote to President Trump three years ago.
quote:In an attempt to keep up with demand, Prestige Ameritech’s management team is working 80-hour weeks, bringing previously idle machines online, and hiring and training dozens of new employees to augment its staff of around 100. Back in what Bowen calls the “peacetime,” before the pandemic, Prestige Ameritech made roughly 250,000 masks a day. Now the company has ramped production up to 1 million masks a day.
But even that isn’t enough. “Since February 1, we’ve had to turn down orders for 100 million masks or more a day on average,” Bowen says. “Sometimes, we turn down 200 million or 300 million [masks] a day. It’s kind of surreal.”
US mask manufacturers say they are experiencing unprecedented demand. With the pandemic and trade restrictions pressuring already-overwhelmed global supply chains, companies are struggling to keep up. Like much of the mask manufacturing industry, industrial giant 3M has been ramping up production since January—including expanding the output of its US based factories, hosting job fairs, and hiring employees on the spot. Yet some US hospitals are still unable to obtain new shipments of surgical masks and N95 respirators.
“There’s a really, really high demand for respirators and really all other products being used in response to the coronavirus to help treat and protect people,” Jennifer Ehrlich, communications manager for 3M told WIRED. “It’s more demand than any one company can supply, and we expect it to remain high for the foreseeable future.”
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
quote:In an effort to more rapidly respond to the coronavirus crisis, President Donald Trump’s aide Peter Navarro on Monday said Honeywell is setting up a mask-making factory in Smithfield.
Navarro, the White House trade adviser, said he got a call from officials at the international conglomerate, who said they could start producing masks within a month if they receive the required regulatory approval to establish the operation.
“On Friday night, I got them to submit their proposal and got assurance from [Health and Human Services] that they’re going to flip that within a couple of days,” Navarro said during an interview on CNBC’s Squawk Box. “As we speak, Honeywell is getting ready to set up a mask factory in Smithfield, Rhode Island.”
Honeywell spokesperson Eric Krantz said the company is well-positioned to further help the U.S. government address the response effort. But declined to provide more specific detail at this time about what the operation might look like in Smithfield.
“We have already increased production at multiple facilities globally to address the growing demand and are rapidly moving to add capacity in the U.S. for N95 face masks,” Krantz said.
The announcement comes at a time the federal government is scrambling to respond to the fast-spreading coronavirus that causes COVID-19, a disease that’s killed more than 6,500 people across the globe.
In addition to the partnership with Honeywell, Navarro said the federal government is working with FedEx to help ship medical swabs across the country to increase the level of testing available to those feeling ill.
Democratic Gov. Gina Raimondo later slammed the federal government for its response to the outbreak so far, saying the state’s health care system needs faster access to — among other things — protective equipment to help front line health care workers.
“I’m out of patience at this point,” Raimondo said during a press conference. “We are in OK shape right now, but this is not OK how the federal government is responding.”
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
quote:The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (HHS/ASPR) today announced support for development of a high-speed manufacturing line to produce N95 respirators to meet surges during a pandemic event.
Halyard Health Inc., formerly Kimberly-Clark Health Care, has been awarded a contract by the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), part of HHS/ASPR, to develop a one-of-a-kind, high-speed machine for rapid manufacture of N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators (FFRs).
These types of respirators are used in health care settings to prevent the transmission of microorganisms through airborne particles. Development of the high-speed manufacturing line will take place under a 14-month, $1.6 million contract, which can be extended for two years and $5 million.
U.S. manufacturing companies currently can produce up to about 150,000 respirators per day on a single machine. However, an analysis by the Institute of Medicine conducted in 2006 estimated that during a pandemic, at least 90 million respirators would be needed in a 42-day period to treat influenza patients safely in U.S. health care settings.
“Pandemic preparedness in the United States is imperative to protecting health and saving lives, and respirator manufacturing capacity remains a critical gap in that preparedness,” BARDA Director Robin Robinson, Ph.D., said. “Innovations in manufacturing like this high-speed line can help bridge that gap and by applying innovative approaches to manufacturing day-to-day, we improve readiness.”
Through the new BARDA-supported project, Halyard Health will research and test manufacturing processes, core manufacturing components, and design a new manufacturing line capable of functioning at high speeds to allow for greater surge capacity and rapid availability during a pandemic. If successful, the technology could be available to replace outdated and slow machines with high-speed machines that can produce between one and two million N95 respirators in one day.
“Halyard is pleased to have been selected by HHS to try to help solve this real problem,” said Lee Burnes, vice president, research and development at Halyard. “All government agencies agree that a shortage of respirators will occur during a pandemic. So, we have a real opportunity to demonstrate our expertise and help make a difference in an area of critical need by performing research on the ability to develop an on-demand, high-speed machine that will make use of stockpiled raw materials to produce respirators.”
The effort will improve and expand medical countermeasure manufacturing capabilities for the U.S. that will result in a cost-effective approach for mitigating the projected shortages of the most commonly used FFRs – that protect healthcare workers from both droplet and aerosol transmission of infections during a pandemic.
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
quote:Originally posted by jon-nyc:quote:Originally posted by piqué:
As I said " assuming it is possible to meet demand"
Why couldn't we do what the Chinese did? Build hospitals in ten days? Mass produce thousands of respirators and millions of masks on a dime? Has anyone here actually looked into why not? Or are you just repeating what you've read?
I'm so shocked at how lazy the reporting has been on this.
Has no one thought to call the top 5 manufacturers and ask them what they're doing and what they've done to ramp up production? I haven't found this, and I've looked. Surely they've done something, but no one wants to report on it.
Trump hasn't invoked the defense production act, seems like that's overdue for respirators, masks, etc.
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fear is the thief of dreams
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fear is the thief of dreams
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier