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PPE playbook
To:Brew Readers
Healthcare Brew // Morning Brew // Update
The past, present, and future struggles of PPE.

Welcome back. Speaking of being back, it’s back-to-school season. The Mayo Clinic recommends making sure your kids are up to date on their vaccines, including Hepatitis A and B, MMR, and polio. Johns Hopkins Medicine also notes proper nutrition and sleep are essential for setting your kiddo up for success. Godspeed, and here’s to another year!

In today’s edition:

PPE shortages

Therapy bots

Making Rounds: UCI Health

—Caroline Catherman, Nicole Ortiz

COVID-19

A worker oversees the production of KN95 masks in Handan, North China's Hebei Province in 2022.

CFOTO/Future Publishing/Getty Images

In the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, medical supply shortages got so severe that nurses fashioned masks and gowns out of pool noodles and trash bags.

Many factors have been blamed: inadequate stockpiles, slow government action, equipment hoarding. But one that has been especially relevant—and is relevant again today as international tensions heat up—is US reliance on foreign personal protective equipment (PPE), supply chain experts told us.

The government invested more than $1 billion to bulk up domestic PPE manufacturing during that first pandemic year, but five years later, the companies that emerged from those efforts have mostly shut down, and the US still relies heavily on foreign manufacturers for PPE and other medical necessities. The American Hospital Association calculated in April the US imported over $75 billion in medical devices and supplies in 2024 alone.

Some experts worry this means the next public health emergency could send the country right back to March 2020.

“If we don’t change the trajectory we are in right now, we’re guaranteed to repeat the same thing,” Tinglong Dai, Bernard T. Ferrari professor of business at Johns Hopkins University, told Healthcare Brew.

See the latest installment in our Quarter Century Project here.—CC

Presented By Cytonics

MENTAL HEALTH

Psychologist AI humanoid robot talking with a sad depressed patient, artificial intelligence and psychology concept

Elenabs/Getty Images

Like it or not, people are using artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots as therapists.

A quick perusal of Reddit shows testimonies from users who swear by ChatGPT as a confidant, and several companies have designed chatbots specifically for this purpose. But there are also tales of AI stoking delusions and chatbots telling a user to “get rid of” his family.

As use of AI grows, regulators are struggling to keep up. Mental health experts told us AI can potentially fill gaps amid a shortage: A reported 53% of psychologists had no openings for new patients in a 2024 survey. But providers caution against relying on AI too heavily.

“There’s a mental health, global crisis,” Russell Fulmer, a licensed professional counselor and associate professor at Kansas State University, said. “AI can be a piece of that puzzle to help, and it will continue to gain ground and probably help us with things like diagnosis. But I don’t see it replacing [practitioners] because of that human connection that is needed.”

Is AI the new future for mental health treatment?—CC

HOSPITALS

The medical director of UCI Health, Ryan Gibney, a man in a necktie and lab coat

UCI Health

Ever since he was a kid, Ryan Gibney, UCI Health’s associate medical director at its Orange, California, facility and an emergency medicine physician, knew he wanted to be a doctor.

But before that happened, he worked in the service industry for many years—and performed in a band—while he studied at med school. Once he took the plunge, he had a “meteoric rise” from residency to leadership, which includes serving as the incoming medical director of the health system’s new Irvine site, scheduled to open later this year.

Healthcare Brew spoke with Gibney about his career and what he’s hoping to accomplish in his new role.

This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

How did you go from working in the hospitality industry to the hospital industry, and what did it teach you?

I moved out to California, where my mom had moved in the interim, and I ended up starting back in the service industry at a bar and restaurant in the area. It wasn’t until 2007 when I got married that I decided that looking longevity-wise and raising a family and that kind of career didn’t really kind of go hand in hand. And I did a very thorough self-inventory and said that I’m going to go back to college.

See the full conversation here.—NO

Together With Calm

VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: 6,500. That’s about how many providers opted out of a major settlement with the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association about its anticompetitive behaviors. (Becker’s Payer Issues)

Quote: “Unfortunately, this leaves one of the vulnerable groups, specifically healthy children less than 2 years old, without access to a safe vaccine that’s known to prevent hospitalization and death.”—Lakshmi Panagiotakopoulos, a pediatric infectious diseases physician and former co-lead of a CDC Covid vaccine panel, on how children may not be able to access the vaccine if RFK Jr. withdraws endorsement (the New York Times)

Read: The Trump administration is considering reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous drug. (Axios)

Osteo-opportunity: Cytonics’ first generation could be a potential first-in-class osteoarthritis therapy. They’re inviting you to invest for just $3.00 per share as they prepare for Phase 2 trials. Learn more.*

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