Selasa, 14 April 2020

India's Modi extends nationwide coronavirus lockdown until May 3 - CNN

Speaking in a televised address on Tuesday, Modi said it was vital that the virus is prevented from impacting parts of the country that remain unaffected.
"My request to all my countrymen is that coronavirus will not be allowed to spread across new areas at any cost," said Modi, who wore a scarf covering his mouth and nose which he removed before speaking. "We have to be very careful about hotspots. We will have to keep a close watch on the places that are expected to become hotspots."
The "complete" 21-day lockdown for India's 1.3 billion people came into force at the end of the day on March 24 and was set to expire on Tuesday, April 14.
Since the lockdown was enforced, only essential services have been operational. Those include water, electricity, health services, fire services, grocery stores and municipal services.
Doctors say India must prepare for an 'onslaught' as one of Asia's biggest slums reports first coronavirus death
All regular shops, commercial establishments, factories, workshops, offices, markets and places of worship have been closed and interstate buses and metros have been suspended. Construction activity was also halted during this period.
"Until May 3, all of us will have to remain in lockdown. During this time, we have to follow the same discipline as we have been doing," Modi said.
Prior to Modi's address, several Indian states had ordered extended lockdowns until April 30, in an attempt to stop the virus from spreading. Those included Maharashtra, the center of the worst outbreak in the country.
While the lockdown measures will continue, Modi said that some states and districts that have shown to have avoided an outbreak "could be allowed to resume important activities but with conditions."
"Until April 20, all districts, neighborhoods and states will be closely monitored to see how strictly they are implementing the rules." Modi said.
The Prime Minister did not offer any specifics but said "detailed guidelines" will be issued by the government on Wednesday.
Social distancing is a privilege of the middle class. For India's slum dwellers, it will be impossible
India is the world's second most populous country and the fifth biggest economy, but there are fears that the country's health systems would not be able to cope with a major outbreak. The country has reported 10,363 coronavirus cases, including at least 339 deaths, according to the Ministry of Health on Tuesday.
In his speech, Modi thanked citizens for adhering to the lockdown restrictions over the past three weeks.
"You have faced difficulties to save yourself and the nation," Modi said. "I understand the great difficulties you are facing regarding food, the lack of movement. Some had to stay away from their families. You are fulfilling duties as disciplined soldiers for the sake of the nation."
He said that India had made efforts to ensure major outbreaks -- such as those seen in Europe or the United States -- did not spread in the country.
"Today, the pandemic is global. Compared to other countries, India has made efforts to prevent infection here," Modi said.
"India didn't wait for the problem to escalate. Instead, as soon as the problem appeared, we tried to stop it by making swift decisions. I can't imagine what the situation would have been had such quick decisions not been taken."

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2020-04-14 07:12:47Z
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China tightens Russian border checks, approves experimental coronavirus vaccine trials - Reuters

SUIFENHE, China (Reuters) - China has approved early-stage human tests for two experimental vaccines to combat the new coronavirus as it battles to contain imported cases, especially from neighbouring Russia, the new “front line” in the war on COVID-19.

People wearing face masks cross a road after the lockdown against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was lifted in Wuhan, Hubei province, China April 14, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song

Russia has become China’s largest source of imported cases, with a total of 409 infections originating in the country, and Chinese citizens should stay put and not return home, the state-owned Global Times said in an editorial.

“Russia is the latest example of a failure to control imported cases and can serve as a warning to others,” said the paper, which is run by the Communist Party’s People’s Daily.

“The Chinese people have watched Russia become a severely affected country... This should sound the alarm: China must strictly prevent the inflow of cases and avoid a second outbreak.”

China’s northeastern border province of Heilongjiang saw 79 new cases of imported coronavirus cases on Monday. All the new cases were Chinese citizens travelling back into the country from Russia, state media said on Tuesday. They formed the bulk of new cases on the Chinese mainland, which stood at 89.

Heilongjiang’s provincial authority said on Tuesday that it had established a hotline to reward citizens for reporting illegal immigrants crossing into the province.

According to a notice, people supplying verified information about illegal cross-border crimes will be granted 3,000 yuan. Those who apprehend the illegal immigrants themselves and hand them over to the authorities will be given 5,000 yuan.

As of Tuesday, China had reported 82,249 coronavirus cases and 3,341 deaths. There were no deaths in the past 24 hours.

Mongolia’s health ministry also confirmed 13 new cases on Tuesday, all imported from Russia.

VACCINE TRIALS

As China fights to prevent a second wave of COVID-19, two experimental vaccines will be trialed on humans, state media Xinhua reported on Tuesday.

The experimental vaccines are being developed by a Beijing-based unit of Nasdaq-listed Sinovac Biotech (SVA.O), and by the Wuhan Institute of Biological Products, an affiliate of state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group.

In March, China gave the green-light for another clinical trial for a coronavirus vaccine candidate developed by military-backed China’s Academy of Military Medical Sciences and HK-listed biotech firm CanSino Bio (6185.HK), shortly after U.S. drug developer Moderna (MRNA.O) said it had begun human tests for their vaccine with the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

At a meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Monday, China’s coronavirus task force decided to deploy more health resources on its borders.

It said it would build hospitals and establish isolation points in border regions, and would also strengthen cooperation with neighbouring countries.

However, officials on Monday acknowledged that China’s long border and its large number of country roads, paths, ferry crossings and mountain passes made it very difficult to control.

To ensure no infected people slip across the Russian-China border, China has put in stringent measures in Suifenhe a small city in Heilongjiang which shares a checkpoint with Russia.

Piao Minghua, deputy head of Harbin customs, which oversees Suifenhe border control, told Reuters that everyone entering Suifenhe has to be tested for the coronavirus, give detailed contact tracing, and then undergo quarantine.

Slideshow (14 Images)

Samples from inbound travellers are taken inside well-ventilated containers set up at the checkpoint so as to minimise cross-infection. Testing is being down round the clock to minimise waiting time.

Though the northeast border remains China’s priority, state media also reported late on Monday that more than 100 people had been arrested in March for illegally entering China through its southwestern border in Yunnan province. Yunnan police have promised to step up controls over the border.

Thousands of people, mostly Chinese workers and traders, were flooding back into Yunnan from Laos and Myanmar earlier this month, putting huge pressures on border regions like Xishuangbanna.

Reporting by Yew Lun Tian and Huizhong Wu in Suifenhe, Lusha Zhang in Beijing; Additional reporting by Tom Balmforth in Moscow, Emily Chow in Shanghai, and Anand Tumurtogoo in Ulaanbaatar; Writing by David Stanway; Editing by Michael Perry

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2020-04-14 07:16:19Z
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Senin, 13 April 2020

Ukraine wildfires creep closer to Chernobyl | TheHill - The Hill

Wildfires in Ukraine reached an area less than a mile and a half from where some of the most dangerous waste from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster is stored, according to an environmental group and Monday media reports.

Greenpeace Russia officials told Reuters that satellite images of wildfires blazing near the abandoned town of Pripyat show the burn areas to be much larger than Ukrainian officials have claimed publicly, and now sit 0.6 miles from the site of the disaster itself.

“According to satellite images taken on Monday, the area of the largest fire has reached 34,400 hectares,” Greenpeace said.

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Greenpeace officials added that a second wildfire much closer to the destroyed nuclear plan now sits at 12,600 hectares, according to Reuters, which noted that Ukrainian officials said earlier this month that the fire only affected 20 hectares. Ukrainian officials reportedly did not respond to requests for comment on Greenpeace's claims.

An official with the country's top agency in charge of the region surrounding the Chernobyl power plant added to the Associated Press, however, that officials “cannot say the fire is contained."

“We have been working all night, digging firebreaks around the plant to protect it from fire,” the official said.

Video and images obtained by the news service shows large swaths of trees in the country's exclusion zone, largely uninhabited due to radiation, burning as firefighters work to control the blaze.

The region has reportedly experienced unusually dry weather in recent months, while local police have said that a 27-year-old resident deliberately started the blaze.

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2020-04-14 00:36:35Z
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Boris Johnson praises immigrant nurses who saved his life, as Britain’s NHS becomes a rallying cry - The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/boris-johnson-addresses-coronavirus-after-leaving-hospital/2020/04/12/e04ad3b8-d05b-4515-9192-c3abaf2f4422_video.html

LONDON — When he emerged from St. Thomas’ Hospital on Sunday, the first thing Prime Minister Boris Johnson did was thank the National Health Service for saving his life. He paid special tribute to his nurses, “Jenny from New Zealand” and “Luis from Portugal,” two of the thousands of immigrants who serve in the NHS.

“It’s hard to find the words to express my debt,” said the usually loquacious Johnson, pale and wan in a video clip, after days in the virus ward, where “it could have gone either way,” he said.

In Johnson’s short speech on life and death, the 55-year-old Tory praised the NHS as “powered by love.” His tribute underlines how Britain’s great socialist endeavor, a national health-care system, free for all, has emerged as the most trusted and vital of institutions.

Right now, the NHS nurse garners the kind of acclaim directed at New York City firefighters in the days after 9/11. A taxpayer-funded system for rationed care, born in the deprivation of 1948 postwar Britain, is holding this place together.

When the health secretary or finance minister address the country, they repeat over and over their call to “stay home, protect the NHS and save lives.” The rallying cry to safeguard “our NHS” is a powerful tool deployed to convince the people to submit to lockdown.

When the government desperately needed help to care for the vulnerable in isolation, to shop for their groceries and medicines, it created the “NHS Volunteer Responders,” and saw more than 750,000 apply in four days. Not because the government needed them, but because the NHS did.

Toby Melville

Reuters

A staffer at 10 Downing Street, the prime minister’s official residence in London, displays rainbows in the window in support of the National Health Service.

When kids put crayon drawings of rainbows in their bedroom windows, it is for NHS. When people mourn public deaths, it is for NHS doctors and nurses, many of them immigrants or the children of immigrants. And if and when the government wants to track infections via cellular phones? It will be by a NHS-branded app.

[In fight against coronavirus, the world gives medical heroes a standing ovation]

Johnson and his ministers have been effusive in their praise for the NHS — and careful, too, to emphasize their full support. In doing so, they’ve also managed to gloss over a decade of austerity budgets for the health-care system overseen by their Conservative Party governments — budgets that created the very shortfalls in staffing, beds and ventilators that threaten to see the NHS overwhelmed now if the number of coronavirus patients surges.

Kevin Corbett, a retired nurse and a university lecturer, said the NHS helps the government stoke feelings of community for political purpose. “The clapping. Isn’t it sort of whipping people up into a frenzy of support?” he said.

Corbett said the crisis also underscored a pivotal question about the system: how valued, really, are the NHS workers? “Would you rather have someone clapping for you once a week or getting another 20,000 pounds paid to you,” Corbett said. “I know what I would like.”

Even in a normal winter, the NHS barely copes with the onslaught of seasonal flu. This year, before the coronavirus, the health service was reporting an overload, with patients waiting in trolleys, in hospital hallways, for hours.

Before the virus struck, the NHS was already suffering from a shortfall of 100,000 caregivers. Its nursing staff has been particularly taxed. As of 2018, there were 41,000 vacancies, according to an independent assessment.

As the Conservatives pursued “austerity” — a budget-cutting campaign by the governments since 2010 — the NHS remained the largest employer in England, but was experiencing a steep drop in the number of doctors, according to the Nuffield Trust research group.

Johnson campaigned on NHS investment — both ahead of the 2016 Brexit referendum and in the run-up to his landslide general election victory in December.

“The NHS is a very potent brand,” said Julian Le Grand, a professor of social policy at the London School of Economics. Unlike in the United States, where people can be distrusting of big hospitals and insurance companies, the NHS is viewed as “an essentially altruistic, professionally-driven organization,” he said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/britain-applauds-nhs-in-weekly-clap-for-carers-initiative/2020/04/13/e48184a5-4467-4ce1-bd7d-db5f815a51b9_video.html

During the pandemic, the British public has been shocked by reports of NHS nurses donning garbage bags as protective gowns, and hearing doctors plead for more personal protective equipment (PPE).

Britain’s health secretary, Matt Hancock, said the government is making a “herculean effort” to import and distribute visors, gloves and gowns to front-line workers.

But the British Medical Association reported that this effort is falling short. A BMA survey found just 12 percent of hospital doctors and 2 percent of general practice physicians felt fully protected from the virus while treating patients.

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents 800,000 of the 1.2 million NHS staffers, said even as government officials quote ever-growing figures of the many millions of pieces of protective gear being delivered, there remains high anxiety.

“Frontline staff, and those representing them, are pointing with increasing frustration to multiple instances of PPE not being available when required,” he wrote in the Guardian newspaper Monday.

Meng Aw-Yong, an emergency room physician at Hillingdon Hospital in London, said the crisis has meant he is working 60 to 70 hours a week in protective gear.

“It is really hot, it is really uncomfortable using PPE,” he said. “I almost fainted last week because it was so humid . . . You’ve got gloves on. You have a big over-suit. You have your scrubs. It is not pleasant.”

He admits he is exhausted, and has daily regrets. “For someone to die — and for the last thing for them to see is your face, not a loved one. And then they can’t even see your face because we have the mask on. It’s a horrible way to let someone die. It doesn’t feel right.”

Andy Rain

EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

NHS ambulance staff arrive at a call in London.

In Johnson’s remarks upon release from the hospital, the prime minister called the NHS the country’s “greatest” asset. He singled out two nurses — Jenny McGee from New Zealand and Luis Pitarma from Portugal — who stayed at his bedside for 48 hours.

Johnson’s decision to highlight the two immigrants was notable. The prime minister was a leading cheerleader for Brexit, which was driven by calls to “take back control” of Britain’s borders and slash immigration.

Carrie Symonds, a former Conservative Party media strategist and Johnson’s 32-year-old fiancee, who is pregnant with the couple’s first child, tweeted “I cannot thank our magnificent NHS enough . . . there were times last week that were very dark indeed.”

Immigrants make up almost a quarter of all hospital staff in Britain. Analysis last December by the Nuffield Trust, an independent health think tank, found that half of the increase in health and nursing home care workers over the last decade were from people born overseas.

Immigrants also represent a “disproportionate” number of health-care workers who have died of the novel coronavirus, Hancock said this weekend.

Nineteen front-line NHS workers have died, including a retired village doctor from Syria, a midwife from Hong Kong, and a nurse from the Philippines whose Facebook profile showed him in a mask with the words: “I can’t stay at home, I’m a health-care worker.”

Chaand Nagpaul, chair of the British Medical Association, the main doctor’s union, said that “almost all” of the doctors who have died have come from abroad.

“These statistics are stark and disturbing,” Nagpaul told the BBC on Monday. He said an investigation was needed. He has also said that staff have “dangerously low” levels of protective equipment.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/londons-excel-centre-converted-into-coronavirus-hospital/2020/03/31/3a1e541a-016e-45d4-8546-d4ad61d5db90_video.html

One doctor that raised concerns was Abdul Mabud Chowdhury. Last month he warned on social media about the shortages of protective equipment. Last week he died after losing a two-week battle with the coronavirus.

His son, Intisar Chowdhury, told the BBC he was glad protective equipment was now getting attention, “because it pains me to say that my father is not the first and he is unfortunately not going to be the last NHS front-line worker to die.”

Before the coronavirus pandemic and his hospitalization, Johnson promised to give preference to foreign-born NHS doctors and nurses in a post-Brexit immigration scheme. And now, the government has announced it would extend visas for a year, at no charge, for 2,800 migrant doctors, nurses and paramedics whose visas were set to expire in October — two months before the scheduled end of the Brexit transition period.

But a cross-party group of more than 60 lawmakers is pushing for Johnson to go further. They have called on the government to give foreign staff who work for the NHS — and their families — the right to stay in Britain indefinitely, as they believe that “those who have put their lives at risk for our country are welcome to live in it.”

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Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-04-13 22:36:55Z
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Spain partially loosens lockdown as coronavirus death rate slows - Reuters

MADRID (Reuters) - Spain let some businesses get back to work on Monday, but one of the strictest lockdowns in Europe remained in place despite a slowing in the country’s coronavirus death rate.

Police handed out face masks to people passing through major transport hubs as they went to work, although only a few commuters were seen using Madrid’s usually bustling Atocha train station and road traffic was mainly public buses.

Although some activities, including construction and manufacturing, were allowed to restart, Health Minister Salvador Illa said that Spain remained in lockdown. Shops, bars and public spaces are set to stay closed until at least April 26.

Restrictions have helped slow a spiralling death rate that reached its peak in early April and some workers expressed concern that a relaxation could trigger a surge in cases.

“I would have preferred to wait 15 more days confined to home or at least one more week and then come back,” said Carlos Mogorron, a 27-year-old engineer from Extremadura in western Spain who was planning to return to work on Tuesday.

Spain recorded its smallest proportional daily rise in the number of deaths and new infections since early March, with the cumulative toll rising by 517 to 17,489.

The Health Ministry said on Monday confirmed coronavirus cases totalled 169,496, up from 166,019 the previous day.

“You are always afraid of catching it and even more so knowing that your life may be in danger, or your relatives,” said Mogorron, who lives with his house-bound parents.

Business association CEOE warned that many companies, particularly the small firms that make up the bulk of the Spanish economy, do not have access to the protective equipment like gloves and masks needed to guarantee the safety of staff.

Some regional leaders also criticised the moves, fearing a resurgence of the coronavirus outbreak, which is weighing heavily on the Spanish economy, with some 900,000 jobs lost since mid-March.

ITALY, BRITAIN STRUGGLE

Deaths in Italy from the epidemic rose over the weekend to 19,468 and the number of new cases climbed to 4,694 from 3,951. It was the highest daily death toll since April 6.

People wearing protective face masks queue in a food distribution store during a lockdown amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Ronda, southern Spain, April 13, 2020. REUTERS/Jon Nazca

After easing from peaks around the end of March, Italy’s daily death and infection tallies have fallen but not as steeply as was hoped by Italians who have been in lockdown for a month.

Nor was there any indication that Britain would lift restrictions anytime soon as its death toll passed 10,000 and a scientific adviser to the government said the country risked becoming the worst hit in Europe.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson left hospital after several days due to a serious case of the coronavirus, saying “things could have gone either way” for him.

In Germany, where new infections and deaths have declined, senior politicians began debating a potential easing of restrictions imposed since mid-March. Germany has weathered the pandemic better than its biggest neighbours.

ECONOMIC DAMAGE

In Spain, while businesses from wind turbine maker Siemens Gamesa (SGREN.MC) to fashion giant Inditex (ITX.MC) began increasing activity, production lines at Volkswagen-owned Seat remained shut.

Burgos-based industrial group Nicolas Correa (NEA.MC), said it would take measures to prioritise the health of its staff.

Slideshow (14 Images)

“We will continue to work in shifts, with staggered entries and exits to avoid concentrations of staff,” it said, adding that all workers would be provided with protective equipment.

In Catalonia, Spain’s second-worst hit region, the government warned that the resumption of some work could lead to a rise in infections and wipe out the gains of the lockdown.

The regional government issued recommendations including measuring employees’ temperatures before entering the workplace and controls outside metro stations to guarantee a one-third occupancy rate.

Additional reporting by Jose Elías Rodríguez, Jessica Jones, Elena Rodriguez, Marco Trujillo, Paola Luelmo, Joan Faus and Andrei Khalip, Editing by Angus MacSwan, Sonya Dowsett and Alexander Smith

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2020-04-13 22:06:04Z
52780725387873

Boris Johnson praises immigrant nurses who saved his life, as Britain’s NHS becomes a rallying cry - The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/boris-johnson-addresses-coronavirus-after-leaving-hospital/2020/04/12/e04ad3b8-d05b-4515-9192-c3abaf2f4422_video.html

LONDON — When he emerged from St. Thomas’ Hospital on Sunday, the first thing Prime Minister Boris Johnson did was thank the National Health Service for saving his life. He paid special tribute to his nurses, “Jenny from New Zealand” and “Luis from Portugal,” two of the thousands of immigrants who serve in the NHS.

“It’s hard to find the words to express my debt,” said the usually loquacious Johnson, pale and wan in a video clip, after days in the virus ward, where “it could have gone either way,” he said.

In Johnson’s short speech on life and death, the 55-year-old Tory praised the NHS as “powered by love.” His tribute underlines how Britain’s great socialist endeavor, a national health-care system, free for all, has emerged as the most trusted and vital of all institutions.

Right now, the NHS nurse garners the kind of acclaim directed at New York City firefighters in the days after 9/11. A taxpayer-funded system for rationed care, born in the deprivation of 1948 postwar Britain, is holding this place together.

When the health secretary or finance minister address the country, they repeat over and over their call to “stay home, protect the NHS and save lives.” The rallying cry to safeguard “our NHS” is a powerful tool deployed to convince the people to submit to lockdown.

When government desperately needed help to care for the vulnerable in isolation, to shop for their groceries and medicines, it created the “NHS Volunteer Responders,” and saw more than 750,000 apply in four days. Not because the government needed them, the NHS did.

Toby Melville

Reuters

A staffer at Downing Street, the prime minister’s official residence in London, displays rainbows in the window in support of the NHS.

When kids put crayon drawings of rainbows in their bedroom windows, it is for NHS. When people mourn public deaths, it is for NHS doctors and nurses, many of them immigrants or the children of immigrants. And if and when the government wants to track infections via cellular phones? It will be by NHS-branded app.

[In fight against coronavirus, the world gives medical heroes a standing ovation]

Johnson and his ministers have been effusive in their praise for the NHS — and careful, too, to emphasize their full support. In doing so, they’ve also managed to gloss over a decade of austerity budgets for the health-care system overseen by their Conservative Party governments — budgets that created the very shortfalls in staffing, beds, ventilators that threaten to see the NHS overwhelmed now if the number of coronavirus patients surges.

Kevin Corbett, a retired nurse and a university lecturer, said the NHS helps the government stoke feelings of community for political purpose. “The clapping. Isn’t it sort of whipping people up into a frenzy of support?” he said.

Corbett said the crisis also underscored a pivotal question about the system: how valued, really, are the NHS workers? “Would you rather have someone clapping for you once a week or getting another 20,000 pounds paid to you,” he said. “I know what I would like.”

Even in a normal winter, the NHS barely copes with the onslaught of seasonal flu. This year, before coronavirus, the health service was reporting an overload, with patients waiting in trolleys, in hospital hallways, for hours.

Before the virus struck, the NHS was already suffering from a shortfall of 100,000 caregivers. Its nursing staff has been particularly taxed. As of 2018, there were 41,000 vacancies, according to an independent assessment.

As the Conservatives pursued “austerity” — a budget-cutting campaign by the governments since 2010 — the NHS remained the largest employer in England, but was experiencing a steep drop in the number of doctors, according to the Nuffield Trust research group.

Johnson campaigned on NHS investment — both ahead of the 2016 Brexit referendum and in the run-up to his landslide general election victory in December.

“The NHS is a very potent brand,” said Julian Le Grand, a professor of social policy at the London School of Economics. Unlike in the United States, where people can be distrusting of big hospitals and insurance companies, the NHS is viewed as “an essentially altruistic, professionally-driven organization,” he said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/britain-applauds-nhs-in-weekly-clap-for-carers-initiative/2020/04/13/e48184a5-4467-4ce1-bd7d-db5f815a51b9_video.html

During the pandemic, the British public has been shocked by reports of NHS nurses donning garbage bags as protective gowns, and hearing doctors plead for more personal protective equipment, called PPE.

Britain’s health secretary, Matt Hancock, said the government is making a “herculean effort” to import and distribute visors, gloves and gowns to front-line workers.

But the British Medical Association reported that this effort is falling short. A BMA survey found just 12 percent of hospital doctors and 2 percent of general practice physicians felt fully protected from the virus while treating patients.

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents 800,000 of the 1.2 million NHS staffers, said even as government officials quote ever-growing figures of the many millions of pieces of protective gear being delivered, there remains high anxiety.

“Frontline staff, and those representing them, are pointing with increasing frustration to multiple instances of PPE not being available when required,” he wrote in the Guardian newspaper Monday.

Meng Aw-Yong, an emergency room physician at Hillingdon Hospital in London, said the crisis has meant he is working 60 to 70 hours a week in protective gear.

“It is really hot, it is really uncomfortable using PPE,” he said. “I almost fainted last week because it was so humid … You’ve got gloves on. You have a big over-suit. You have your scrubs. It is not pleasant.”

He admits he is exhausted, and has daily regrets. “For someone to die — and for the last thing for them to see is your face, not a loved one. And then they can’t even see your face because we have the mask on. It’s a horrible way to let someone die. It doesn’t feel right.”

Andy Rain

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

NHS ambulance staff arrive at a call out in London.

In Johnson’s remarks upon release from the hospital, the prime minister called the NHS the country’s “greatest” asset. He singled out two nurses — Jenny McGee from New Zealand and Luis Pitarma from Portugal — who stayed at his bedside for 48 hours.

Johnson’s decision to highlight the two immigrants was notable. The prime minister was a leading cheerleader for Brexit, which was driven by calls to “take back control” of Britain’s borders and slash immigration.

Carrie Symonds, a former Conservative Party media strategist and Johnson’s 32-year-old fiancee, who is pregnant with the couple’s first child, tweeted “I cannot thank our magnificent NHS enough … there were times last week that were very dark indeed.”

Immigrants make up almost a quarter of all hospital staff in Britain. Analysis last December by the Nuffield Trust, an independent health think talk, found that half of the increase in health and nursing home care workers over the last decade were from people born overseas.

Immigrants also represent a “disproportionate” number of health-care workers who have died from coronavirus, Hancock said this weekend.

Nineteen front-line NHS workers have died, including a retired village doctor from Syria, a midwife from Hong Kong, a nurse from the Philippines whose Facebook profile showed him in a mask with the words: “I can’t stay at home, I’m a health-care worker.”

Chaand Nagpaul, chair of British Medical Association, the main doctor’s union, said that “almost all” of the doctors who have died have come from abroad.

“These statistics are stark and disturbing,” he told the BBC on Monday. He said an investigation was needed. He has also said that staff have “dangerously low” levels of protective equipment.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/londons-excel-centre-converted-into-coronavirus-hospital/2020/03/31/3a1e541a-016e-45d4-8546-d4ad61d5db90_video.html

One doctor that raised concerns was Abdul Mabud Chowdhury. Last month he warned on social media about the shortages of protective equipment. Last week he died after losing a two-week battle with coronavirus.

His son, Intisar Chowdhury, told the BBC he was glad protective equipment was now getting attention, “because it pains me to say that my father is not the first and he is unfortunately not going to be the last NHS front-line worker to die.”

Before the coronavirus pandemic and his hospitalization, Johnson promised to give preference to foreign-born NHS doctors and nurses in a post-Brexit immigration scheme. And now, the government has announced it would extend visas for a year, at no charge, for 2,800 migrant doctors, nurses and paramedics whose visas were set to expire in October — two months before the scheduled end of the Brexit transition period.

But a cross-party group of more than 60 lawmakers is pushing for Johnson to go further. They have called on the government to give foreign staff who work for the NHS — and their families — the right to stay in Britain indefinitely, as they believe that “those who have put their lives at risk for our country are welcome to live in it.”

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Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-04-13 20:28:40Z
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Spain partially loosens lockdown as coronavirus death rate slows - Reuters

MADRID (Reuters) - Spain let some businesses get back to work on Monday, but one of the strictest lockdowns in Europe remained in place despite a slowing in the country’s coronavirus death rate.

Police handed out face masks to people passing through major transport hubs as they went to work, although only a few commuters were seen using Madrid’s usually bustling Atocha train station and road traffic was mainly public buses.

Although some activities, including construction and manufacturing, were allowed to restart, Health Minister Salvador Illa said that Spain remained in lockdown. Shops, bars and public spaces are set to stay closed until at least April 26.

Restrictions have helped slow a spiralling death rate that reached its peak in early April and some workers expressed concern that a relaxation could trigger a surge in cases.

“I would have preferred to wait 15 more days confined to home or at least one more week and then come back,” said Carlos Mogorron, a 27-year-old engineer from Extremadura in western Spain who was planning to return to work on Tuesday.

Spain recorded its smallest proportional daily rise in the number of deaths and new infections since early March, with the cumulative toll rising by 517 to 17,489.

The Health Ministry said on Monday confirmed coronavirus cases totalled 169,496, up from 166,019 the previous day.

“You are always afraid of catching it and even more so knowing that your life may be in danger, or your relatives,” said Mogorron, who lives with his house-bound parents.

Business association CEOE warned that many companies, particularly the small firms that make up the bulk of the Spanish economy, do not have access to the protective equipment like gloves and masks needed to guarantee the safety of staff.

Some regional leaders also criticised the moves, fearing a resurgence of the coronavirus outbreak, which is weighing heavily on the Spanish economy, with some 900,000 jobs lost since mid-March.

ITALY, BRITAIN STRUGGLE

Deaths in Italy from the epidemic rose over the weekend to 19,468 and the number of new cases climbed to 4,694 from 3,951. It was the highest daily death toll since April 6.

People wearing protective face masks queue in a food distribution store during a lockdown amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Ronda, southern Spain, April 13, 2020. REUTERS/Jon Nazca

After easing from peaks around the end of March, Italy’s daily death and infection tallies have fallen but not as steeply as was hoped by Italians who have been in lockdown for a month.

Nor was there any indication that Britain would lift restrictions anytime soon as its death toll passed 10,000 and a scientific adviser to the government said the country risked becoming the worst hit in Europe.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson left hospital after several days due to a serious case of the coronavirus, saying “things could have gone either way” for him.

In Germany, where new infections and deaths have declined, senior politicians began debating a potential easing of restrictions imposed since mid-March. Germany has weathered the pandemic better than its biggest neighbours.

ECONOMIC DAMAGE

In Spain, while businesses from wind turbine maker Siemens Gamesa (SGREN.MC) to fashion giant Inditex (ITX.MC) began increasing activity, production lines at Volkswagen-owned Seat remained shut.

Burgos-based industrial group Nicolas Correa (NEA.MC), said it would take measures to prioritise the health of its staff.

Slideshow (14 Images)

“We will continue to work in shifts, with staggered entries and exits to avoid concentrations of staff,” it said, adding that all workers would be provided with protective equipment.

In Catalonia, Spain’s second-worst hit region, the government warned that the resumption of some work could lead to a rise in infections and wipe out the gains of the lockdown.

The regional government issued recommendations including measuring employees’ temperatures before entering the workplace and controls outside metro stations to guarantee a one-third occupancy rate.

Additional reporting by Jose Elías Rodríguez, Jessica Jones, Elena Rodriguez, Marco Trujillo, Paola Luelmo, Joan Faus and Andrei Khalip, Editing by Angus MacSwan, Sonya Dowsett and Alexander Smith

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2020-04-13 21:44:09Z
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