
In the past week, four UK doctors have died from Covid-19; the youngest was 55. There will be more to come if the government doesn’t quickly resolve the shortages of personal protective equipment, or PPE, in hospitals and medical centers.
The British Medical Association wasn’t being dramatic when it said that health workers treating Covid-19 patients face “life-threatening†shortages of PPE, and asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer for enhanced death-in-service insurance cover. A failure to protect medical personnel will not only threaten Britain’s ability to help those worst
affected by Covid-19 — it could also undermine the bonds of trust that have
kept the country’s under-resourced health service punching above its weight.
Doctors around the country are still reporting a lack of PPE, despite government assurances that the shortages were due only to temporary distribution hiccups and that millions of items have been delivered.
As the hashtag #GetMePPE was trending and young doctor couples were reportedly drawing up wills, there have been reports of doctors being punished or prevented from speaking out, as if out of some 1970s communist playbook. (And this was not just in the UK: Bloomberg reported that doctors and medical staff in the US have also been told by hospitals they’ll be fired if they speak out about shortages).
But doctors are right to advocate for better protection. In examining the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the World Health Organization found that healthcare workers were up to 32 times more likely to become infected than the general population; the degree of healthcare worker infection — which ranged from 2% to more than 50% — depended largely on the preparedness of the facility receiving patients. It’s been clear for some time that medical workers are at heightened risk from Covid-19 and that shortages of
PPE were going to be a big problem.
There was the tragic death of 34-year-old Chinese doctor Li Wenliang, who was initially detained by police for “spreading rumours†after warning colleagues of the new virus.
In February, Chinese and US media were reporting that Chinese medical professionals often had to source their own PPE, using tape to hold together items meant for single use and, inevitably, becoming ill. In mid-February, China reported that 1,716 medical workers had contracted the virus and six had died. Few doubt that this vastly understated the problem.
Italy began publishing statistics on doctor deaths on March 11. When I first wrote about the issue, 24 Italian doctors had been named as fatalities from Covid-19. Just 10 days later, the list had grown to 69.
Occupational Hazard
Most fatalities have been older doctors, but that should be no comfort to younger physicians. An older person’s weaker immune system increases vulnerability; but doctors with prolonged and repeated contact with Covid-19 patients, and especially
surgeons performing invasive aerosol-generating procedures, are likely to experience a higher viral load.
This seems to increase the risk of contracting a more severe form of the disease, where the virus overwhelms even a younger person’s
defenses.
The news from Italy isn’t all grim. Experience at the Cotugno Hospital in Naples, in which no medical staff have been infected so far, supports the view that correct PPE and procedures can save lives. The PPE there is more like Full Metal Jacket for the coronavirus era. A Sky News report from the hospital showed guards in the corridors and disinfectant machines that hose down all visitors.
Staff protection at Cotugno Hospital goes beyond the standard WHO recommendations. Their thick suits are waterproof. Those inside the treatment rooms with patients communicate through a
window to those outside. Medicine is passed through a compartment.
The PPE shortage in the UK and US is one consequence of years of underinvestment in pandemic preparedness, despite many warnings. It will take time to fix. “The typical supply chain, where US healthcare providers purchase from known manufacturers, has broken down. Connecting supply to demand has become the Wild West,†explains Nadav Ullman, one of the founders of ProjectN95, a non-profit set up to act as a national clearinghouse for Covid-19 equipment in the US. They have logged more than 335 million requests for PPE for the next
30 days.
Big Chinese factories like 3M’s are focussed on supplying Asian countries, so any masks coming arriving in the West from them are “leakage,†says Devika Daga, supply director of ProjectN95.
— Bloomberg