Conservative. Idaho. Software engineer. Historian. Trying to prevent Idiocracy from becoming a documentary.
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"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose." -- Rom. 8:28
With scant public input, state and federal officials are pushing ahead
with plans that -- during a severe flu outbreak -- would deny use of
scarce ventilators by some patients to assure they would be available
for patients judged to benefit the most from them.
The plans have been drawn up to give doctors specific guidelines for
extreme circumstances, and they include procedures under which patients
who weren’t improving would be removed from life support with or without
permission of their families.
The plans are designed to go into effect if the U.S. were struck by a
severe flu pandemic comparable to the 1918 outbreak that killed an
estimated 50 million people worldwide. State and federal health
officials have concluded that such a pandemic would sicken far more
people needing ventilators than could be treated by the available
supplies.
Right now, there are 105,000 ventilators,
and even during a regular flu season, about 100,000 are in use. In a
worst-case human pandemic, according to the national preparedness plan
issued by President Bush in November, the country would need as many as
742,500.
To some experts, the ventilator shortage is the most glaring example of the country's lack of readiness for a pandemic.
"This
is a life-or-death issue, and it reflects everything else that's wrong
about our pandemic planning," said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the
National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University. "The
government puts out a 400-page plan, but we don't have any ventilators
and there isn't much chance we're going to get them."
We are building thousands of mechanical ventilators now.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is that we will lack trained respiratory therapists to operate them..