Nurses already were nervous about limited supplies of masks and gowns — and the conservation policies to stretch reserves of protective equipment for COVID-19.
That was before hospitals started planning to resume elective surgeries that nurses fear might strain those supplies even more.
"My kids know by this point that when Mom's off of work, they stay completely away from me until I shower and scrub myself down — before they can even come close to me," said Brittany Livaccari, an emergency room nurse at United Hospital in St. Paul. "I feel so much concern for my co-workers who have very young children and who are really afraid of bringing this home to them, or have immunocompromised family members. It's horrifying."
With hospitals resuming elective surgeries as early as Monday, tensions have arisen between nurses and their hospitals over the use of personal protective equipment amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hospitals say they're carefully monitoring the situation and prioritizing worker safety but need to resume the elective surgeries and procedures that were postponed as of March 23.
The governor's order calls on facilities that use personal protective equipment (PPE) and ventilators to develop and implement plans that ensure safety for workers and patients and prioritize which surgeries should come back first. In recent weeks, the state has built up its stockpile of masks, gloves and face shields, including smaller increases of gowns and N95 respirators.
The state's critical care supply warehouse can be drawn on by hospitals when their own reserves run low. Previously, hospitals couldn't tap the supply warehouse until they had only zero to three days' worth of equipment. Now, hospitals can tap the warehouse if they have four to seven days' worth of a supply, said Alice Roberts-Davis, commissioner of the state Department of Administration.
"We have gained a tiny bit of breathing room," Roberts-Davis said during a Wednesday call with reporters.