Healthcare Hygiene magazine April 2020 | Page 6
from the editor
h ealthcarehygienemagazine
The Aftermath of the
COVID-19 Outbreak
W
Kelly M. Pyrek
editor & publisher
[email protected]
hen we get to the other side of the COVID-19 pandemic – and we will – it will
be a time of reflection, contemplation, and reckoning. The world will come
to terms with the reality of the outbreak and its aftermath and must decide if it can
handle the truth or continue in its state of make-believe that perpetuates disarray
and unpreparedness. We got lucky in the more recent outbreaks such as H1N1 and
SARS, in that the U.S. did not see the case counts that our nation is experiencing
currently. We dodged the Ebola bullet, too, and it afforded us a chance to review
our collective state of readiness for the next emergency.
Clearly, we failed.
Not because our Administration failed us. Although plenty of people decided
that weaponizing the coronavirus for political gain was more important than the
response itself.
Not because our healthcare systems failed us. Although lack of preparedness has
been a perennial issue in an era of cost-cutting.
Not because industry failed us. Although single-country sourcing has crippled
the supply chain and left us unnecessarily vulnerable.
We failed because we never thought it could happen to us, and it did. And then
we panicked, reacted out of a place of fear, and reason and common sense was
the coronavirus’s biggest casualties, even as human life was lost, and the country
plunged into economic disaster.
It didn’t have to happen, but as we look toward eventually rebuilding, it’s more
important to learn from this painful lesson once and for all and get our priorities
straight. Allow me to make some suggestions:
Ditch the just-in-time inventory strategy if you, as a hospital, are depending on
companies that single-source their products. In a pinch, the supply chain will choke,
and healthcare workers and patients will pay the price.
Stop pretending that you, as a hospital, are prepared for an outbreak. If you
can’t handle a domestic pathogen successfully, you’ll never be able to handle a
foreign one. And don’t forget that the domestic pathogens are as important as the
exotics and are deserving of continued control and elimination efforts in the midst
of a pandemic.
Start acting as if you, as a hospital, have created a contingency plan, educated
and trained healthcare professionals about it, and have revised your budgets to allow
for the staff, resources, medical supplies, equipment and wherewithal to tackle a
pandemic properly.
Stop pretending you wash your hands when you don’t. The silver lining of all
this lunacy is a renewed focus on hygiene. It will serve us well in the future, if we
don’t abandon it the minute the danger passes.
Quit surrendering accountability and stop pointing fingers; all that does is
produce a victim mentality. We are better than that, and patients deserve nothing less.
As consumers, practitioners and business owners, we all have the shared respon-
sibility of learning from the past, being proactive and responsible in the present,
and preparing for the future.
We recognize and thank all healthcare workers and first responders for their heroics
on the frontline of the COVID-10 battle. We appreciate the efforts of industry to
retrofit their factories and supply the critical goods that the healthcare sector needs.
Until next month, bust those bugs!
A.G. Hettinger, CPA
president & CFO
Patti Valdez
art director
Mary Johnson
sales and marketing specialist
[email protected]
Linda Lybert
business development consultant
J. Christine Phillips
customer service manager
Send inquiries to:
[email protected]
Healthcare Hygiene magazine is
published monthly by Keystone
Media Inc. 8925 Ridgeline
Boulevard, suite 106, Highlands
Ranch, CO 80129. Free digital
subscriptions available at
www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com
for U.S., Canada and other foreign
subscribers. Copyright © 2019
Keystone Media Inc. All rights
reserved. The publisher reserves
the right to accept or reject any
advertising or editorial material.
Advertisers, and/or their agents,
assume the responsibility for all
content of published advertisements
and assume responsibility for any
claims against the publisher based
on the advertisement. Editorial
contributors assume responsibility
for their published works and
assume responsibility for any
claims against the publisher based
on the published work. All items
submitted to Healthcare Hygiene
magazine become the sole property
of Keystone Media Inc. Editorial
content may not necessarily reflect
the views of the publisher. No
part of this publication may be
reproduced in any form or by any
electronic or mechanical means,
including information storage and
retrieval systems, without permission
in writing from the publisher.
Kelly M. Pyrek
Editor & Publisher
[email protected]
6
april 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com