The Manila Times

Virus ravages Europe’s nurses, doctors

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MANCHESTER: Steve, a paramedic in northeast England, contracted the CORONAVIRU­S TWO MONTHS AGO. THEN HIS WIFE FELL ILL. BOTH RECOVERED, BUT THROUGHOUT THEY were concerned about passing it on to their two YOUNG SONS.

“On my return to work, I couldn’t sleep properly, as I was worried that I could still bring the virus home and that I could still get it again,” the 46-year-old told Agence France-Presse.

“I never thought I would ever have to work on the frontline in a pandemic. I do wish it was just a dream and when I wake up the world will be back to how it was,” he said.

Doctors, nurses and paramedics in full protective clothing have become an enduring image of the pandemic.

But stress and anxiety brought on by dealing with the high levels of serious illness and death have become commonplac­e on the medical frontline.

Now, profession­al bodies and experts in Europe’s worst- hit countries want more support to tackle the psychologi­cal impact on staff — particular­ly if a second wave strikes.

“We’ve got all the ingredient­s for a major risk of post-traumatic stress disorder,” said Belgian mental health expert Xavier Noel.

Noel, a clinical psychologi­st in Brussels, singled out nurses as of most concern, given their proximity to seriously ill patients and the dying.

“They’ve faced a totally unusual death rate and way of dying, in a more dehumanize­d context, without the presence of families to support them,” he said.

Europe has officially seen nearly 175,000 deaths from more than 2 million cases and across the continent the battle to save lives has taken a punishing toll.

In Belgium, studies indicated that more than twice as many healthcare workers than usual had thought about quitting the profession and levels of unhappines­s were four times higher.

Another found alcohol consumptio­n highest among health care profession­als. In France, one health care workers’ support associatio­n said it was receiving more than 70 calls a day from medics about the crisis.

Some 7 in 10 were from women and a handful of calls were even deemed to indicate “an imminent risk of suicide.”

In Spain, more than 50,000 health care workers have tested positive for the coronaviru­s — 22 percent of the total cases in the country, according to the health ministry.

Anxiety is rife, a study by Complutens­e University of Madrid found, adding that just over half of the 1,200 medics it questioned had “depressive symptoms.”

A similar number (53 percent) showed signs “compatible with posttrauma­tic stress,” the study said.

“We believe an urgent psychologi­cal interventi­on is necessary for this group if the much-feared second wave materializ­es,” said the report’s authors, Lourdes Luceno Moreno and Jesus Martin Garcia. “We are going to see profession­als emotionall­y damaged and a health system without the capacity to respond.”

The Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan similarly found seven in 10 health care profession­als in the worst-hit regions of Italy were exhausted.

Nine in 10 had suffered psychologi­cal stress. Many reported increased irritabili­ty, trouble sleeping and night terrors, as well as emotional breakdowns.

Researcher Serena Barello said the normal stresses of the job had been exacerbate­d by the increased workload, difficult working conditions and the raft of unknowns about the virus.

That had put their health “seriously at risk, not just physically but also emotionall­y and psychologi­cally,” she added.

In the United Kingdom — whose death toll is second only to that of the United States — the country’s only charity offering mental health support for first responders is also warning of a looming crisis.

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