- Joined
- Jan 8, 2019
- Messages
- 6,790
- Reaction score
- 3,270
- Location
- Massachusetts
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Slightly Liberal
April 5, 2020 trump- Many hospital administrators that we’ve been in touch with, even in the really hotspots — you know what they are — are communicating directly with us that their level of supplies are meeting essential needs. And at the current time, they’re really thrilled to be where they are.
whitehouse.gov/briefings
As trump spins a happy group of hospital adminstrators, his own watchdog group's investigations reveal the opposite. What has become quite obvious is trump speaks vaguely about important issues, issues that should be detailed and transparent during this crisis.
Another poster on this site labeled trump's game with words perfectly, the poster offered: trump always leaves a back door to slip out of his misstatements. Knowing backdooring and witnessing trump's many false statements that are revealed down the road when full facts come out.
Example trump's above statement on administrators may be partially true, but trump throws out a leading statement wanting the public to think hospitals are all just dandy.
Reality proven by his own watchdog group, is quite opposite. I'm sure trump talked to some administrators, but like partisan call in radio talk shows, trump screened out the administrators that went against trump's views issues and accentuates the few administrators doing ok.
Government watchdog: Hospitals face severe shortages of medical gear, confusing guidance from government
An internal government report found that one hospital was so short of thermometers it could screen staff and patients for coronavirus only at random.
April 6, 2020
WASHINGTON — Hospitals across the country face dire shortages of vital medical equipment amid the coronavirus outbreak — including testing kits and thermometers — and fear they can't ensure the safety of health care workers needed to treat patients with COVID-19, according to an internal government watchdog report released Monday.
The alarming findings, based on interviews conducted from March 23 to March 27, represent the first government assessment of how the country's hospitals are coping with the outbreak and confirm previous media reports and warnings from health workers that the medical system is under unprecedented strain.
Hospital administrators also said conflicting guidance from federal, state and local governments on how to use personal protective gear and other issues has led to "a greater sense of confusion, fear and distrust among staff that they can rely on hospital procedures to protect them," according to the report from the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS.
Government watchdog: Hospitals face severe shortages of medical gear, confusing guidance from government
Full transparency and complete data is necessary to mitigate this virus, along with forming future strategies
whitehouse.gov/briefings
As trump spins a happy group of hospital adminstrators, his own watchdog group's investigations reveal the opposite. What has become quite obvious is trump speaks vaguely about important issues, issues that should be detailed and transparent during this crisis.
Another poster on this site labeled trump's game with words perfectly, the poster offered: trump always leaves a back door to slip out of his misstatements. Knowing backdooring and witnessing trump's many false statements that are revealed down the road when full facts come out.
Example trump's above statement on administrators may be partially true, but trump throws out a leading statement wanting the public to think hospitals are all just dandy.
Reality proven by his own watchdog group, is quite opposite. I'm sure trump talked to some administrators, but like partisan call in radio talk shows, trump screened out the administrators that went against trump's views issues and accentuates the few administrators doing ok.
Government watchdog: Hospitals face severe shortages of medical gear, confusing guidance from government
An internal government report found that one hospital was so short of thermometers it could screen staff and patients for coronavirus only at random.
April 6, 2020
WASHINGTON — Hospitals across the country face dire shortages of vital medical equipment amid the coronavirus outbreak — including testing kits and thermometers — and fear they can't ensure the safety of health care workers needed to treat patients with COVID-19, according to an internal government watchdog report released Monday.
The alarming findings, based on interviews conducted from March 23 to March 27, represent the first government assessment of how the country's hospitals are coping with the outbreak and confirm previous media reports and warnings from health workers that the medical system is under unprecedented strain.
Hospital administrators also said conflicting guidance from federal, state and local governments on how to use personal protective gear and other issues has led to "a greater sense of confusion, fear and distrust among staff that they can rely on hospital procedures to protect them," according to the report from the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS.
Government watchdog: Hospitals face severe shortages of medical gear, confusing guidance from government
Full transparency and complete data is necessary to mitigate this virus, along with forming future strategies
Last edited: