Health & Fitness
Gov. Allows More Types Of Health Workers To Treat Coronavirus Patients
Physician assistants and advanced practice registered nurses can now treat patients without the supervision of a licensed physician.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Monday signed Executive Order 2020-30, which relaxes scope of practice laws to give hospitals and other health care facilities the flexibility they need to successfully deploy qualified physician assistants, nurses and other health care providers to combat COVID-19, a disease caused by a new coronavirus.
“Responding effectively to the urgent and steep demands created by the COVID-19 pandemic will require the help of as many health care professionals as possible,” the order states.
Under the order, physician assistants and advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) can treat patients without the supervision of a licensed physician. In addition, health care students can work alongside medical professionals as “respiratory therapist extenders” to assist them in operating ventilators.
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The order also reinforces an existing law that protects hospitals and health care workers from liability for taking necessary steps to protect Michiganders during an emergency.
“Michigan’s dedicated health care professionals continue putting their lives on the line every day during this unprecedented crisis, and we must do everything we can to empower them to do their jobs,” said Whitmer. “This executive order temporarily sets aside some existing rules to allow qualified physician assistants, nurses and other health care providers to treat COVID-19 patients and help slow the spread of this virus in every corner of our state.”
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Additionally, Whitmer and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) launched a new website over the weekend that allows trained medical professionals to register as volunteers to assist hospitals in fighting COVID-19.
Others can use the site to find out how they can help in their local communities; give blood; donate money or needed medical supplies; or assist public health officials in tracking infections.
Meanwhile, health care workers in Michigan have been challenged with working through the state’s COVID-19 outbreak with a shortage of proper personal protective equipment (PPE) like N95 masks, as reported by the Advance.
On Saturday, the state received more than 112,000 N95 masks in a shipment from the strategic national stockpile to fight COVID-19.
In a tweet that morning, Whitmer said that 8,000 more masks were on their way and said it was, “Great news for our health care workers. We’ll keep working hard along with FEMA and the White House to get more of the PPE we need to keep Michiganders safe.”
This story was originally published by the Michigan Advance. For more stories from the Michigan Advance, visit MichiganAdvance.com.