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Coronavirus - Doctors and medical staff: Appreciation Thread

A minute's silence will be held across the UK later to commemorate the key workers who have died with coronavirus.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who returned to work on Monday, will join the tribute, which starts at 11:00 BST.

More than 100 NHS and care staff have died with the virus, as have many transport and other key workers.

NHS England medical director Stephen Powis said he hoped "the whole nation" would show how much their "contribution is remembered and appreciated".

Chief nursing officer Ruth May added: "Every death is a tragedy but we feel the loss of fellow health and care workers particularly keenly."
 
BBC identifies 114 health worker deaths linked to Covid-19

Analysis by BBC News has identified 114 health worker deaths linked to the coronavirus.

Additional analysis found credible reports for the deaths of 16 social care workers across the UK.

According to Health Secretary Matt Hancock, 82 NHS workers and 16 social care workers have died from Covid-19 in England.

Our analysis of 114 reported health worker deaths records that 59 of those who died were male, 54 female.

In England we have recorded 100 deaths; in Scotland four deaths; in Wales nine deaths. To date, we have not recorded any health worker deaths in Northern Ireland.

BAME - Black, Asian, and minority ethnic - staff account for 70 deaths, where we have been able to establish ethnicity.

Within BAME deaths, 26 are reportedly from Black backgrounds; 21 from South Asian backgrounds; 19 from East Asian backgrounds, of which 14 Filipino; and four from Arabic backgrounds.

Of the doctors who we believe were working in a hospital environment all 17 are BAME and male, with almost all over 50.

Medical staff account for 24 deaths; nursing and midwifery 39 deaths; allied occupations 51 deaths.

It is unclear how many contracted the virus in the course of their work in the health sector.

Separate analysis by Health Service Journal suggests that the rate of death is “largely consistent with the number of healthcare workers in the population.”

The BBC News analysis is based on deaths reported in the public domain where we have been able to establish their occupation as being medical or other occupations in a health setting - including pharmacists, hospital porters, paramedics and other roles.
 
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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson observed a minute’s silence for key workers, from No 10 Downing Street.

Alongside Johnson were Cabinet Secretary Sir Mark Sedwill and Chancellor Rishi Sunak.

Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the main opposition Labour Party, also paid his respects.
 
A gang believed to be wearing medical-style face masks and gloves stabbed an NHS worker to death in an attack just days before his father’s funeral.

David Gomoh, 24, was set upon by a gang of four to five males moments after he left his home in east London, close to the NHS Nightingale field hospital at the Excel centre, on Sunday evening.

Police say the attack was unprovoked and against a wholly innocent victim by a gang that went out armed and looking for a target.

Gomoh’s family have been left suffering “unimaginable torment” and are due to bury his father on Wednesday after he died from a Covid-19 related illness.

Police said Gomoh was stabbed multiple times and suffered at least four knife wounds. The attack from start to finish lasted 10 seconds, during which time the gang spotted Gomoh, got out of a car and stabbed him repeatedly, then got back in the car and sped off.

Surgical-style masks and gloves were found close to the scene of the murder, and also close to where the car was dumped, the Guardian understands.


But detectives are bearing in mind the greater use of masks and gloves due to the coronavirus outbreak. They are keeping an open mind on a possible motive, though one theory being examined is that the gang was looking for revenge on anyone in that postcode.

Police said Gomoh’s mother and sister, who also work for the NHS, were “heartbroken”.

Gomoh, a marketing graduate from South Bank University in London, worked in NHS supplies and procurement and lived with his mother and sister.

Just before 10.25pm on Sunday evening he left home to go to a nearby shop. Police said he was on the phone speaking to a friend when the gang, driving a stolen silver Dodge Caliber, spotted him and rushed out of the vehicle with at least two knives.

The attack happened in Freemasons Road, near the junction with Kerry Close, in Canning Town.

The car was abandoned about half a mile away. It had been stolen in Dagenham 11 days earlier and its number plates had been cloned.

DI Tony Kirk of the Metropolitan police’s specialist crime command, who is leading the investigation, said. “David’s family are going through unimaginable torment. Within days his mother has seen the death of her husband and son; his sister has lost her brother and father, both are now heartbroken.

“David was a young man who had worked hard to put himself through university and, like his mother, worked hard for the community in the NHS. At this time we believe the only thing David did to be murdered was walk down a street. He was apparently approached by a group of men wearing masks and stabbed multiple times in a ferocious assault.

“I have no doubt this was a planned attack that singled out David because he happened to be in that area. David and his mother, who have done so much to help the community, now need the public to come forward and tell us what they know. If you have any information, please think of this young man and the suffering of his family and call us. If you don’t want to give your name, call Crimestoppers, but do make that call. David’s family deserve both answers and justice.”

Detectives are awaiting the results of a postmortem and examining CCTV footage. They have appealed for anyone who has dashcam footage or CCTV from the scenes where the murder happened or car was dumped to contact them.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...Social&utm_source=Facebook#Echobox=1588141963
 
Royal College of Surgeons has told Sky News it supports calls for members of ethnic minorities to be removed from the front line and adds that easing the lockdown now would put "intolerable pressure" on NHS healthcare workers
 
All the best to [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] and his colleagues on the front line. Doing the nation proud. Great courage.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Dr Furqan Ali Siddiqui, a British Pakistani Doctor (graduated from Dow Medical College, In 91 ) passed away today due to COVID19. <br>Our condolences to the family.</p>— Dr.Ashraf Chohan #StayAtHomeSaveLives (@DrAshrafChohan) <a href="https://twitter.com/DrAshrafChohan/status/1255923000475627520?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 30, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

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An NHS doctor and dad-of-six died on the front line of the coronavirus fight just two months after moving to the UK, say heartbroken colleagues.

Dr Furqan Ali Siddiqui worked at Manchester Royal Infirmary and was "coming to the end of his training" when he caught the virus.

Described as an "NHS hero" who made "the ultimate sacrifice", he was working in Britain to support his family - including his six young children, wife and elderly parents - in his native Pakistan, said friends.

Colleagues said Dr Siddiqui contracted Covid-19 shortly after his arrival in the UK and he was on a ventilator in intensive care for four weeks before he lost his battle with the disease.

He is at least the 15th Muslim doctor to die on the front line of the crisis, which has claimed roughly 27,000 lives in the UK.

More than 110 health and care workers have died in the UK during the pandemic, many of them from a black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) background.

It is understood that Dr Siddiqui graduated from Pakistan's prestigious Dow Medical College in the early 1990s.

Before moving to the UK he was head of A&E at Liaquat National Hospital in Karachi, according to friends.

Colleagues from the Association of Pakistani Physicians and Surgeons of the United Kingdom were among those to pay tribute to him.

The organisation said he was the 15th Muslim doctor to die from Covid-19 in Britain.

A spokesperson said: "Furqan Siddiqui was a doctor working in NHS in Manchester Royal infirmary and was coming to the end of his training.

"Despite the risk to his own health and life, he continued to care for his patients. Unfortunately, he himself fell ill with Covid-19.

"He sadly passed away after a struggle with the disease.

"He leaves behind six young children and a wife.

"He is another NHS hero who had travelled thousands of miles to work for the NHS and made the ultimate sacrifice."

The Muslim Doctors Association also hailed his contributions to the NHS.

Former colleague Malik Heera wrote on Facebook : "Today [Thursday] our Ex HOD of A&E Dept. In Liaquat National Hospital Dr. Furqan Siddiqui who was on ventilatory support due to COVID-19, passed away, in Manchester UK.

"Request for special dua for the departed soul."

A spokesperson for the Pakistan Islamic Medical Association (PIMA), one of the largest organisations of Muslim doctors in the South Asian country, said Dr Siddiqui had only just moved to Britain to work for the NHS.

A spokesperson wrote online: "Another Pakistani doctor lost his life saving lives for the NHS.

"He went to the UK just over two months back and took a locum position in plastic surgery.

"He acquired Covid-19 and was on a ventilator for four weeks. He graduated from Dow in 1992.

"May his soul rest in eternal peace.

"Heartfelt condolences to his family who are in Karachi. May Allah swt give them the strength to bear the loss."

A GoFundMe page has raised more than £44,000 to support Dr Siddiqui's family.

One friend wrote on the page: "Can't believe it. Another huge loss.

"When I was starting of in my early years as a junior doctor we used to work together in Chorley Hospital A&E.

"Very friendly and a humble guy who invited me to his house for meals with family on a couple of occasions.

"Very saddened to hear of this. Duas for him and family. Rest in peace brother."

Another friend wrote: "A very sad situation. A father of six young children and himself a son of elderly frail parents all living in Pakistan while Irfan was working in UK to support them all."

A third added: "Ali was a good man and passed away in the pursuit of his courageous lifelong goal of helping others. A great example to others. May he rest in peace inshallah."

It is estimated that almost two-thirds of NHS workers who have died with Covid-19 are from a BAME background.

Concerns about the impact of Covid-19 on BAME medics and care staff have led NHS England to recommend that health trusts assess them as being "at potentially greater risk".

Professor Tim Cook, honorary professor in anaesthesia at the University of Bristol, said: "The disproportionately high number of BAME health and social care workers dying from Covid-19 is striking, so I welcome news that NHS England has recommended these individuals to be identified as potentially at greater risk.

"Our analysis showed 63 per cent of healthcare workers who have died from coronavirus were BAME individuals."

The Royal College of Surgeons has said that health workers from ethnic minority groups should be removed from high-risk areas to protect them from coronavirus.

However, it cautioned that doing so would put more pressure on their colleagues

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/nhs-doctor-dad-six-dies-21956248
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Dr. Nasir Khan a British Pakistani NHS consultant of medicine in Bolton hospital passed away today due to COVID19. <a href="https://t.co/pSXhrSDHvX">pic.twitter.com/pSXhrSDHvX</a></p>— Dr.Ashraf Chohan #StayAtHomeSaveLives (@DrAshrafChohan) <a href="https://twitter.com/DrAshrafChohan/status/1255281882448658433?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
The son of a care home nurse who died in the UK after contracting Covid-19 has said a lack of personal protective equipment is what killed his mother, as the family were forced to say goodbye via an iPad.

In an online tribute, Ian O’Neal described Suzanne Loverseed, 63, as a “lioness” who gave everything for her children.

He wrote: “At the end, she worked in a care home, with patients dying of this virus. She had no PPE [protective personal equipment] but fearlessly she carried on. That’s what killed her.”

It comes amid growing concern about the risks faced by those in the UK’s care homes, with the sector believed to be at the centre of crisis. On Wednesday, the government released figures that revealed coronavirus deaths for both in hospitals and the community, including care homes, for the first time. It added an additional 3,811 deaths for those who had tested positive for Covid-19 in the community since the start of the outbreak, bringing the total number of deaths to more than 26,000.
 
A 26-year-old female doctor passed away from the coronavirus at Rawalpindi's Holy Family hospital, it emerged on Saturday.

The hospital's medical superintendent, Dr Shehzad, confirmed that the young doctor died due to Covid-19. He revealed that Dr Rabia Tayyab had complained about mild flu and cough symptoms on April 20 which the doctors declared as "normal fever".

When her condition worsened after four days, she was brought to the Holy Family Hospital. She was put on a ventilator but died on April 30.

The doctor hailed from Gujjar Khan in Rawalpindi and was the daughter of renowned teacher Mohammad Tayyab. She graduated from the Quaid-i-Azam Medical College in Bahawalpur and was due to start her house job from May 1.

Her death emerged a day after data shared by the National Emergency Operation Centre revealed that at least 191 more healthcare providers and medical workers tested positive for the coronavirus within a week. The total number of infected medical workers in the country has risen to 444.

Read: Infections amongst healthcare workers increase by 75pc in a week

The report showed that 216 doctors, 67 nurses and 161 healthcare staff tested positive across the country. Of these, 204 were in isolation at homes, 138 were admitted to hospitals while 94 had recovered from the disease.

According to the report, which contained data up until April 29, eight healthcare workers had died from the coronavirus so far. The first known Covid-19 fatality among the local medical community occurred in Gilgit-Baltistan where a young doctor, Usama Riaz, succumbed to the disease in March.

Early last month, Dr Abdul Qadir Soomro from Sindh became the province's first Covid-19 fatality from the medical community.

Last week, a senior doctor at Peshawar's Hayatabad Medical Complex passed away from Covid-19. He had been working in the hospital's coronavirus ward.

According to the report, three healthcare workers died from the virus in Sindh, two in Gilgit-Baltistan and one each in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Islamabad.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1554002/26-year-old-doctor-dies-due-to-coronavirus-in-rawalpindi
 
'I look like I've been to war': NHS staff in pictures

An NHS worker has shared photos of hospital staff in their face masks to show "the emotions and tiredness of the effects of looking after patients", he said.

Colin Gray, 41, photographed his colleagues on Lavenham Ward at Ipswich Hospital because he wanted "to give the people I work alongside something to look back on in years to come", he said.

"I had comments like, 'I look totally broken, do I really look like that?', and 'I have a thousand yard stare, I look like I've been to war'", the clinical support technician said.

The pictures, titled "the eyes behind the mask", have received praise online.

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ER nurse who died of Covid-19 documented her fight

She was a 56-year-old ER nurse from New Jersey - a single mum to two boys who took three jobs to keep her family going. Pamela Orlando treated coronavirus patients until one day she became one.

Orlando started recording a video diary as a way of documenting her fight with the virus. On the first two days, she filmed herself at home. On the third day she was taken to hospital.

"I feel horrible. Almost like I'm not going to make it," she said on her fifth day. On 16 April, 24 days after falling ill, she died.

"I begged my mother to not go to work, I really did, but that's not who my mum was," her son Reid told CBS News "This is a woman who had everything to lose - but she still went out on the front line saving lives."
 
Junior doctors in the UK usually start work in August, but this year's graduations have been pushed forward so more medical workers can join the fight against the virus.

The new cohort will start work months earlier than expected.

"I think we're all very nervous and it feels quite scary," said Dr Maisha Choudhury.

"The fact that the NHS created this role for us, I guess means that it's just a testament [to] how stretched they are. If we can help in whatever little way we can, I think it will save lives, hopefully."
 
'You are my hero': Sindh health minister sends out appreciation letters to health workers

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Over 90,000 health workers infected worldwide - nurses group

At least 90,000 health care workers worldwide are believed to have been infected with Covid-19, and possibly twice that, amid reports of continuing shortages of protective equipment, the International Council of Nurses (ICN) said.

The disease has killed more than 260 nurses, it said in a statement, urging authorities to keep more accurate records to help prevent the virus from spreading among staff and patients.

“The figure for health care workers infections has risen from 23,000 to we think more than 90,000, but that is still an underestimation because it is not (covering) every country in the world,” Howard Catton, ICN’s chief executive officer, told Reuters.

The 90,000 estimate is based on information collected on 30 countries from national nursing associations, government figures and media reports.

The ICN represents 130 national associations and more than 20 million registered nurses.

Catton, noting that 3.5 million cases of Covid-19 have been reported worldwide, said: “If the average health worker infection rate, about 6% we think, is applied to that, the figure globally could be more than 200,000 health worker infections today.” He added:

The scandal is that governments are not systematically collecting and reporting on this information.

It looks to us as though they are turning a blind eye which we think is completely unacceptable and will cost more lives.

The World Health Organization, which is coordinating the global response to the pandemic, says that its 194 member states are not providing comprehensive figures on health worker infections.

The WHO last said on 11 April that some 22,000 health workers were thought to have been infected.
 
Health professionals in the UK have issued a legal challenge demanding an immediate inquiry into the government's failure to provide adequate protective equipment to front-line staff.

They say that action must be taken quickly so that "lessons can be learnt" from the Covid-19 crisis to help shape future responses, should the UK be hit by further waves of the virus.

A pre-action letter - sent by the Doctor's Association UK and the Good Law Project - details a list of "recurrent and systemic" failures in the supply and procurement of personal protective equipment.
 
At the beginning of April, a long line of police cars snaked slowly around a hospital in Winston-Salem, North Carolina with their blue lights flashing in the bright sun. It was a tribute, they said, to the healthcare workers risking their lives to treat patients with Covid-19.

But for Jonathan Vargas Andres, an ICU nurse treating Covid patients in that hospital, these grand gestures feel somewhat empty.

Jonathan is an undocumented worker who came to the US under the Daca "Dreamers" programme, and in the next few weeks he'll find out whether the country that he's risking his life to protect will decide to deport him.

"I try not to think about it because if I think about it for too long I get tired," Jonathan told the BBC. "I've basically had to zone it out for my own health."

Daca - or the Deferred Action on Childhood Arrivals is an Obama-era ruling from 2012 that shielded young people who were brought to the US illegally as children from deportation.

In 2017, President Trump decided to end the Daca programme. The Supreme Court is now considering a series of cases that challenge Trump's decision.
 
Some NHS managers have tried to stop doctors speaking publicly about shortages of personal protective equipment, the BBC has been told.

WhistleblowersUK said more than 100 healthcare workers had contacted them since the beginning of March, raising concerns about Covid-19 and PPE.

The Department of Health said no one should be prevented from speaking up.

But Newsnight has seen evidence of pressure being applied to doctors to not share concerns they have about PPE.

A newsletter sent out to staff at one trust suggested subjects for tweets, such as thanking staff for their hard work, paying tribute to retired NHS staff who had returned to the workforce and retweeting posts from the trust's account.

It specified that staff were to avoid "commenting on political issues, such as PPE".

Another trust put up posters in hospital staff areas which told healthcare workers not to "make public appeals for equipment, donations or volunteers".

'Stop causing a fuss'
One doctor who had posted concerns about PPE shortages online spoke to BBC Newsnight anonymously, for fear of reprisal from his hospital.

"They hauled me up in front of a panel of senior managers - it was very, very intimidating", he said.

"They kept on feeding me what felt like government type of lines, saying 'this hospital has never had PPE shortages' - which I know to be factually untrue. And that essentially I should stop causing a fuss.

"There have been colleagues who've died at my hospital. And there have been a handful more who've been in ICU (intensive care units).

"It's very, very concerning that we can't even say our colleagues have died, please don't let us be next."

Another doctor told the programme they were called into a meeting with senior NHS managers after speaking to the press about a lack of PPE.

They said they were told by their manager that if they continued to speak out they would get a "reputation" and "find it hard to get a job at that trust or others in the region".

The doctor said: "I was told we need positive messaging that suggested everyone in the NHS is working very hard, we are doing our best in the pandemic. I was told this is what we need to be putting out, not negative stories."

'System is completely broken'
Dr Jenny Vaughan, law and policy lead at campaigning organisation Doctors' Association UK, said their concerns "weren't listened to properly".

"These are people who had tried the right channels. These are people genuinely raising concerns who went to the people who should have listened to them and felt either they couldn't raise a concern or they weren't listened to.

"If you have a transparent, open culture of reporting and people feel free that they can speak up about safety concerns, it saves lives".

"The system is completely broken," said Georgina Halford-Hall, its chief executive.

"What we see time and time again in the evidence that comes back is that when an individual has raised a concern it goes straight to HR, who immediately begin to investigate the whistle-blower and look for things that they're doing wrong rather than looking at the actual issues that they're raising.

"The default position is an auto-immune response against the whistle-blower, and not - absolutely no intention whatsoever - to investigate or look into the allegations that they make."
Conservative MP and chair of the all-party parliamentary group for whistleblowing, Mary Robinson, said: "If we don't listen to the concerns of people on the front line we don't have the right tools to deal with issues like PPE shortages"

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "Whistleblowers perform a vital and courageous service in ensuring safe care, and no one should ever be prevented from speaking up or discriminated against if they do.

"Freedom to Speak Up Guardians are now established in every NHS trust in England to ensure workers who speak up are listened to, thanked and supported, and they have handled over 19,000 cases in the last two years."

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52671814
 
A third of UK nursing staff lack proper protective kit - survey

More than one in three nurses and healthcare assistants in the UK are caring for Covid-19 patients without adequate personal protective equipment (PPE), a poll suggests.

The survey of more than 5,000 nursing staff for the Royal College of Nursing found 34% were working without adequate PPE, including gowns and respirator masks.

Almost a quarter (23%) of respondents who need gowns said there were not enough for them to use, with a further 34% concerned about the supply for their next shift.

The government has previously said it is working "around the clock" to provide PPE to the NHS and social care sector.

Our colleague Michelle Roberts has more on PPE and the NHS.
 
Mourners have lined the streets for the funeral of a nurse and his parents who died within weeks of each other in England after contracting coronavirus.

Keith Dunnington, 54, a nurse for more than 30 years, died at his parents' home in South Shields on 19 April.

His mother Lillian, 81, died on 1 May and her husband Maurice, 85, died days later in hospital.

NHS staff, well-wishers and fire crews paid tribute to the family outside South Tyneside District Hospital.
 
From Pakistan:

You'll buy new clothes when your parents and children are alive, say YDA doctors

Young Doctors Association (YDA) has demanded the government to provide personal protective equipment and masks to healthcare professionals, "not for their sake but for the safety of the patients".

During a press conference in Lahore, a YDA representative regretted that the authorities were not ensuring that social distancing is observed and proper safety measures are taken.

"We don't want to scare anyone, but you will only buy new clothes for Eid when your parents and children are alive," a representative said. He further said that doctors were working day and night, without taking breaks but were not being given due respect.

The YDA member urged the government to make hospitals safe for patients, adding that if appropriate measures are not taken, doctors will start informing incoming patients that hospitals are not safe for their health.

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Hospitals not safe for Covid-19 patients: YDA

Members of the Young Doctors Association in Lahore have said that hospitals are "not safe for coronavirus patients" because SOPs are not implemented.

During a press conference outside the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC) in Lahore, they said that test results, that should ideally be received in 12 hours are released in 14 days, which endangers other people, who are usually suffering from heart ailments and admitted in the hospital with suspected patients.

He demanded that:

the government recognises PIC as a facility for Covid-19 patients

PPEs be provided to doctors and hospital staff

testing facility be increased

"It is the right of the patients that they are protected from any of us who might be a carrier," the YDA representative said.

"Doctors do not take tea breaks or lunch breaks, they don't go on summer or winter vacations, do not opt out of night duties. We are doing all we can," he said and urged authorities to not project doctors as public enemies.
 
The Home Office is now extending its bereavement scheme, which offers indefinite leave to remain, to the families and dependents of NHS support staff and social care workers who die as a result of contracting the coronavirus
 
The Home Office is now extending its bereavement scheme, which offers indefinite leave to remain, to the families and dependents of NHS support staff and social care workers who die as a result of contracting the coronavirus

Family of non-British NHS workers granted right to stay

Family members and dependants of non-British NHS and social care workers who die with coronavirus can be granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK after their deaths, it has been announced.

The government had been under pressure from opposition MPs to extend the scheme to them.

The offer of indefinite leave to remain will be effective immediately and retrospectively, ministers say.
 
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing a potential rebellion from some Conservative MPs after he rejected calls to scrap the fees overseas health workers have to pay to use the NHS.

The health immigration surcharge on non-EU migrants is £400 ($489) per year and set to rise to £624 ($763) in October.

BBC Newsnight understands that unease is brewing among Tory MPs over the prime minister's stance.

Labour, the SNP and the Royal College of Nursing say the charge is "unfair".
 
The families of overseas NHS support staff and care workers who have died with coronavirus can now stay in the UK permanently.

The Home Office bereavement scheme had previously only applied to certain professions, such as nurses.

Home Secretary Priti Patel has extended it to cover cleaners, porters and other low-paid roles after pressure from the opposition Labour Party and the unions.

The offer of indefinite leave to remain for bereaved families of support staff will be effective immediately and retrospectively, the Home Office said.

It comes after Syrian refugee Hassan Akkad, a documentary maker working for the NHS as a cleaner on a Covid-19 ward, shared a video on social media on Wednesday. In the video, directed to the prime minister, he says he feels "betrayed" and "stabbed in the back" that he and his colleagues weren't included in the bereavement scheme.
 
The Prime Minister has asked the Home Office and the Department for Health and Social Care to remove NHS and care workers from the NHS surcharge as soon as possible
 
The UK's weekly applause for front-line workers tackling the coronavirus outbreak has "had its moment" and should end next Thursday, the woman behind it has suggested.

It would be "beautiful" to end Clap for Carers after its 10th week, and make it an annual event, Annemarie Plas said.

She said the public had "shown our appreciation" and it was now up to ministers to "reward" key workers.

The government has said it is considering how best to do so.

Some have taken to incorporating pots and pans during into their weekly claps
The event originally began as a one-off to support NHS staff on 26 March - three days after the UK went into lockdown.

However, after proving very popular, it was expanded to cover all key workers and has continued every Thursday at 20:00 BST, with people peering out of their windows or standing on their doorsteps to show their appreciation by clapping, cheering, banging saucepans and playing instruments.

Dutch-born Londoner Ms Plas, who is credited with starting the nationwide applause, told BBC Radio 2's Jeremy Vine show that it was inspired by similar events in the Netherlands and around the world.

But she said: "Because this is the ninth time - and next week will be 10 times - I think that [it] would be beautiful [for it] to be the end of the series."

"Maybe there [it should] stop and then move to an annual moment, because I also feel we're slowly shifting and other opinions [are] start to rise to the surface," she added.

"So I feel like this [has] had its moment and then we can adapt - let's continue to something else."

The applause has been called into question in recent weeks. Some NHS staff have said they felt "stabbed in the back" by people breaking lockdown guidelines to hold VE Day street parties or flock to the beach.

Others have suggested the NHS would benefit more from extra funding rather than applause, while Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has said many key workers are "overlooked and underpaid".

Ms Plas said she feels that people have shown key workers their appreciation and it is now the responsibility of "the people that are in power... to reward and give them the respect they deserve".

In a later interview, she added: "Without getting too political, I share some of the opinions that some people have about it becoming politicised.

"I think the narrative is starting to change and I don't want the clap to be negative."

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52773032
 
An NHS doctor working in a COVID-19 intensive care unit has said he will resign by the end of the week if Dominic Cummings has not done so by then - and said other NHS staff will most likely follow.

Dr Dominic Pimenta, a cardiology registrar, tweeted a picture of himself wearing personal protective equipment (PPE), saying: "This stuff is hot and hard work. Haven't seen my parents since January.

"Frankly, Cummings spits in the face of all our efforts, the whole NHS. If he doesn't resign, I will."

Boris Johnson has backed his top aide and has refused to fire him after he was accused of breaching lockdown rules by travelling from London to Durham with his wife and young son to stay with his parents at the end of March - a week after the lockdown was imposed.

Dr Pimenta said he will announce his decision to quit by the end of the week if Mr Cummings is still in his position.

He said: "I found it incredibly insulting to see the whole cabinet doubling down on this issue and undermining the public who are working incredibly hard to follow the guidance, it's a betrayal.

"NHS staff have bent over backwards to meet this incredible challenge, spending hundreds of extra hours in meetings and drawing up timetables to care for patients.

"I do think it's still early days yet, but I'll give them until the end of the week for Mr Cummings to resign before I do.

"I'm not trying to lead a movement, but I wouldn't be surprised if more did the same."

The doctor called on the government and cabinet members to apologise as he said they "cannot continue to insult health workers like this".

"Many feel incredibly disrespected, like all their hard work and energy has been thrown back in their faces," he said.

Mr Johnson's decision to back Mr Cummings has brought about a rift among Conservative MPs as well, with at least 15 telling Sky News they want the controversial aide to resign.

However, during Sunday's daily coronavirus press briefing, Mr Johnson remained steadfastedly supportive, saying Mr Cummings acted "responsibly, legally and with integrity".

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...-resign-if-dominic-cummings-does-not-11994170
 
Muslim doctors in Malaysia spend Eid in hospitals

Eid has become a more sombre affair for Muslim Muslim Malaysian doctors, amid the coronavirus pandemic that has so far seen over 7,000 people in the country infected with the coronavirus, including 115 who have died of COVID-19.

Muslim-majority Malaysia has imposed widespread restrictions on movement since mid-March in a bid to stem the virus outbreak.
 
Coronavirus: NHS doctor revealed as antibody 'super-donor' after COVID-19 recovery

A doctor who spent a week in intensive care with coronavirus has been revealed as an antibody "super-donor" who could save the lives of other people.

Alessandro Giardini, 46, has the highest antibody level in his plasma measured so far in a trial - around 40 times that of the average patient.

The discovery was made as part of an NHS trial to analyse the blood of 435 COVID-19 patients.

Mr Giardini, a consultant in the cardiology department of Great Ormond Street children's hospital, spent seven days on a ventilator in intensive care after falling ill with COVID-19.

He described being ill with the virus as a "very hard experience" as he did not know if he would see his wife and two children again.

He said he felt he "had to give back" by donating his convalescent plasma to help other patients.

Mr Giardini added: "Even though it was scary to go back into a medical environment and have a needle again, I really felt that if there was any chance I could help someone else who was still ill with COVID-19, that I needed to do it.

NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT), which is collecting the plasma for the trial, is appealing to recovered COVID-19 patients, especially men aged over 35 or those have been admitted to hospital, to come forward.

Research found that men were twice as likely (34%) to have high enough antibody levels compared to women (17%).

And only 10% of people aged under 35 had high enough antibody levels compared to 31% of 35-to-45-year-olds and 40% of those aged over 45.

Meanwhile, 70% of people admitted to hospital with coronavirus had high enough antibody levels compared to 31% of donors who had a positive test for COVID-19 but did not require hospital treatment.

Professor David Roberts, NHSBT's associate medical director for blood donation, said: "People who are more seriously ill produce more antibodies, which can be transfused to potentially help others.

"The evidence so far is that men and older people are more seriously affected by coronavirus."
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...ovid-19-recovery-11994998?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter
 
On the morning of May 20, Dr Amara Khalid took to her Instagram to write the following words: “What happened last night was shocking. I still cannot come to terms with it.”

The 27-year-old, who works in the special ward for coronavirus patients at the Mayo Hospital in Lahore, was rattled after the previous night’s events. At 2:30am, Dr Khalid was still on duty, tending to the COVID-19 infected, when she heard some commotion in the corridors.

She peeked out and saw a large group of men – around 30- surround the security guard posted outside their building.

The enraged men slapped the guard, pushed him around and then barged into the building. If another guard had not quickly rushed forward to lock the room where the patients were, the mob would have made its way in.

The men shouting abuses and threatening doctors were relatives of two female patients who had tested positive for coronavirus. One of them had died on her way to the ward.

Read also: Only 9 beds left in Karachi hospitals for COVID-19 patients

“A whole building at Mayo is dedicated for COVID-19 patients,” Dr Khalid told Geo.tv over the phone. “This whole building is off-limits for unauthorised persons. Yet, these people came inside the high-risk area.”

Dr Khalid and Dr Bilal Nadeem quickly pulled out their hazmat suits. Just as they were getting dressed, a man dragged Dr Nadeem out of the doctors’ room and shoved him into the ward.

“He was pushed inside without personal protection equipment (PPE),” Dr Khalid said. By now other female patients in the room had begun to panic. Some even started to cry. “The relatives outside kept shouting at us, saying that coronavirus is just a hoax.”

Frightened, some doctors and nurses locked themselves in a storeroom. “There were no signals in the room to make a phone call, but luckily we found a landline and dialled the police,” Dr Khalid recalled.

That night, the men broke a hospital door, manhandled a guard and misbehaved with doctors.

Two days later, the CEO of Mayo Hospital wrote a letter to the Capital City Police Office in Lahore requesting security. “Regarding the incident of scuffle and misbehaviour on part of attendants of a patient who expired in Mayo… consequent request for deployment of sufficient police force,” the letter reads, as seen by Geo.tv.

Read also: Can you contract coronavirus through your air conditioner?

A similar incident of violence, the letter adds, took place on May 23.

Since the outbreak of the coronavirus in Punjab, Mayo Hospital has been one of the most heavily-impacted health facility in the province, out of 19 state-run hospitals in Lahore.

Mayo Hospital has 2,400 beds, of which 200 have been dedicated to the coronavirus patients. Almost all the beds – those for the virus and others - are currently occupied, doctors say.

Documents shared by the hospital staff show that there are 195 patients in the COVID-19 ward at the moment. While, to date, 78 people have died of the deadly disease and 35 healthcare workers have tested positive at the hospital. Separately, there are 82 ventilators at the facility. Three are non-functional.

Relatives of a COVID-19 patients break windows and damage the COVID-19 ward at Mayo Hospital.

In the last one month, the hospital has been overrun with patients.

Dr Mahmood Ahmed, president of the Young Doctors Association at Mayo said that recently when he was contacted by a family for a bed equipped with a ventilator, the doctor told them to send the patient immediately. “I said we have a ventilator now but I cannot guarantee if it will be available in an hour.”

Equipment, such as medical monitors in surgery rooms, are being taken down and shifted to the COVID-19 ward. “We are running short on almost everything,” Dr Ahmed went on, “All surgeries have been affected. Neuro surgeries are not even taking place. And neurosurgery patients can’t wait for too long.”

Dr Rashid Virk agrees. He is a medical officer and an Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) consultant at Mayo Hospital.

“Space is a major issue,” he told Geo.tv, “If I want to admit an ENT patient in the hospital today, I won’t be able to.”

As per official rules, he adds, patients who had symptoms of the virus were first shifted to Mayo Hospital. “But recently Mayo does not have enough ventilators to cater to so many patients.”

Punjab has recorded over 22,000 cases of COVID-19 cases to date and 381 deaths. Around 48% of the infections in the province are in Lahore alone.

With the influx of patients, doctors also complain that the rising temperature in the city is making working more difficult. “There are no air conditioners in the room for the coronavirus patients,” Dr Amara Khalid said, “We doctors have 10 hours shifts and we only get one PPE to use the entire day. It is difficult.”

https://www.geo.tv/latest/290251-at...covid-19-patients-face-hostility-and-mistrust
 
We want money not medals, say protesting French health workers

Hundreds of healthcare workers demonstrated outside a hospital in Paris on Thursday to demand better pay and more resources for a public health sector on the frontline of the COVID-19 epidemic.
 
The daily situation report by the directorate general health services Punjab issued on May 28, put the total number of medics and healthcare providers infected at 341. The number is up from a day earlier when 241 medical professionals were tested positive for the deadly disease.

As per the latest report, 2,173 healthcare workers were suspected of being carriers of the virus. All the suspected have been tested and 15.6 per cent have the virus. While 84 per cent have tested negative.

The positivity rate amongst doctors, nurses and others medics in the province has shot up from the previous 12.7 per cent to 15.6 per cent.

Separately, on Thursday, the province sampled 5,348 tests in a single day while it has the capacity of 6,400 daily tests, according to official figures.

Also, the report notes that the majority, 7,034, cases in the province are in the age bracket between 16-30 years.

Meanwhile, on Thursday Punjab recorded its highest death tally, 29, related to coronavirus in a single day.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Nurses<br>doctors<br>sanitation workers<br>journalists<br>truck drivers<br>grocery store workers<br>researchers<br>& all essential workers<br><br>are risking their well-being to serve their communities.<br><br>We thank them for being on the front lines during the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/COVID19?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#COVID19</a> pandemic.<br><br>&#55356;&#57256;: Mahalakshmi Guruprasad <a href="https://t.co/LnfYIdpTiI">pic.twitter.com/LnfYIdpTiI</a></p>— United Nations (@UN) <a href="https://twitter.com/UN/status/1266263756562223104?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 29, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Egypt’s prime minister, Mostafa Madbouly, has told the country’s embattled medical syndicate that doctors who die on the job will be viewed as “martyrs” and their families compensated, in the same manner as security forces who die in battle, Ruth Michaelson reports.

The comparison to military honours was an attempt to cool tensions between the country’s medical syndicate, which represents medical professionals in Egypt, and a government that has drawn anger over poor working conditions for medical professionals on the frontline against Covid-19. Earlier this week the syndicate accused the Egyptian health ministry of negligence, describing it as a “crime of killing by irresponsibility”.

Twenty-three Egyptian doctors have died and 350 have contracted Covid-19. True numbers are expected to be higher, as doctors previously complained of barriers to obtaining vital tests for themselves and patients. The health ministry drew particularly pointed criticism this week over the death of doctor Walid Yehia, who died after he was unable to access treatment at an overcrowded Cairo hospital, despite the attempts of his colleagues
 
5 doctors and one nurse lost their lives to COVID in pakistan today. Most pf my colleagues have already got the infection, some have recovered while other are recovering. Very alarming situation z
 
5 doctors and one nurse lost their lives to COVID in pakistan today. Most pf my colleagues have already got the infection, some have recovered while other are recovering. Very alarming situation z

A female doctor in her 20s died at a private hospital in Lahore after testing positive for the novel coronavirus, the Punjab health department confirmed on Friday.

According to the health department, Dr Sana Fatima was treating Covid-19 patients at Fatima Memorial Hospital.

She was admitted to Doctors Hospital and Medical Centre on May 20 after testing positive for the virus and developing symptoms of its related disease — Covid-19. She died early morning today after her condition deteriorated, the department said.

Fatima was also a resident at Chughtai Lab, Lahore, and leaves behind a husband and a daughter.

Speaking to Dawn.com, Punjab health secretary Nabeel Awan expressed his condolences over the passing.

"The government is providing doctors with all the facilities. Doctors all over the world who are fighting the virus on the frontlines are dying. The situation in Pakistan is no different," he said.

Earlier this month, another doctor – a recent graduate from the Quaid-i-Azam Medical College in Bahawalpur – had died from the virus in Rawalpindi just days before she could begin her professional career with a house job.

Punjab has reported 29 deaths today, its highest single-day death toll so far, the health department said, adding that a majority of the cases were being reported in the provincial capital, Lahore. The province has reported a total of 22,964 cases since the virus first emerged in Pakistan on February 26.

Data from the health ministry — dated May 28 — shows that 17 medical professionals have died of Covid-19 in Pakistan out of a total 1,904 who tested positive; this figure included 299 nurses, 570 others healthcare staff and 1,035 doctors.

Of these, 1,037 were self-isolating and 171 were hospitalised; 167 were in stable condition while four were on ventilators. Further, 679 had recovered from the virus or were discharged from the hospital.

Sindh has reported the deaths of eight healthcare workers, the highest among provinces, with a total of 538 cases among medics.

On the other hand, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has 552 cases among healthcare workers, the highest out of all the provinces, which include 249 doctors, 97 nurses and 205 other health workers.

Of the 1,904 doctors who tested positive for the virus in the country, 368 were performing duties in critical care wards while the remaining 1,536 were performing duties elsewhere.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1560172/l...ting-covid-19-patients-passes-away-from-virus
 
5 doctors and one nurse lost their lives to COVID in pakistan today. Most pf my colleagues have already got the infection, some have recovered while other are recovering. Very alarming situation z

From my ward, 3 doctor have tested positive. One has fever with cough. Other 2 have Anosmia ( loss of sense of smell ). These two work in my shift.
Another 5 doctors from other wards have tested positive.
All in last 48 hours.

Anosmia has become a very common first symptom of Covid.
 
The novel coronavirus has infected 1,904 healthcare workers in Pakistan and 17 have died since the outbreak first emerged, official data reveals.

The new data provides sobering evidence that doctors, nurses, paramedics and other healthcare providers are working in high risk areas without adequate protection gear.

In Sindh, 538 healthcare professional have tested positive for the coronavirus, and eight have died, a report by the ministry of national health services dated May 29 states.

Similarly, in Punjab, 341 healthcare workers have been infected to date. There have been no deaths in the healthcare sector. However, the Punjab chapter of the Young Doctors Association, the largest union of doctors in the country, told Geo.tv that seven healthcare professional have died in the province.

In Balochistan, 237 have been infected and two have died, as per official data. Although, the director general health in the province told Geo.tv that seven healthcare providers have died and 280 are infected.

In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the largest majority, 552, have tested positive while four have died.

Separately, 42 healthcare providers have contracted the virus in Gilgit Baltistan, while two have died. In Azad Jammu and Kashmir, nine have been infected. There have been no deaths reported so far.

In Islamabad, 185 medics have the virus. While one death has been reported from the capital city.

Pakistan reported its first doctors to have died from the deadly virus in March, from the northern Gilgit Baltistan. The 26-year-old Dr. Usama Riaz contracted the coronavirus while screening pilgrims returning from Iran.

Since then, doctors who are on the frontline in Pakistan has made repeated requests for personal protection equipment (PPEs) and other safety gear to shield them from the disease. In a series of press conference earlier this month, they have also appealed to the government to reconsider its decision to ease the lockdown country-wide lockdown.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/290530-17-healthcare-workers-have-died-of-coronavirus-in-pakistan
 
A mob of around 70 people attacked doctors and staff at the emergency ward in Civil Hospital, Karachi on Friday night. The attack was carried out after one of the attacker’s relative died of COVID-19 and the hospital refused to hand over the body without proper protocols.

This was the third incident of its kind at the hospital and long in a line of increasing incidents of violence against medical workers during the epidemic in Pakistan.

Relatives of the deceased COVID-19 patient, who had been brought to the hospital in a deteriorating state, turned violent after the patient passed away. They stormed the ER and took the body from the hospital without following any of the SOPs for COVID-19 deaths, confirmed CHK Medical Superintendent Dr Khadim Qureshi.

An FIR was lodged on Saturday.

Following the incident, young doctors at the hospital protested for their security on Saturday. They closed down OPDs and demanded the Sindh government provide them proper protection.

Head of Healthcare in Danger Initiative at the International Committee of the Red Cross Dr Mirwais Khan said COVID-19 has already overburdened a thinly stretched healthcare system. “It’s about time we realise health workers are people and they don’t need to accept this violence as part of their duty. It is also important to treat COVID-19 patients and their families with kindness. The stigma attached to COVID-19 diagnosis needs to be erased so families can bring in patients before the end stages of the disease.”

Earlier in the month, Karachi’s Jinnah hospital had also witnessed two such incidents after COVID-19 patients passed away. Doctors at Patel Hospital say they’ve been witnessing such violence from attendants regularly ever since the pandemic began.

The Sindh government had then changed the SOPs for the burial of COVID-19 patients. The new guidelines allowed the deceased’s family to take the body after washing and shrouding had been carried out by trained health personnel.

A 2019 study by the ICRC across 16 cities in three provinces of Pakistan found that 49.2% of the total healthcare workers surveyed had either experienced and/or witnessed some kind of violence and more than one-third (38.5%) reported having experienced some form of violence in the last six months.

https://www.samaa.tv/news/2020/05/k...-attacked-by-mob-after-covid-19-patient-dies/
 
KARACHI: Amid growing number of violent incidents at hospitals and attacks on health workers allegedly by attendants of patients, the Sindh government while ordering an inquiry into a recent similar episode at the Civil Hospital Karachi decided on Sunday to register criminal cases of all violent incidents against those responsible.

A key member of the provincial administration said that Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah while taking notice of the violence against the medical staff of the CHK ordered an immediate inquiry into the incident.

“Our doctors, nurses and paramedics are risking their lives to save the lives of others. Such violence against them is intolerable,” said Sindh Information Minister Nasir Shah. “If people had a complaint against the medical staff, they should have talked to the administration and not attacked them.”

He said that a legal action was being taken against all the attackers and cases had been registered against them.

Police are conducting raids to arrest those involved in the CHK violence

He said that a detailed report in this regard would be submitted to the CM soon.

He said that the CM expressed his indignation over all these incidents in which the CHK as well as the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre were vandalised.

Addressing doctors, nurses and paramedical staff of government hospitals, Nasir Shah said that they should not feel alone at all as the government was standing by them.

FIR lodged in CHK violence case

The Eidgah police registered a case against over 20 unknown attendants/relatives of a Covid-19 patient who allegedly misbehaved with doctors and security guards of the CHK on Friday night over a delay in handling over of the body to them.

Area SHO Nadeem Haider said that the FIR was registered on Saturday night against on the complaint of Dr Hafeez Rehman, who works at the ‘corona control room’ of the hospital.

According to the contents of the FIR (248/2020), the 55-year-old patient, who was a resident of Keamari, was brought at the hospital at about 2:14pm on May 29. He passed away during treatment at 7:30 p.m.

The complainant said he was a Covid-19 patient and doctors and staff advised the attendants to follow the standard operating procedures for the Covid-19 patient’s death but they refused.

“At 10:30pm, they started misbehaving with the staff and security guards and forcibly took away the body,” the FIR reads.

The FIR was lodged under Sections 147 (rioting), 269 (negligent act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life), 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace) and 337-A (I) (Shajjah: causing hurt to any person) of the Pakistan Penal Code.

Meanwhile City SP-Investigation Mukhtiyar Khaskheli said that some suspects had been identified.

The police conducted raids at their homes in Keamari but no arrests were made as they had allegedly fled.

‘Coronavirus pandemic has saved PTI govt’

Meanwhile, Information Minister Nasir Shah said that the coronavirus pandemic had saved the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf government, otherwise everyone could see the state of economy that was due to the failed policies of the incompetent government.

“Everyone knows who is causing controversies in the country,” he said, adding that the seriousness of the prime minister could be gauged from the fact that the first case of Covid-19 was reported in the country on Feb 26 while he convened the first meeting to address this serious issue on March 13. He said that only a tweet came between Feb 26 and March 13.

He said that from the very beginning, the Sindh government tried its best that a unanimous voice should go out in public regarding the steps being taken to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, but it was unfortunate to say that due to the lack of seriousness of the federal government, the sincere attempt of the provincial government failed.

He said that the Sindh government decided to impose a strict lockdown in the province after consulting medical experts.

If the PM at that time had supported Sindh CM regarding a strict lockdown the situation would have been very different today, he said.

“If we had taken appropriate measures at the Iran and Afghanistan borders and at airports in the beginning, we could have prevented the coronavirus from entering the country,” he said.

“Because of the federal government’s failure to make timely decisions, we will now have to deal with the coronavirus for a long time,” he said.

He said that opening of businesses would be allowed but with standard operating procedures.

Mr Shah said that when the PM woke up on March 13 how timely preventive measures could be taken?

He said the Sindh government had been accused from the beginning of intimidating the people.

The information minister said when the doctors held a press conference and talked about the threat of coronavirus they were also accused of holding a press conference at the behest of the Sindh government.

He said that although the Sindh government seemed to be a villain in the eyes of a common man and business community today, but whatever tough decisions it took it did it to save lives.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1560563/s...of-cases-against-people-vandalising-hospitals
 
Authorities devise security plan for Karachi's Civil Hospital after mob violence

Police, Rangers, hospital administration and civil administration have jointly chalked out a security plan for Dr Ruth Pfau Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK) to avoid any unpleasant situation in the future, said DIG South Sharjeel Kharal during a visit to the facility.

The development comes days after dozens of people vandalised the CHK and attacked doctors, allegedly due to a delay in handing over the body of a Covid-19 patient.

The DIG said that under the new security plan, an additional force will be deployed at the entry gate and emergency of the hospital. An anti-riots platoon will be also deployed.

In addition, video recording will be carried out through CCTV cameras and communication with the hospital will be further enhanced to ensure security to doctors and medics.
 
PM Imran summons emergency plan to safeguard medics from Covid-19

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday took notice of doctors and paramedical staff infected with coronavirus across the country while treating Covid-19 patients, ARY News reported.

According to sources, PM Imran Khan has summoned an emergency plan from concerned authorities in order to safeguard medics from Covid-19.

Ministry of Health and National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) officials will brief the prime minister about plans to protect doctors from getting infected with COVID-19.

It must be noted that doctors and paramedical staff have been on the frontline in the battle against the novel coronavirus.

According to statistics released by the Ministry for National Health and Emergency Services, the total number of health workers affected from coronavirus in Pakistan has reached 2,193 as 23 of them lost their battle against the infection thus far.

At least 139 more tested positive for the virus on Monday while two of them died from it during the last 24 hours.

As many as 333 nurses have also contracted the infection as they treat virus patients on the frontline. Overall 628 paramedics have been affected by novel coronavirus in the country, the report showed.

It further showed that 196 health workers are still being treated for the infection across the country in hospitals with seven of them put on ventilators due to their critical health condition.

“1185 of them are self-isolating at their homes,” it said as 789 health workers were discharged after being recovered from the infection.

Last week, SAPM Mirza said that the government was planning on hiring retired government doctors under contract to curb the dearth of doctors and paramedics in the country amidst the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.
https://arynews.tv/en/pm-imran-emergency-plan-safeguard-medics-covid-19/
 
The Grand Health Alliance (GHA) threatened to go on strike from June 11 if its demands are not met by the government, saying that doctors, nurses and paramedical staff were still deprived of surgical masks, treatment and allowances.

In a press conference held at the National Institute of Pediatrics in Karachi today, YDA General Secretary Sindh Dr Mehboob Noorani lamented that despite repeated demands of healthcare professionals, the Sindh government was making false claims regarding the provision of essential medical equipment to doctors, nurses and the paramedical staff in the fight against COVID-19.

"There are no ventilators in hospitals, doctors are not provided N95 mask and the health workers have to work without the safety kit," he said, adding that "doctors are being sent to the battlefield without weapons".

Maintaining that a separate isolation centre should be set up for the paramedical staff, Dr Mehboob noted that nurses should be given Health Professionals Allowance facility and a service structure should be formed for doctors and nurses.

He said that doctors were not in need of salutes rather, those who were martyred in the line of duty, their families should be given Shuhuda Packages.

Also read: Pakistan registers highest number of positive cases for third consecutive day

"The Sindh government has handed powers to private hospitals and the mafia," he said, noting with disappointment that even JPMC Director Seemin Jamali was sent to a private hospital for treatment recently.

Urging authorities to provide security to health professionals working in various hospitals across the country, he demanded that Rangers checkposts should be set up in medical centres to ensure the safety of the front-line workers.

Meanwhile, Sindh Young Nurses Association (SYNA) Chairperson Syed Shahid Iqbal said that nurses have been protesting for many years now but to no avail.

"Nurses were tortured by hooligans in Lyari yet no inquiry was held against the incident," he lambasted, putting his demand forward that about 2300 nurses should be made permanent.

Raising concerns that the ease in lockdown will worsen the situation in the coming days, the health experts predicted that it will be followed by an increase in the COVID-19 drastically while endangering the lives of paramedics and common citizens.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/291417-yda-warns-of-strike-if-govt-doesnt-pay-heed-to-demands-by-june-11
 
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan lauded on Thursday the services of doctors and paramedics at the forefront of the country’s fight against the novel coronavirus.

Speaking to a delegation of Insaf Doctors Forum at the PM Office, he said the entire nation pays tribute to health professionals struggling to turn the tide against the pathogen that has so far infected more than 80,000 people and killed over 1,770.

Prime Minister Khan lamented that the health sector was ignored in the past, due to which people faced hardships in getting access to quality healthcare. The government will iron out the existing inefficiencies in the healthcare system and provide quality health facilities to the people, he reiterated.

The visiting delegation put forth a suggestion for establishing a hospital in Waziristan. To which, the prime minister assured that a task force set up for bringing reforms to the health sector would consider the proposal.

Earlier, on June 2, Prime Minister Khan had said the entire nation paid homage to the doctors and other health workers performing their duties on the frontlines in the fight against coronavirus pandemic.

Chairing a high-level meeting on the requirements of the healthcare workers, he said that the government would meet all the needs of medical workers on a priority basis.

https://arynews.tv/en/pm-imran-khan-lauds-doctors-paramedics/
 
Frontline workers and their family members to be provided healthcare on 'priority basis', says Mirza

Doctors and health workers who have lost their lives during their fight against the novel coronavirus will be commemorated on every day of national importance, along with other martyrs of the country.

He further said that medical professionals will be tested and provided healthcare and medicines on a priority basis. If a family member of a frontline health worker falls ill, the government will bear the cost of their treatment.

While acknowledging the efforts of frontline workers, Mirza said that the package does not equal the efforts they are making and promised that the government will try its best to provide more facilities to doctors and healthcare staff.

==

Tax relief to be provided to health workers, says Mirza

The government has decided to provide tax relief to healthcare workers who are fighting against Covid-19, SAPM Zafar Mirza said.

For medical workers who have passed away from the virus, the government has already announced a Shuhda package.

In order to ensure the security of doctors, the supply of protective equipment, including masks, PPEs etc will be ensured.

==

SAPM Mirza presents 7-part package for doctors, frontline workers

The government's package for the relief of doctors and health care professionals is based on seven groups, SAPM on Health Dr Zafar Mirza said in a briefing.

Each of the groups comprises different points, he added. The highlights of the package include:

Financial incentives

Security of frontline health workers and doctors

Training of medical professionals

Support mechanism

Healthcare of doctors and their families

Incentives to be provided to private health sector

Commemoration of doctors

==

Dr Zafar Mirza pays tribute to frontline workers, says nothing can repay their sacrifices

SAPM on Health Dr Zafar Mirza has said that the government, after consultation with all stakeholders including medical associations, has prepared a package for health workers and doctors, who have been on the frontline in the fight against Covid-19.

Paying rich tribute to doctors and medical professionals, he said: "No package can match up to the sacrifices they (doctors) and their families are making, but I will present the points of this package [which is being given as] a gesture."
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]
 
Last edited:
Frontline workers and their family members to be provided healthcare on 'priority basis', says Mirza

Doctors and health workers who have lost their lives during their fight against the novel coronavirus will be commemorated on every day of national importance, along with other martyrs of the country.

He further said that medical professionals will be tested and provided healthcare and medicines on a priority basis. If a family member of a frontline health worker falls ill, the government will bear the cost of their treatment.

While acknowledging the efforts of frontline workers, Mirza said that the package does not equal the efforts they are making and promised that the government will try its best to provide more facilities to doctors and healthcare staff.

==

Tax relief to be provided to health workers, says Mirza

The government has decided to provide tax relief to healthcare workers who are fighting against Covid-19, SAPM Zafar Mirza said.

For medical workers who have passed away from the virus, the government has already announced a Shuhda package.

In order to ensure the security of doctors, the supply of protective equipment, including masks, PPEs etc will be ensured.

==

SAPM Mirza presents 7-part package for doctors, frontline workers

The government's package for the relief of doctors and health care professionals is based on seven groups, SAPM on Health Dr Zafar Mirza said in a briefing.

Each of the groups comprises different points, he added. The highlights of the package include:

Financial incentives

Security of frontline health workers and doctors

Training of medical professionals

Support mechanism

Healthcare of doctors and their families

Incentives to be provided to private health sector

Commemoration of doctors

==

Dr Zafar Mirza pays tribute to frontline workers, says nothing can repay their sacrifices

SAPM on Health Dr Zafar Mirza has said that the government, after consultation with all stakeholders including medical associations, has prepared a package for health workers and doctors, who have been on the frontline in the fight against Covid-19.

Paying rich tribute to doctors and medical professionals, he said: "No package can match up to the sacrifices they (doctors) and their families are making, but I will present the points of this package [which is being given as] a gesture."
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

Very good gesture indeed. However, whether it will be implemented or not is another story.
 
Nearly 500 Russian medics dead from virus

On the face of it this was a stark announcement by the head of Russia’s healthcare watchdog.

Alla Samoylova told an online seminar that 489 medical workers had died as a result of coronavirus, which would represent more than 6% of all Covid-19 deaths here.

Roszdravdadzor later clarified that the figure referred to an unofficial but widely followed tally kept by medical professionals themselves, not official statistics. But we now know that the watchdog keeps a close eye on those numbers, and gives them credence.

In fact, the "memorial list", as it’s called, currently records 505 deaths, including healthcare workers from Ukraine and Belarus.
The last official count from the health ministry came three weeks ago and reported that 101 people had died.

What looks like an abnormally high percentage of medics’ deaths probably partly reflects issues with overall fatality figures. Excess mortality statistics for Moscow in May show three times more deaths than the number so far officially attributed to coronavirus.

There has long been concern about the provision of protective gear (PPE) for hospital and ambulance staff. Doctors and nurses have described to us having to work with infected patients in regular, gauze masks, and hospital "red zones" that were not fully isolated. Most said the situation had later improved.
 
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An NHS worker has said he is "lucky to be alive" after being attacked in a "racially aggravated" hit-and-run incident.

The unnamed 21-year-old had his leg, nose and cheekbone broken in the attack and will require plastic surgery to his face and leg.

A car was deliberately driven at the man as he walked home from his job at Bristol's Southmead Hospital at around 4.30pm last Wednesday, according to witnesses.

A general view of Southmead Hospital, Bristol. Six cancer patients whose sperm samples were lost when the hospital freezer broke down can claim damages, the Court of Appeal ruled today.

Two men apparently shouted racist abuse at the victim, before running from the dark blue Honda Accord.

The incident is being treated as "racially aggravated" by Avon and Somerset Police, adding it could have resulted in death.

The man, who has been recording music since 2017, said he wanted to raise awareness about racism.

In a statement through police, he said: "I have six months' recovery ahead of me, minimum.

"I have a broken leg, nose and cheekbone, will need plastic surgery to my face and leg and am walking on crutches.

"I don't want this to happen to anyone else, I want people to be aware."

He was taken to hospital immediately following the incident, and was discharged the following day.

He thanked those who stepped in to help him after the attack, as well as his NHS colleagues, witnesses, police and the charity Sari (Stand Against Racism & Inequality).

"I don't feel safe to walk outside and I can't play football, record my music, go to the gym or even sleep - I have to try to sleep sitting up," he said.

He has appealed for privacy during what he called a "really difficult time", adding: "We will bounce back as a family, this will make us stronger. We won't let the haters win."

The man's mother said the situation was a "waking nightmare", adding she found it upsetting that her son could no longer do the things he enjoys, such as playing football and going to work.

In a statement, Sari described the incident as "horrific".

"We will be doing all we can on behalf of this young man and his family to try and get justice served," the charity said.

"We would like to thank the police for their hard work to date as they proceed with their investigation.

"We very much hope that the offenders will be identified, charged and prosecuted as swiftly as possible so this appalling crime can be dealt with as it should and to prevent harm to anyone else."

Andrea Young, the chief executive of North Bristol NHS Trust, said she was "incredibly saddened" to hear about the incident, adding:

"The police believe this to have been a racially aggravated attack and we are horrified that this is something that has happened to one of our friends and colleagues.

"Racism, in any form, has no place in our society and that an attack such as this can happen is shocking."

Police closed Monks Park Avenue while investigations took and recovered the car used in the attack. Officers have also interviewed the victim, carried out door-to-door interviews and looked at CCTV footage.

https://news.sky.com/story/nhs-work...fter-racially-aggravated-hit-and-run-12038119
 
One morning in June, Deep Chand spotted a distraught family member of a Covid-19 patient standing outside the coronavirus ward in a hospital in India's capital, Delhi.

The man was desperately trying to speak to a doctor or nurse to find out about the condition of his relative who was a patient in the ward.

But it was a terrible day for doctors - some patients had died, a few others were critical, and new patients were being wheeled in throughout.

So Deep Chand, who worked as a ward boy - or assistant - walked up to the man and asked if he could help.

That man was me, and I was trying to find out how my brother-in-law was doing. It had been three days since he was put on a ventilator.

Doctors usually called every day to update us, but on that day no-one seemed to have time to do that.

When Deep Chand came up to me, I mistook him for a doctor because he was wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) and I threw a volley of questions at him.

"I am a ward boy and I can't help you with these questions," he said.

I must have sounded desperate and even rude, but he responded softly, without irritation.

He told me that my brother-in-law's blood oxygen level was fine, and there had been no turn for the worse in the last 10 hours.

That's how I met Deep Chand, 28. Ward boys are nearly at the bottom of the hospital's hierarchy. They have no professional medical training, and their job is to assist doctors and nurses as well as help patients.

This includes everything from taking samples for testing, wheeling patients across the hospital for X-rays, serving them food, and sometimes just talking to them. And amid the painful chaos of the pandemic, these ward boys have become a source of support not just for patients but also for their families.

I will never forget my reassuring interaction with Deep Chand because it's just what I needed to hear while I waited for an hour outside the ward, anxious and scared. I could hear the sounds of the machines, patients yelling in pain and doctors and nurses shouting instructions at each other.

I also distinctly remember a patient pleading: "I can't breathe, please save me!"

Deep Chand's words cut through my panic and I ran to the car park to update my family - we nervously smiled at each other while standing at a safe distance.

This was the worst part - we couldn't hug or even hold hands when we desperately needed comfort. We had to maintain distance to protect each other. Not being able to hold each other - while my wife's brother was breathing through a machine - had become routine.

Even on a day the doctor told us "the next 12 hours are critical", we all broke down in our respective corners of the car park.

In the days that followed, we often relied on Deep Chand and his colleagues whenever doctors were too busy to give us updates.

We spent tense hours at home or in the hospital waiting for news from the ward.

It was difficult because the first two weeks of June saw a massive surge in Delhi's Covid-19 case numbers. Most hospitals were overrun, including the one where my brother-in-law was admitted.

In that chaos, ward boys like Deep Chand became messengers for dozens of families like ours.

I would often see them consoling families, supporting them and taking messages to those patients who were too ill even to talk on the phone.

One day when my brother-in-law's condition deteriorated, I was standing outside the ward and I broke down.

The doctor's update was factual. "We can't say anything at the moment, he is not improving."

But a ward boy walked up to me and said: "Don't worry, I have seen even severely ill patients recover."

His hopeful words gave me some relief.

When doctors keep repeating "anything can happen", the mind takes you to dark places. It made me doubt everything.

Did we pick the right hospital? Should we have listened to him instead of convincing him to go on the ventilator? It had been a tough call - he had been against it, and the doctors kept saying there wasn't much time left to waste.

My family kept crying but praying for the "miracle" Deep Chand had told us was possible.

It was one of the most difficult times in my life, and Deep Chand's kind, calming words meant a lot to me - especially when I wasn't able to speak to the doctors.

Speaking to me on the phone now, more than a month later, he says he felt the pain of the families but there was little that the doctors and nurses could do to improve communication.

"They were so busy, they somehow managed to speak to the families of serious patients once a day. It's nobody's fault - none of us were prepared for this kind of rush," he says.

Instead, it was Deep Chand and other ward boys who would share what information they could about the patient's progress - they routinely informed me about my brother-in-law's blood oxygen level.

"I can see the oxygen saturation level on the monitor and I don't mind sharing that information with families," Deep Chand says.

I also saw Deep Chand take food and letters for patients from their families.

He says he has been working as a ward boy for five years, but Covid-19 has completely changed the way he works.

He adds that being in protective equipment for 10-12 hours is painful, but it's nothing "compared to what patients and their families go through".

His colleague, Amit Kumar, nods in agreement, while speaking to me outside the Covid-19 ward one day. He says that even a little information goes a long way in reassuring families.

"Sometimes the families feel happy with little things - like when we tell them that the patient ate properly today or he smiled in the morning."

Every day, ward boys risk their lives in hospitals across the country. Hundreds of them have been infected with the virus. Some have even died. But their contribution in the fight against Covid-19 is seldom mentioned.

The ward boys I spoke to say this doesn't bother them. Deep Chand says he is not looking for special recognition.

When he was told that he would have to work in the "corona ward" at the start of the outbreak in March, he admits was concerned. "I was terrified for my safety and that of my family."

But then, he adds, he realised that he would not think twice before going into the ward if one of his family members was sick.

"Every patient is somebody's family."

That thought drove him to start working in the ward in April, and since then he has never considered quitting.

And doctors appreciate this. "Ward boys are an important part of any ICU unit," says Dr Sushila Kataria, the director of intensive care at Medanta Hospital.

"They watch our backs, they deal with discarded PPE kits and contagious samples. No doctor can work without their help," she says.

"They are also heroes in this fight like doctors and nurses."

But they are some of the lowest-paid employees in a hospital. The situation is worse in smaller towns where they are hired by contractors who lease their services to hospitals.

Sohan Lal works in a government-run hospital in the northern state of Bihar and earns 5,000 rupees ($66: £52) a month.

He says it's a paltry amount given the risk of working in a Covid-19 ward. "But I don't have any other job, so I will keep doing this. I also realise the importance of my job."

He adds that so many times he has given medicines to patients after consulting the doctor on the phone.

"Doctors seldom come for rounds more than once a day. So, patients rely on ward boys to convey their messages to the doctors."

The other tough part of their job is seeing death so closely. Deep Chand says he feels distraught when a patient he has been caring for dies.

"Sometimes patients die after spending more than two weeks with us. They almost become like our family," he says.

But, he adds, he won't stop "until we defeat corona or it defeats me".

I wanted to specially thank him the day my brother-in-law was discharged after nearly a month in the hospital. But he disconnected my call, saying "he was on duty".

A text followed: "You don't need to thank us", he wrote. "Pray for us and all medical teams working in Covid-19 wards across the world".

And he had a message too: "Please wear masks and follow social distancing."

I can't agree with him more, having seen the worst of what this virus can do.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-53604691
 
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