The Coronavirus is out of control. The article below is from the National Nurses United (NNU), the largest nurses’ union in the country, and which is in the forefront of the fight for universal health care. Nurses say deaths from the virus number more than 220+ (in October) ; 60% are people of color. The deaths were avoidable, a result of government and employer inaction. Nurses were forced to work without proper PPE to do their jobs safely. In a statement issued Nov. 9 (see below), National Nurses United praised the Biden-Harris plan to beat Covid-19. The NNU called the proposed plan a huge step forward in confronting the deadly pandemic, based on science and public health, that if implemented immediately could save countless lives, and has been proven effective in other countries. —The Editors
“This is the plan the American people have been waiting for,” said NNU President Zenei Cortez, RN, urging the Trump administration to work with the incoming Biden-Harris administration to implement it immediately.
“Not only does the plan address the current crisis, it would begin to rebuild the infrastructure needed to be able to respond to infectious disease outbreaks, that are likely to happen more often due to the climate crisis, globalization, and rapid urbanization in the future,” Cortez said.
NNU has advocated and urged policy leaders to carry out key elements of this proposal since February. The union has warned of the consequences of failure to act, as seen in the current explosion of record numbers of infections, hospitalizations, overwhelmed health care facilities, and deaths.
Cortez noted that the failure of policy makers and employers to guarantee that health care workers have proper PPE “is why hospitals have too often become super spreader hot spots and more than 2,000 health care workers, including over 220 nurses, have died from Covid-19.”
Major components of the plan welcomed by NNU include:
Full use of the Defense Production Act to ramp up production of masks, face shields, and other PPE, not just to meet demand but to replenish stockpiles and create a supply chain in the U.S.
Prioritizing and relying upon science, when creating guidance and when reviewing and approving vaccines and therapeutics, with transparent access to local case data.
A task force on racial and ethnic disparities, that is essential to confront the disproportionate number of deaths that have ravaged Black, Latino, Filipino, and Indigenous communities in particular, including among nurses, other health care workers and essential employees.
Restoring the U.S. relationship to the World Health Organization, which is an important step towards rebuilding a coordinated international response to the Covid-19 pandemic, and as a framework for ensuring a unified approach to future outbreaks.
Urging states to make wearing masks mandatory, as the governor of Utah declared Nov. 8, a critical facet of an overall public health plan.
Nationwide contact tracing that is essential to confronting and limiting the spread of the virus to identify people who have been exposed and set the stage for isolation to protect others from becoming infected.
Creation of a Public Health Job Corps, as the plan proposes, utilizing community resources “to perform culturally competent approaches to contact tracing and protecting at-risk population.”
Investing in a massive vaccine manufacturing and distribution plan that will guarantee “it gets to every American, cost-free.”
Working with Congress to pass an emergency package to ensure schools have the additional resources they need to adapt effectively to Covid-19.
Providing a “restart package” that helps small businesses cover the costs of operating safely, including things like plexiglass and PPE.
Did you know:
“The 100 most expensive U.S. hospitals charge up to $1,808 for every $100 of their costs. There is no excuse for these scandalous prices . . . for the most basic necessity of your life: your health.”
— NNU President Jean Ross, RN
Nurses welcome science-based plan for pandemic
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