Tag Archives: shortages

‘Barely a drop’: UN warns water shortages a deadly risk for Gaza children – Al Jazeera English

  1. ‘Barely a drop’: UN warns water shortages a deadly risk for Gaza children Al Jazeera English
  2. ‘Barely a drop to drink’: children in the Gaza Strip do not access 90 per cent of their normal water use UNICEF
  3. GAZA LIVE BLOG: UNICEF: Gaza Children Out of Water | Israel: Ready for Long-Term Truce | Resistance Engages Israeli Military at Several Fronts – DAY 75 Palestine Chronicle
  4. Water and electricity: How the conflict is destroying vital infrastructure in Gaza The France 24 Observers
  5. War on Gaza: weaponizing access to water, energy and food (December 2023) [EN/AR] – occupied Palestinian territory ReliefWeb

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Gaza’s Hospitals Face Fuel and Power Shortages, Red Crescent Says: Israel-Hamas War News – The New York Times

  1. Gaza’s Hospitals Face Fuel and Power Shortages, Red Crescent Says: Israel-Hamas War News The New York Times
  2. Israeli troops evacuate babies from Gaza hospital after newborns die, IDF says | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  3. ‘Please stop this.’ Gaza’s hospitals are failing under the weight of war. US medical groups are scrambling to help CNN
  4. Gaza hospital nearly at its breaking point as it operates without power CBS New York
  5. EU joins calls for ‘immediate pauses’ in hostilities, establishment of humanitarian corridors in Gaza Anadolu Agency | English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russian-Occupied Crimea Facing Gasoline Shortages Following Ukrainian Bridge Strike – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

  1. Russian-Occupied Crimea Facing Gasoline Shortages Following Ukrainian Bridge Strike Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  2. Ukraine Destroys Three Russian Ships, Kyiv Says, as More Vessels Flee Newsweek
  3. Head of Ukraine’s Security Service details how agency carried out Crimean Bridge explosion in October 2022 Meduza
  4. Truck with explosives equal to 42 Kinzhal missiles: Head of Ukraine’s Security Service reveals details of first attack on Crimean Bridge Yahoo News
  5. Russians building makeshift crossings after bridges damaged in Crimea, Ukrainian military says Yahoo News
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Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach back to normal operations after labor shortages trigger shutdowns – KABC-TV

  1. Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach back to normal operations after labor shortages trigger shutdowns KABC-TV
  2. Retailers, manufacturers urge White House to mediate in West Coast ports labor dispute Yahoo Finance
  3. West Coast port labor issues persist from Los Angeles to Seattle, with supply chain frustration mounting CNBC
  4. 2 container terminals at Port of Long Beach closed Monday, at least 1 to be closed Tuesday Long Beach Business Journal – Long Beach News
  5. West Coast dockworkers disrupt trade for a fourth day, says maritime group CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Idaho hospital to stop labor and delivery services citing “political climate” and doctor shortages – CBS News

  1. Idaho hospital to stop labor and delivery services citing “political climate” and doctor shortages CBS News
  2. Idaho hospital to stop delivering babies. One reason? ‘Bills that criminalize physicians’ Idaho Statesman
  3. North Idaho Hospital Says it Will no Longer Deliver Babies, Citing Political and Staffing Issues bigcountrynewsconnection.com
  4. Bonner General Hospital to discontinue Labor & Delivery services Idaho News
  5. Bonner General Health to stop providing pregnancy, labor and delivery care as doctors flee state over abortion laws The Spokesman Review
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‘Street takeovers’ highlights City of Austin staffing shortages – KEYE TV CBS Austin

  1. ‘Street takeovers’ highlights City of Austin staffing shortages KEYE TV CBS Austin
  2. Austin mayor embroiled in fight with police officials amid fallout over street race takeover, contract dispute Fox News
  3. Co-host of weekend street takeover event comments amid contentious police labor contract negotiations FOX 7 Austin
  4. ‘Dangerous’: San Antonio police chief addresses street racing trend mySA
  5. Former Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo calls on Gov. Abbott, Legislature to step up after illegal street racing incidents KVUE.com
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Pediatric bed shortages are here to stay — we must support pediatric health care in the way it deserves 

Parents do not need to look far for alarming news that children’s hospitals are experiencing bed shortages and long wait times to see pediatric specialists as the flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) wave worsens. According to the CDC, a third of flu-related hospitalizations are in children and RSV cases are on the rise in at least 32 states. Last month, the American Academy of Pediatrics joined us in calling on the White House to declare a national emergency due to child respiratory infections and to provide additional funding and resources to help cover the capacity of care. We’re grateful the Biden administration clarified that the flexibilities hospital systems were given during COVID-19 to ease certain staffing requirements also apply to RSV and flu. Despite this, more work needs to be done if we are to get to the root of the issue. 

Even before the COVID pandemic, pediatric programs in community hospitals have been in decline for many years. The specialists who care for essential health needs like mental health, adolescent medicine, and neurology, have similarly been in short supply for a long while. This shortage developed even as demand for pediatric health care for our nation’s 76 million children has increased. There is no mystery about why supply isn’t keeping up with demand. 

Simply put, there is a devastating lack of financial prioritization across our nation’s health care system. Most of the care for children by pediatric hospitals, pediatricians, and family physicians are reimbursed at lower rates than adult care. The training of pediatric residents is financed at lower levels than physicians trained to care for adults. Pediatricians make less money than their physician counterparts focused on the care of adults, despite accruing the same medical education debt. Without the essential financial support of private commercial insurance and community philanthropy to children’s hospitals to offset the low reimbursement of the Medicaid program, the pediatric hospital industry in the United States would be unsustainable as we know it.  

All hospitals and aspiring physicians, confronted with choosing between adult programs and practices versus pediatric health care, are incented to choose the former. In so doing, they are making rational economic decisions and will continue to do so until we change the math. The situation is clear: pediatric health care capacity will struggle to meet demand in a nation which values adult health care and providers at comparatively higher levels.  

The necessary solutions are well known and simple: 

Reimburse pediatric health care services – physical and mental – in Medicaid at comparable levels paid by Medicare for adult health care. Medicaid is the primary insurance program for children, covering over 40 million children. Medicare is the primary payor program for older adults, covering over 50 million adults. Continuing to pay for adult care in Medicare at higher levels reinforces provider incentives to focus on adults.  

Invest in the training of physicians caring for children at a comparable amount provided to physicians focused on the care of adults. The Children’s Hospital Graduate Medical Education program, or CHGME, trains half of the nation’s pediatricians and most pediatric specialists at the same levels of costs as the training of physicians focused on the care of adults. Despite similar costs, the CHGME program for pediatricians is funded at half the amount of the Graduate Medical Education program, or GME, supporting the training of all other U.S. residencies. Continuing to fund CHGME at far lower levels than the GME program weakens the pediatrician workforce by placing greater financial burden on the training pipeline. Without changes, we can expect both hospitals providing clinical programs and future physicians making career choices that will continue to prioritize their adult-focused options over pediatrics. 

The primary challenge in sustaining a robust health care delivery system for children – from primary care pediatricians to advanced care in children’s hospitals– is financial. Federal spending on health care per adult is much higher than what is spent per child. Despite children constituting 22 percent of the U.S. population, a far lower proportion of the federal health budget is spent on their behalf. Some have suggested this is due to children being “healthy and not needing much care,” a statement unsupported by the national pediatric mental health crisis, the annual respiratory RSV surges, and the significant access challenges for families needing pediatric specialty care across the country.  

Through policy decisions, lawmakers have demonstrated pediatrics is a lower priority compared to the longstanding national focus on the health care of adults. This needs to change. We’ve called on congressional leaders to take action for pediatric resources before and will continue to do so. It’s time our country steps up on behalf of our future and supports pediatric health care in the way it deserves. Our future depends on it. 

Mark Wietecha is CEO of the Children’s Hospital Association, representing over 200 children’s hospitals in their role as leading national advocates for children’s health in Washington, D.C., and across the country. 

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Strep A antibiotics prices, shortages hit drugstores amid UK outbreak

Drugstores are warning of major shortages of key antibiotics used to treat Strep A, as cases rise in the U.K.

Marko Geber | Digitalvision | Getty Images

LONDON — Drugstores in Britain are warning of shortages of key antibiotics used to treat Strep A, as cases rise and the number of child fatalities reaches 15.

A surge in Group A Streptococcus, especially among schoolchildren, has increased demand for amoxicillin and penicillin, the main antibiotic treatments, over the past week.

Where supplies do exist, they are “flying off the shelves,” according to drugstores, with some saying they are now dispensing medication at a loss due to soaring wholesale prices.

In some cases, pharmacists say wholesale prices for the drugs have spiked as much as 850%. These increased costs must be absorbed either by the U.K.’s National Health Service or drugstores, rather than parents, who typically receive children’s prescriptions for free.

At least 15 children have died in the U.K. from severe cases of Strep A this winter season, according to health agencies across England, Wales and Northern Ireland. A further death from suspected infection was reported Saturday but has not yet been confirmed.

While most cases of Strep A are mild and often go unnoticed, it can also lead to more serious illness and complications, such as scarlet fever. The bacteria can also get into the bloodstream and cause an illness called invasive Group A strep (iGAS). 

These severe infections can be deadly, and are thought to be the cause of the recent spate of deaths. It has led to an increase in clinicians prescribing antibiotics for children.

Cases have been on the rise in Britain this year, with the U.K. Health Security Agency reporting 6,602 cases of scarlet fever from Sept. 12 to Dec. 4, well above the 2,538 reported during the last peak in 2017-2018.

Fears of a national shortage

The government and wholesalers have insisted that the country is adequately equipped to deal with the outbreak. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak last week dismissed fears of a “national shortage” of antibiotics.

“There are no current shortages of drugs available to treat this and there are well-established procedures in place to ensure that that remains the case,” he told the House of Commons on Wednesday.

However, a letter to pharmacists from NHS England, seen by Sky News, acknowledged that local drugstores may be experiencing a “temporary interruption of supply of some relevant antibiotics due to increased demand.”

Dr. Leyla Hannbeck, chief executive of the Association of Independent Multiple Pharmacies (AIMP), which represents drugstore owners nationwide, told CNBC the reality on the ground was becoming desperate.

This just shows the incompetence of those in charge. This is not the first time this has happened.

Dr Leyla Hannbeck

CEO, Association of Independent Multiple Pharmacies

“Quite clearly there isn’t (enough supply), because it’s not finding its way to pharmacies,” she said. “And where there are patchy supplies, they are flying off the shelves.”

“This is very concerning for us, especially when we have parents coming into pharmacies, and unfortunately they haven’t got the stock,” she added.

Parents have been advised to call ahead to drugstores to check prescription availability after Hannbeck noted reports of families traveling for miles between stores.

She said the government shouldn’t be surprised by the shortages given similar shortfalls in medication for other outbreaks, such as monkeypox, earlier this year.

“This just shows the incompetence of those in charge,” she said. “This is not the first time this has happened. Since the beginning of this year, I have been discussing with community pharmacies that there is something the matter with the U.K.’s drug supply chains.”

The U.K. health department did not comment on allegations of incompetence when contacted by CNBC.

Drugstores ‘footing the bill’

Drug supply chains have been heavily disrupted this year due to a combination of factors including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, inflation, Covid-19 and Brexit.

It has left drugstores spending more time — and money — sourcing medications.

Under the U.K.’s National Health Service (NHS) drug tariff scheme, drugstores receive set compensation for medication. There is also a concession list of medications for which higher prices can be paid.

Despite this, when wholesale prices jump, drugstores can end up making a loss.

The government’s Department of Health and Social Care has warned that, while prices may fluctuate, “no company should use this as an opportunity to exploit the NHS.”

Streptococcus A — or Group A Strep (GAS) — is a bacterial infection of the throat or skin, which typically arises during the winter months.

Halfpoint Images | Moment | Getty Images

However, over the past week, wholesale prices for amoxicillin and penicillin liquid solutions — which provide an alternative to tablets for children and are in particularly short supply — have risen in some places from around £2 to between £15 and £19, according to AIMP’s Hannbeck.

London-based drug wholesaler Sigma Pharmaceuticals reportedly hiked the price of its amoxicillin liquid solution by more than 10 times to £19 on Thursday, but later told CNBC the surge was due to an “IT glitch.”

Martin Sawer, executive director at the Healthcare Distribution Association, which represents drug wholesalers, said higher prices “directly reflect” the increased costs charged by manufacturers. He rejected claims of supply shortfalls, pointing instead to a “huge demand surge.”

“Right now there is too much demand for products and not enough competitive products being made available to buy from the manufacturers,” Sawer said.

If Government doesn’t intervene soon to protect pharmacies, patients can expect to see ever more problems with receiving their medicines.

Janet Morrison

chief executive, Pharmaceutical Services Negotiating Committee

Drugstore owners are now calling for the government to update its concessionary price for amoxicillin and penicillin, to ensure they are fairly reimbursed even if prices rise further.

Janet Morrison, chief executive of the Pharmaceutical Services Negotiating Committee, which negotiates the concessions list with the health department, said pricing assistance was “urgently” needed.

“Pharmacy teams are at breaking point,” she said. “They are helpless against market forces that are working against them, and urgently need Government assurance that all medicines will be available, and not at wildly inflated prices.”

A total of 158 drugs were on the NHS’s November concessions list, compared to 135 in October. Morrison said she expects to see a “record number” of medicines added to the list in December as supply constraints exacerbate shortages and push drug prices even higher.

“For months on end, pharmacies have been footing the bill for NHS medicines themselves when these should be covered by Government,” said Morrison.

“This can’t continue,” she added. “If Government doesn’t intervene soon to protect pharmacies, patients can expect to see ever more problems with receiving their medicines. Government and the NHS must fix this, and fast.”

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NYC hot spots cut hours as crime, staff shortages eat away at business

Big Apple restaurants are cutting back their hours as they grapple with rampant crime and a chronic shortage of workers, industry insiders tell Side Dish. 

Last month, top chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten made a splash opening six restaurants and six fast-casual spots inside the landmarked Tin Building at the South Street Seaport. But the building and its restaurants are only open four days a week, from noon until 9 pm.

Even with slashed hours and days, the Tin Building is still without the employees it needs. Recent ads on social media show openings for “cooks, prep cooks, chef de partie, garde manger, butchers, bakers, pastry cooks, cake decorators and sous chefs.” 

The Tin Building isn’t unusual. Restaurateurs interviewed by Side Dish say shorter weeks are a response to crime and inflation to labor shortages. And New Yorkers who are back at work are often only in their offices two or three days a week.

“People just aren’t out as much, and the late-night demand isn’t always there because of the crime factor. I don’t even feel safe walking around at 2 a.m. on Sunday nights. Do you? It’s like a ‘Matrix’ experience,” says nightlife baron king Richie Romero. 

Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Tin Building and its restaurants are only open four days a week.
Stefano Giovannini for NY Post
Jean-Georges Vongerichten says Tin Building is still without the employees it needs.
Getty Images

His 11,000 square-foot club Nebula, the largest new nightclub to open last year, is now open three nights a week – Tuesday, Friday and Saturday – with “one-offs” on some Thursdays. The rest of the time, the club only opens its doors for private events. 

Romero’s new kosher sushi omakase spot Fin and Scales, at 10 E. 8th St., is open one night a week, while his other recently opened Sushi by Bou, in Chelsea, is open five nights a week. Then there’s Zazzy’s Pizza, which has three locations. It’s still open seven days a week — until 4 a.m. Thursday to Saturday at the Lower East Side outpost, but shuts off its ovens at 10:30 p.m. Sunday through Wednesday. 

“People have adapted to being at home more after COVID. They are in their offices two to three days a week instead of five, and it’s hard to staff places. There is less demand. People aren’t commuting as much. They’re staying home,” Romero said. 

Some new restaurants that attempted to stay open seven days a week had to quickly scale back. 

“People just aren’t out as much, and the late-night demand isn’t always there because of the crime factor,” says Richie Romero.
WireImage

When Roam Sporting Club launched in Queens in February, it was open seven days a week. But during the summer, the high-end sports bar near Austin Street cut back to five days. Owner Manish Chadha tried to reopen for “Monday Night Football” this fall but the cost was too high and “the streets in Forest Hills were pin-drop quiet,” he said. 

By mid-September, the restaurant was down to five nights a week after dropping its weekday lunch service. Chadha said he didn’t want to “fight the trend of beyond quiet nights” at the top of the week. He’s also tried to lure customers with discounted bar tabs during non-peak hours.

Ten Hope in Williamsburg is also feeling the squeeze. When it launched in 2019, Ten Hope was open six days a week. Now it’s open four days a week, Thursday through Sunday, “to tighten the ship and brave the winter ahead,” said owner Bill Zafiros. He also will launch a price incentive —  $10 menus during dinner hours — to bring in people.

Romero’s Nebula in May. The 11,000-square-foot club is now open three nights a week.
WireImage

“We’ve always been packed on the weekends. It’s just a lot more efficient to simplify things and go where the demand is rather than continue to bang my head against the wall to try and convince customers to come out earlier in the week, especially during the winter months ahead,” Zafiros said. 

Legendary cocktail artist Albert Trummer recently opened a highly stylized bar and lounge called DOM, for Domicile, in the landmarked United Charities Building below Hawksmoor, a British steakhouse, at 287 Park Avenue South.

Albert Trummer inside his new bar DOM.
J. Messerschmidt/NY Post

It is open only three days a week, Thursday through Saturday, because of staffing issues, and is also available for private events, said Trummer, who gained fame founding celeb hot spot Apotheke in Chinatown 

“I lost many of my staff during the pandemic, and it’s hard to find people who are highly skilled and sophisticated, and also willing to work hospitality’s long hours,” Trummer said. 

The Austrian-born mixologist brings his special elixirs to DOM after selling Apotheke, where he served up medicinal-style cocktails and pyrotechnic antics in the former opium den.  

“It’s hard to find people who are highly skilled and sophisticated, and also willing to work hospitality’s long hours,” Trummer says. 
J. Messerschmidt/NY Post

Many of the liqueurs are from his own eponymous line that use herbs from the Austrian Alps to cure everything from common colds to lackluster libidos.

As New York City moves into the holiday season, he hopes to expand DOM’s hours and days, offering cocktails divided into the categories Health and Beauty, Pain Killers, Stress Relievers, Aphrodisiacs, Pharmaceuticals, Stimulants and Euphoric Enhancers. 

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Ford stock drops more than 4% as supply costs to jump by $1 billion, parts shortages to leave more cars unfinished

Ford Motor Co. shares dropped more than 4% in the extended session Monday after the company said inflation and parts shortages will leave it with more unfinished vehicles than it had expected, reminding Wall Street supply-chain snags are far from over for auto makers.

Ford
F,
+1.43%
said it expects to have between 40,000 and 45,000 vehicles in inventory at the end of the third quarter “lacking certain parts presently in short supply.”

The auto maker also said that based on its recent negotiations, payments to suppliers will run about $1 billion higher than expected for the quarter, thanks to inflation. The company reaffirmed its outlook for the year, however.

Ford’s warning “is evidence that auto parts shortages and supply-chain issues are still ongoing,” CFRA analyst Garrett Nelson told MarketWatch.

Many investors had started to believe “these problems were in the rearview mirror with inventories starting to recover from the record lows of the last year or so,” Nelson said.

The unfinished vehicles include high-demand, high-margin models of popular trucks and SUVs, Ford said. That will cause some shipments and revenue to shift to the fourth quarter.

“Ironically, Ford may have become a victim of its own success in that its recent U.S. sales growth has outperformed peers by a wide margin,” Nelson said. Its third-quarter production “apparently wasn’t able to keep pace with demand.”

Ford reiterated expectations of full-year 2022 adjusted earnings before interest and taxes of between $11.5 billion and $12.5 billion, despite the shortages and the higher payments to suppliers, it said.

Ford called for third-quarter adjusted EBIT of between $1.4 billion and $1.7 billion.

Shares of Ford ended the regular trading day up 1.4%. The company has embarked on a reorganization to pivot to electric vehicles, and last month confirmed layoffs in connection with its new structure.

Ford is slated to report third-quarter financial results on Oct. 26, when it said it expects to “provide more dimension about expectations for full-year performance.”

Analysts polled by FactSet expect the auto maker to report adjusted earnings of 51 cents a share, which would match the third-quarter 2021 adjusted EPS, on revenue of $38.8 billion.

The quarterly sales would compare with $35.7 billion in revenue in the year-ago period.

Shares of Ford slid 4.4% after hours, and have lost 28% so far this year, compared with losses of 18% for the S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.69%.

The news comes a week after FedEx Corp.
FDX,
+1.17%
roiled markets and raised fears of an economic slowdown by withdrawing its outlook for the year and warning that the year was likely to become worse for the business.

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