From Olga Nunes, MoveOn Civic Action <[email protected]>
Subject PPE (What we can do)
Date April 8, 2020 11:25 PM
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Dear MoveOn member,
 
In one way or another, this pandemic will touch the lives of every
American, but among our heaviest hit will be our care providers and first
responders. They are members of our communities, our friends and family,
and many of them are entering their hospitals at the beginning of each
shift to the sound of applause from nearby buildings. But once inside, the
reality of how under-resourced they are is devastating.

So what is the problem?
Personal protective equipment (often called “PPE”) is the suit of armor
that health care workers wear into the fight—the masks, face shields, hand
sanitizer, goggles, gloves, and gowns. Right now, there is a global
shortage of PPE, and without it, [ [link removed] ]health professionals are at increased
risk of catching or spreading COVID-19 every time they see a patient.
Eventually, manufacturers will make enough PPE to meet the demand—but that
could take months. 

Until then, every hour counts, every mask and every glove. As the pandemic
escalates, supplies save lives, [ [link removed] ]so we're identifying avenues to connect
already existing, medical-grade supplies to people who need them. 

Luckily, there are lots of places to find PPE. Today.

We already have it, in households and businesses across America. Everyday
Americans are rummaging through their garages and attics, searching their
workplaces and warehouses. They’re finding badly needed supplies
everywhere and getting them directly into the hands of health care workers
who are using this PPE to save lives without risking their own.

Not only are people donating supplies, there are whole armies of people
working around the clock to actually produce suitable stopgap PPE,
thousands of hands, sewing machines, and 3D printers, all spinning at
once. We’re all in this together. 
It’s working! But our health care providers need so much more support.

So, what can we do?

GetUsPPE.org is a coalition founded by doctors, endorsed by and operated
in partnership with the American College of Emergency Physicians, and
built entirely by volunteers. They’ve gathered over a dozen grassroots
groups from across the nation into a single, unified relief effort to
share resources and save lives. As of this writing, their database has
more than 2,500 requests for PPE from care providers throughout the U.S. 

[ [link removed] ]Visit the website GetUsPPE.org to find out how you can help. There
you’ll find tools to ...

* Request PPE if you are a health care provider or a health care center
of any size in your community.
* Donate PPE directly to health care professionals in your area or
nationwide. If for any reason you are in possession of PPE, one thing
you can do to help in this crisis is to make it available to medical
professionals. The site includes a map that shows which health care
providers are requesting PPE, and what kind. Each request lists
contact information so you can call and confirm in advance the best
way to coordinate delivery. We do not advise that you show up in
person without confirmation, as many facilities will likely be
overwhelmed. In addition to donating equipment in your possession, you
may also try reaching out via phone or the internet to local schools,
science labs, cleaning services, tattoo parlors, painting shops, or
local businesses that work with wood or fiberglass to make them aware
of this website and encourage them to coordinate their own donations.
* Learn how to make a mask. Find templates to make nonmedical-grade
masks [ [link removed] ]for your own personal use, using the guides provided. In
addition to physical distancing and regular hand washing with soap,
the Centers for Disease Control now recommend that all Americans wear
cloth masks (but not professional-grade PPE; save that for the health
care providers!) when in public to reduce the spread of the
coronavirus.
* Spread the word. Share #GetUsPPE with your friends and networks.

Additionally, [ [link removed] ]you can sign nurse Donna Phillips' petition to pressure
the White House to use the full powers of the Defense Production Act to
require industry to more aggressively manufacture and distribute PPE to
our frontline health care workers. 
 
This pandemic, in one way or another, is already touching the lives of
every one of us. We're all in this together, John, and we can
all do something to help. [ [link removed] ]Visit GetUsPPE.org to help health care
workers in your community today—or if you're a health care
worker, [ [link removed] ]request help from your community today.

Thanks for all you do.

–Olga, Eric, Kaytee, Mohammad, and the rest of the team

P.S. If you want to learn about some next steps we can take as a community
during the pandemic, we recommend [ [link removed] ]checking out this livestream we did
over the weekend with Andy Slavitt (former head of Medicare/Medicaid under
Obama), Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), and Randi Weingarten,
president of the American Federation of Teachers. 

Source:

1. "How You Can Donate Protective Equipment to Help Hospitals Fight
Coronavirus," The Wall Street Journal, April 6, 2020
[ [link removed] ][link removed]

 
 


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