62,000 healthcare workers in the US have tested positive for the coronavirus, the CDC says. The number is likely far higher.
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Bill Bostock
May 27, 2020, 15:55 IST
Nurses picket outside United Hospital in St. Paul, Minnesota, on May 20, 2020, seeking a say in higher safety standards.AP Photo/Jim Mone
62,000 healthcare professionals in the US have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data published Tuesday.
The numbers are likely far higher.
Of the healthcare workers who tested positive, the CDC said it only has death data for 57% of them.
Additionally, 84% of US nurses have never been tested, according to the National Nurses United union.
Healthcare workers say their colleagues are dying because a shortage of personal protective equipment is putting them in harms way.
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At least 62,000 US healthcare professionals have now tested positive for the coronavirus, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
In an update published Tuesday, the CDC said 291 healthcare workers have died, and that there were a total 62,344 infections in the profession. This figure includes people who have died, recovered, and are still battling the coronavirus.
But the numbers are likely far higher than the CDC says.
Data on death have been only available for 35,460, or 57%, of the healthcare workers who have tested positive.
And out of the 1,327,266 people surveyed, only 282,366 (21.3%) identified their profession.
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Additionally, 84% of US nurses have never been tested for the virus, according to a survey of 23,000 nurses by National Nurses United — the largest nursing union in the US — conducted between April 15 and May 10.
In the wake of that update, Business Insider spoke with the families of those healthcare workers that lost their lives to the coronavirus. You can read their stories here.
Healthcare workers have vocally criticized the dearth of personal protective equipment (PPE) needed to protect themselves.
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A vast majority — 87% — of the nurses surveyed by National Nurses United said they have had to reuse single-use PPE.
In early May, "Project Airbridge," a program designed by White House senior adviser Jared Kushner to fly PPE from Asian manufacturers to US hospital suppliers, began winding down, despite the continued shortages.
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