The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Supporting Covid fight in Nepal

Peterborou­gh-based charity The Leprosy Mission has seen staff and patients at its hospital near Kathmandu vaccinated

- By Stephen Briggs stephen.briggs@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @PTStephenB

The Covid-19 vaccine roll-out began in Nepal last week with 169 frontline health workers vaccinated at The Leprosy Mission’s Anandaban Hospital, on the outskirts of Kathmandu.

The Oxford Covid-19 vaccine, manufactur­ed in India, was given to staff at Anandaban Hospital and government health workers working in the mountainou­s area surroundin­g the hospital.

The Leprosy Mission, a charity based in Peterborou­gh, has worked closely with the Nepali government since it designated Anandaban Hospital as a Disaster Response Centre in the wake of the 2015 earthquake­s which killed 9,000 people in Nepal. Staff at Anandaban Hospital gave emergency medical care to 2,000 earthquake victims.

Dr Pradip Sapkota, Anandaban’s Medical Superinten­dent, who is leading the vaccine programme at Anandaban Hospital, said they planned to give the first dose of the vaccine to 860 frontline health workers by Sunday.

He said: “We are hoping for a 90% uptake of the vaccinatio­n. We can’t give it to breastfeed­ing mothers and pregnant women.

“The second dose of the vaccine should be given between three and 12 weeks after the first and we are aiming to give it within four weeks.

“It’s a big day here for all of us at Anandaban and we are very happy.

“We will wait to hear about the next phase of the vaccine roll out which will see the elderly, the vulnerable and frontline workers including police officers vaccinated.”

In October a 10-bed Covid-19 isolation ward opened at Anandaban Hospital thanks to a grant from the British government.

The isolation ward has already been used for more critically ill patients than expected with 250 patients receiving care to date. There has been one fatality.

The lifesaving facility was made possible by a £200,000 grant from the UK Government’s Foreign, Commonweal­th & Developmen­t Office (FCDO). It was used to transform the hospital’s existing hospital space into an isolation ward which includes a ventilator, four respirator­s and PPE for staff.

The salaries of three doctors, seven nurses and an ambulance driver are covered with the team transferri­ng from their leprosy work to be part of the coronaviru­s relief effort throughout the winter months.

Hospital staff have also relayed Covid-19 health messaging – for example, the importance of social distancing, good hygiene, the need to isolate with COVID symptoms - to 1,700 households in the remote, hard to reach mountain

ous areas of Nepal. Emergency food and sanitation packs have been distribute­d to the most vulnerable households.

A Covid-19 testing laboratory is already operationa­l at Anandaban Hospital's research centre. It aims to

support the community as well as protect people affected by leprosy and disability from Covid-19.

Nepal has reported 270,092 cases of coronaviru­s infection and 2,017 deaths from Covid-19.

 ??  ?? Manoj, the first Covid-19 patient is pictured having fracture traction treatment in the new isolation ward at Anandaban Hospital
Manoj, the first Covid-19 patient is pictured having fracture traction treatment in the new isolation ward at Anandaban Hospital

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