Some people have floated the idea of letting military trained medics help out. One aspect of law that I don't personally understand is that if you're a military medic, even a battle hardened one who field dresses blown-up legs and the like, none--zip, zero, zilch--of that training counts toward shit to even become a civilian EMT, let alone a nurse or physician assistant. I have a buddy who was a Navy corpsman, who while enlisted was allowed to more or less treat disease (under a doctor's supervision, of course), but who could only find work as a transport person in an ER when he returned from active duty. There are some ideas out there of passing laws that temporarily remove some of those restrictions. I don't know how much that could increase the supply of providers, but it sure couldn't hurt.Still can't believe we haven't subsidized medical equipment production, emergency hospital construction, and training of personnel. I don't really give a shit how the needs are met, but whatever's not transpiring right now is making me very, very upset. If invoking wartime production legal precedent is required, do it.