Hospitals have been compelled to innovate with new methods of hydrating sufferers and giving them drugs, after a key manufacturing facility that produces IV fluid baggage flooded throughout Hurricane Helene. (This story first aired on Morning Version on Nov. 7, 2024.)
AYESHA RASCOE, HOST:
When Hurricane Helene made its strategy to western North Carolina, it flooded a North Carolina plant that makes greater than 60% of the nation’s IV fluid baggage. Hospitals are nonetheless taking a look at months of IV fluid shortages, and it is not clear when the plant will return to full manufacturing. So, as Jackie Fortier stories, some hospitals are discovering new methods to get by.
JACKIE FORTIER, BYLINE: In late September, Hurricane Helene tore by the South, stunning residents like emergency room nurse Ashley Bunting.
ASHLEY BUNTING: I am from Florida initially, and I moved as much as the mountains pondering, oh, I am by no means going to be impacted by a hurricane right here.
FORTIER: Bunting cares for sufferers at Mission Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina. It has been greater than a month, and the water popping out of the hospital faucets nonetheless is not secure to drink.
BUNTING: We’re type of restricted to water bottles. We will not give our sufferers ice chips, like a lot of them request.
FORTIER: And the IV fluids Bunting might use as a substitute are nonetheless in brief provide. Earlier than Hurricane Helene, one firm, Baxter, produced 1.5 million IV baggage at its North Carolina facility, greater than half of what U.S. hospitals use. However when the manufacturing facility flooded, manufacturing floor to a cease.
BUNTING: Possibly getting 60% of our IV fluids from one single supply is not the neatest long-term plan.
FORTIER: The manufacturing facility has re-opened and is producing some IV baggage, however the earliest they will begin to ship is late November. Greater than 1,000 miles north, in Presque Isle, Maine, Nurse Nicole Bridges can be dealing with the scarcity at AR Gould Hospital. She says they’re transitioning sufferers from IV antibiotics to oral antibiotic capsules ahead of they used to.
NICOLE BRIDGES: I feel the workaround proper now’s working very well. I do not know what it may appear like subsequent week or subsequent month.
FORTIER: Essentially the most fragile sufferers at most hospitals are nonetheless getting drugs through IV, however some hospital directors see a possibility within the scarcity. Dr. Sam Elgawly is with Inova Well being within the Washington D.C. space.
SAM ELGAWLY: How usually are we truly giving it greater than we have to? The place we simply – you recognize, simply preserve it going as a result of a affected person’s within the hospital?
FORTIER: Of their 5 hospitals, they’ve slashed IV fluids by about 55%. However surgical demand will quickly go up. Usually, sufferers attempt to cram procedures in earlier than the insurance coverage cycle ends in December and deductibles reset. A method Inova is conserving IV baggage is by skipping additional fluids with some drugs.
ELGAWLY: You’d do what’s referred to as push a medicine. You do not even want a bag in any respect. You simply give the treatment with out the bag. There was rising literature over the past 10 to twenty years that signifies perhaps you need not use as a lot, and this accelerated our innovation and testing of that concept.
FORTIER: However some nurses say doing that may be extra labor intensive. Dr. Vince Inexperienced is with Pipeline Well being, a small hospital system within the Los Angeles space. They’re solely getting half the IV baggage they’d usually obtain.
VINCE GREEN: Each IV fluid bag that we are able to get, we’re buying and we’re maintaining. We’re attempting to get our arms on every little thing we are able to.
FORTIER: Inexperienced says medical workers are encouraging sufferers to drink Gatorade or water, as a substitute of defaulting to IVs for hydration. And so they make sure that to make use of up your complete bag earlier than beginning one other.
GREEN: If they arrive in with IV fluids that the paramedics have began, let’s proceed it. If it saves half a bag of fluids, so be it, nevertheless it provides up over time.
FORTIER: A few of these conservation measures might grow to be everlasting. First, Dr. Inexperienced wish to see knowledge displaying that affected person outcomes aren’t affected. For now, among the new methods simply make sense to him.
GREEN: We need not have this a lot waste and refill our landfills with stuff that, if we might cut back stuff, I feel it might be sensible.
FORTIER: Inexperienced remains to be apprehensive for the close to future. They’re right down to a two-week provide, and respiratory virus season is simply across the nook.
RASCOE: That is reporter Jackie Fortier with our companion KFF Well being Information.
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