You can't stockpile for a 100year (or greater) event, especially if items have a shelf-life (masks). But what should be done is agreements with manufacturers to be able to increase production (if they make those items originally) or modify their process for production (if they don't normally make them) to the extent determined. This doesn't have to be done by individual hospitals, but by groups such as companies that operate several hospitals, or by locale, or by state, or by region.Ibanez wrote: ↑Tue Mar 24, 2020 10:17 amI guess the point is how can you prepare for a pandemic when you don't know what you'll need in terms of equipment and technology? Do you really think hospitals should just have dozens of ventilators held in reserve or something? If you think healthcare costs are high now, wait til you have to pay more for that shit. Again, I''m talking equipment, not protective gear. I agree that protective gear can be held in reserve and the cost is much more minimal as compared to MRI machines and ventilators.AZGrizFan wrote: ↑Tue Mar 24, 2020 10:11 am
"Tough sell". I say bullshit. We (my company) spend MILLIONS each year on compliance, duplicate systems, redundancies, etc., etc. just so we can be prepared for shit like this.
Mismanagement and then blaming the government. It's become the American way. Perhaps the DOH&HS (or whatever gov't entity oversees this shit) needs to get their shit together and start auditing hospitals to make sure they're prepared for the bi-annual pandemic that seems to sweep the globe.
We (the bank) have redundancies as well, but they don't sit still waiting for something, they are actively used until something has to fail over or whatever the case is.
Hoping that companies will decide to modify their production capabilities on the fly is poor planning.
Regulations require that active agreements be in place for response to releases of liquids such as stored chemicals/oil/fuel/etc. that are commensurate to the amount your site stores. The nice thing is that you know how much you store, but you don't know the extent of the spread which is where the guesswork comes in regarding response capabilities. To a certain extent, government response such as HAZMAT teams or the Coast Guard may be involved, but they are not to be the sole entity to rely on.






