MANASOTA KEY, FLORIDA - OCTOBER 13: An aerial view of a building destroyed by Hurricane Milton on October 13, 2024 in Manasota Key, Florida. People continue recovering following the storm that made landfall as a Category 3 hurricane in the Siesta Key area of Florida on October 9th, causing damage and flooding throughout Central Florida. - Joe Raedle/Getty Images/AFP

US hospitals struggle as storms worsen medical products shortages

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SACRAMENTO: The healthcare providers in the United States have been suffering a critical shortage of medical products as the Hurricanes Helene and Milton severely disrupted the supply chain for intravenous (IV) fluids, reported Xinhua.

Mass General Brigham, the largest hospital-based research enterprise in the United States, announced Friday that it would postpone non-emergent, elective procedures from Sunday through at least Wednesday and that it was unclear when the supply of IV fluids would improve due to uncertainties caused by the nationwide shortage.

More than 86 per cent of healthcare providers nationwide are experiencing shortages of IV fluids, according to a survey released Thursday by Premier Inc., a healthcare logistics company.

The situation started after Hurricane Helene damaged a Baxter IV plant in North Carolina late last month, taking 60 per cent of the country’s IV solution supply offline for the foreseeable future.

To conserve IV fluid usage, hospitals give patients Gatorade or Pedialyte to stay hydrated when possible. Mass General Brigham encouraged oral hydration and only prepares IV fluid bags when healthcare teams are certain they’ll need them.

Secretary Xavier Becerra of the US Health and Human Services said in a letter dated Oct. 9 to healthcare leaders that the supply may “continue to be constrained” in the coming weeks and Hurricane Milton may further disrupt “an already fragile market.”

The Food and Drug Administration and Baxter are identifying alternative IV, dialysis, and nutrition products, and the agency is speeding up reviews of manufacturers’ requests to extend the shelf life of products.

However, the Premier survey said smaller medical facilities with 25 or fewer beds were likelier to have none of their IV orders filled. There’s also acute concern about dialysis patients who rely on IV treatments at home.

The American Hospital Association urged the Biden administration to take more aggressive action, including invoking the Defence Production Act to prioritise IV solution manufacturing and removing barriers to importing products from foreign suppliers.

- Bernama, Xinhua