| > Are you seriously claiming that there is a national shortage of people who can be trained to empty bedpans, setup IVs, draw blood, and take temperatures? At any price? Yes. Because COVID19 is happening right now. Even if you had infinite money, there's no way you can train all of those people to take care of the COVID19 surge that is literally happening right now. The effects of the pandemic are here and are already having obvious consequences. --- COVID19's job is closer to shoving catheters into people while you put them under a ventilator, setting up IV drips, etc. etc. But yeah, its happening on a massive scale as we speak. > This is obviously not true, people are not dropping like flies whenever a nurse in America takes a vacation or calls in sick. Lets see how long those patients last if a nurse doesn't change out their bedpans or catheters, while refreshing their IV-drips while they're on a ventilator. Plus the math for keeping track of vitals to determine how many corticosteroids to inject into someone to optimize their chances to live through it all. ------- https://oklahoman.com/article/5677006/asymptomatic-health-ca... I'm not sure if you realize how dire the situation is right now. Nurses who test positive for COVID19 are being kept on the job because there's literally too many patients and not enough nurses. |
OK, so how many years of training is required to learn how to insert catheters and IVs and all that? The army demonstrates that anyone can learn these skills in a few days. I'm sorry, but it's just not some kind of unique magical skill set that only special people can learn.
> I'm not sure if you realize how dire the situation is right now.
I'm not sure if you do. There is no crisis, hospitals are not near capacity, there are plenty of empty beds. (Oklahoma, for example, is at 66% capacity, nothing to get hysterical about.) There is no huge difference in hospital bed utilization between today, last week, last month. Remember that giant hospital ship? The one that sat empty in NY harbor and then quietly left without treating a single patient? Excuse me for being desensitized to chicken little's alarming news.
> Nurses who test positive for COVID19 are being kept on the job because there's literally too many patients and not enough nurses.
Nobody is being "kept on the job". Nobody is being forced to work. Those nurses are volunteering to stay on the job.