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Learning from the #Covid Pandemic : Are Healthcare Workers Being Listened to?

Although NRS figures published on 20th July 2023 recorded only 4 deaths involving Covid in Scotland for that past week, the virus continues to exist in our communities. Vaccination has been very important in reducing the severity of Covid, however, for many people, including the most vulnerable, it still is a real and present danger if contracted.

All those with underlying health conditions, the elderly, those receiving medical treatment (such as cancer patients) – are all very much at risk should they contract Covid. And there are also, the untold hundreds of thousands of people who continue to suffer from the effects of long Covid.

In the front line of all of this are our health and social care workers. If you have visited a hospital, GP surgery, health care facility or Residential Home recently you will have noticed the almost universal absence of anyone wearing a face mask, or even carrying out the routine procedure of hand sanitising. And any lessons learned about the importance of ventilation have been entirely forgotten – if they were ever adhered to.

There is now no tracking of the virus within the community and data of all kinds is sparse and sporadic in being published.

The monitoring of Scotland’s waste water  for fragments of coronavirus’ ribonucleic acid (RNA), with the last testing done at the beginning of July shows that the virus is still in our communities.

This should come as no surprise when we have had the closure of hospital wards in parts of Scotland, including Orkney, and most recently na h-Eileanan an Iar.

And now the group, Scottish Healthcare Workers, have written to the First Minister of Scotland , Humza Yousaf, to reverse the decision to withdraw the wearing of face masks in health care settings.

The group say that this decision which came into force on May 16th 2023 ‘is flawed and dangerous’.

Public Health Scotland continues to publish data received from Hospitals about Covid admissions, however, there was a change to how this was counted on 8th May 2023, reducing the time period of considered being infectious to 10 days. This jiggling of the figures means that , of course, it appears there is quite a drop in the number of patients in hospital who have Covid. – as illustrated in this graph.

Number of inpatients with COVID-19 in hospital

The PHS data also includes Respiratory Surveillance and even if there was no Covid, protection against the transmission of other infections – such as flu ( a 90% increase in cases this week) – would surely make the simple activity of wearing a face mask, sanitising hands, and having suitable ventilation, – sensible preventative measures.

In their letter to Humza Yousaf , Scotland’s Healthcare Workers, make specific demands:

Click on this link to read the whole letter: Covid Action Scotland, Scottish Healthcare Workers Coalition

The current advice published by the Scottish Government can be found here: Coronavirus (COVID-19): staying well and protecting others Very few people are taking this advice, even fewer bother if they encounter someone wearing a ‘keep your distance ‘ badge.

“give more space and care around those using the Distance Aware scheme (wearing a badge or lanyard)”

The Distance Aware scheme was very poorly publicised despite the badges and lanyards being freely available in libraries and other public space. Most members of the public are unlikely to know what it means.

What lessons have we learned from the Covid pandemic which has cost 17,723 deaths in Scotland to date ,228,144 in the UK and estimated at nearly 7million worldwide ?

Some businesses were hit so hard they have never recovered from the economic consequences. And the scandals continue to reveal those who were profiteering from the virus and the lack of PPE that frontline staff had in our health and social care settings when the pandemic started.

The Department for Health & Social Care (DHSC) lost 75% of the £12 billion it spent on personal protective equipment (PPE) in the first year of the pandemic to inflated prices and kit that did not meet requirements – including fully £4 billion of PPE that will not be used in the NHS and needs to be disposed of. There is no clear disposal strategy for this excess but the Department says it plans to burn significant volumes of it to generate power – though there are concerns about the cost-effectiveness and environmental impact of this “strategy”. UK Parliament Public Accounts Committee, 10 June 2022

Will anything come out of the Covid Inquiries taking place in Scotland and the UK?

Is anyone in government even listening to those who are working in healthcare settings, the people in the frontline?

Scottish Healthcare Workers Coalition

The letter is signed by:

If government Ministers don’t listen to the people on the front line of providing health and care, whose views are they prioritising when it comes to preventing the spread of Covid, or on any other public health issue, affecting millions of Scots?

Fiona Grahame

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