New Hampshire health care officials claim FEMA sent faulty personal protective equipment

By Joe Chen | The Center Square

The federal government has been sending defective personal protective equipment to New Hampshire nursing homes, health officials say.

“It’s not an isolation gown; it’s a garbage bag,” Brendan Williams, president of the New Hampshire Health Care Association, told the Concord Monitor. “It’s basically representative that they’re treating health care workers like garbage.”

Williams called the gown a garbage bag because it didn’t even have holes for arms to go through. Williams said other examples include receiving brittle masks that broke easily or receiving a shipment of thousands of extra small gloves that were useless for many adult staff.

In April, President Donald Trump said the Federal Emergency Management Agency would begin sending out personal protective equipment to nursing homes across the nation. The shipments arrived in May and June, but some health care workers across the state still feel a shortage of equipment since many of the shipments had defective equipment.

A spokesperson for FEMA said that they’ve received complaints from only 1 percent of nursing homes and their equipment meets industry requirements.

“The fact that these nursing homes typically use other types of FDA or AAMI-certified PPE does not warrant this type of scrutiny from the news media,” Alexandria Bruner, spokesperson for FEMA, told the Concord Monitor.

But Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan and three of her colleagues sent a letter to FEMA asking the organization about how they control their equipment quality.

The backdrop for the scrutiny is 80 percent of all COVID-19 deaths in New Hampshire occurred in nursing homes.

“These facilities are caring for the most vulnerable to COVID-19, and it’s unacceptable that the federal government hasn’t done a better job of protecting these residents,” Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., recently said in a statement.

Image courtesy of Public domain

3 thoughts on “New Hampshire health care officials claim FEMA sent faulty personal protective equipment

  1. Re: “Williams said other examples include receiving brittle masks that broke easily “.

    I can attest to the mask issue. I received masks for my NH business and the straps holding the masks to one’s ears disconnected almost immediately upon use. We had to staple the straps in place. And, as you might expect, the masks were ‘Made in China’.

  2. They probably mixed up the gowns and body bags. Maybe they were just being frugal, since the gowns hardly do anything anyway, and nursing homes are there for people to die. That’s why they send the sickest people there. Kill two birds with one stone.
    I know that is cynical, but that is what has been happening. Sure doesn’t look like a mistake.

Comments are closed.