WARNING: As an ER doc in a rural hospital, I’m seeing the number of #COVID19 cases here *rise* as we start to plateau in NYC, Detroit, etc. Though @realdonaldtrump anticipates fewer new cases in so-called hot spots, I’m more concerned than ever. Here’s why: (1/11)
Rural hospitals run in a resource-limited environment on a daily basis. While we have most of the equipment we need, what we lack most is personnel. We frequently use traveling RNs to fill our needs, and many doctors travel from at least an hour away. (2/11)
At night we have one doctor, often me, in the whole hospital & one respiratory therapist. Normally, we manage just fine with the occasional night that feels like it will never end due to volume and acuity. But a surge in #COVID19 cases could reach crisis mode very quickly. (3/11)
We have a small number of ventilators but with a single respiratory therapist, the question is: who will manage them all at once, in addition to other duties? With 2 dozen inpatient beds, who will care for patients when we double or triple the number of admitted patients? (4/11)
And with telemedicine fulfilling our after-hours hospitalist needs, how do I manage an ER while responding to crises on the floor? Under normal circumstances it’s quite doable, but when we hit our expected peak in 4-8 weeks? I worry we’ll be stretched too thin. (5/11)
Rigid social distancing measures have thus far kept our case load from getting out of hand. These policies are precisely why we’re seeing a slowdown in new cases in major urban areas that have been hardest hit. But this slowdown is proof of efficacy... not cause to relax. (6/11)
Understandably, weary Americans are now looking to state & national leaders for guidance on when (and how) we can reopen our communities & get people back to work. We need more #COVID19 tests ASAP. (7/11)
I hear the stress in the voices of my patients as they describe recent job losses for them and their families. It’s painful to know that many millions have lost health insurance and are scrambling to figure out how they will pay for insulin and heart medications. (8/11)
And it’s painful to hear our President reject this scientific truth: in order to safely open up our country, we must aggressively #TestAndTrace and isolate patients with #coronavirus, both symptomatic & asymptomatic. This is the urgent, imperative path forward. (9/11)
The President must utilize the Defense Production Act to ensure the availability of tests, reagents, swabs, and new #antibody tests to determine who is safe to re-enter society. Doctors and nurses want our neighbors to head back to work, but we want them to do so safely. (10/11)
We doctors have taken an oath to care for the members of our communities. We can’t do it if an avoidable surge of very sick patients overwhelms our ability to do the job we love. Help us help you. #StayHomeStaySafe until we have the data from tests to get you back out there. /END
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As an ER doc, I see patients rationing meds every day. We need lower drug prices — full stop. That’s why I support Medicare negotiating directly with pharma.
But let’s talk about Trump’s new “Most Favored Nation” executive order on drug prices. 🧵1/7
The EO sounds aggressive: tie U.S. drug prices to the lowest paid in rich countries like France or Germany.
But here’s the catch: it doesn’t do anything on its own. 2/7
It tells HHS to "negotiate" lower prices within 30 days. No specifics. No enforcement. No immediate effect. Just vibes.
We’ve seen this before: Trump tried this in 2020. It got blocked in court and quietly died. 3/7
As an ER doctor for over 25 years, I’ve seen what happens when people can’t afford the care they need.
Now I’m watching Trump and Congressional Republicans make it worse—by helping Big Pharma, Big Insurance, and billionaires at everyone else’s expense. 🧵1/10
💰 First up: Medicaid cuts.
House Republicans are proposing $880 billion in cuts over 10 years.
That’s not belt-tightening—it’s pulling the rug out from under low-income kids, seniors, and people with disabilities to pay for billionaire tax breaks. 2/10
This is Robin Hood in reverse.
Take from the vulnerable. Give to the ultra-rich.
Source:
🔗 3/10epi.org/blog/the-house…
As an ER doctor, I treat people when other systems fail. Now, we're watching those systems get dismantled on purpose: 20,000 jobs slashed at HHS. Vaccine and prevention programs gutted. And Congressional Republicans voting to cut Medicaid to fund billionaire tax breaks. 1/10
The Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy will be wiped out. This office leads vaccine education, pandemic response, and disease prevention. Without it, we’ll see more outbreaks, more ER visits, and more preventable deaths. 2/10
At the same time, the GOP is pushing Medicaid cuts. That’s 90 million people—children, seniors, pregnant women, and low-income families—left without a safety net. It’s a one-two punch: gut prevention, then gut care. 3/10
As an ER doctor for 2 decades, I have seen the #ACA transform the lives of my patients. This week, one week before the election, @SpeakerJohnson told us that he and @realDonaldTrump will “deregulate” healthcare and that there will be “No Obamacare.”
Before Obamacare insurance companies denied coverage to people with pre-existing conditions. Diabetic patients would come to the ER in crisis because they could not see a PCP. One man waited 5 days having chest pain during a heart attack and ended up in heart failure. 2/10
I routinely saw patients who couldn’t afford insulin come in with diabetic ketoacidosis and diabetic coma. People with high blood pressure that was never treated had a higher risk of having a stroke and some ended up in kidney failure after years of a lack of care. 3/10
As a doctor whose wife experienced 4 miscarriages amongst the 3, now healthy adult children we have raised, I can’t stop thinking about @JDVance’s answers on abortion during the VP debate. Here is the problem with his and Trump’s “leave it to the states” approach. 1/13
He claimed that the US is a diverse country, and the views of California may differ from the views of Georgia or Arizona, etc. I couldn't agree more — we ARE diverse — but that diversity does not end at state lines. 2/13
That diversity extends to counties, cities, neighborhoods, households, and members within a household. It even exists within an individual, given varying circumstances. These circumstances personally resonate with me and my experience as a would-be father. 3/13
As an ER doc and health care advocate I couldn’t care less about @SenKatieBritt's cringe performance in this video that many are roasting. It is the substance of the bill she is pushing that makes me truly cringe. Here’s why: 🧵1/7
The MOMS Act is a GOP ploy to pretend they’ve softened their extreme views on abortion in a critical election year. To have a senator from a state with a near total abortion ban introduce the bill is fitting for a party that is completely out of touch with everyday Americans. 2/7
This bill would create a database of pregnant women in the US. This is chilling in a post-Roe America where some states want to throw women and doctors in jail for making medical decisions about their own bodies and reproductive health. 3/7