The Scotsman

Inside Health

NHS staff are exhausted as they face the second Covid wave, says Lewis Morrison

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It’s been quite a fortnight, with almost half of Scotland plunged into levelfour lockdown just a few weeks before Christmas.

Having to make those decisions is not an enviable task, but at the hear t of it is a need to protect our NHS and its staff.

I’m not exaggerati­ng, or tr ying to garner sympathy, when I say we almost buckled under the first wave of Covid-19. It’s simply a matter of fact.

Doctors, nurses, healthcare workers are exhausted. Winter 2019 into 2020 was hard. Then Covid-19 hit us with no knowledge of what was to come, and we had no time to recover.

Cases may have dropped during the summer, but that didn’t mean rest and relaxation for the NHS: it meant a battle to get ever ything else moving again.

A battle to get those patients who were forced to wait even longer for treatment due to the pandemic off the waiting lists. A battle we are still ver y much fighting, only now we are fighting it alongside the second wave of Covid-19.

Visiting at most hospital sites is, understand­ably, off the cards right now. But if you were to be a fly on the wall you would see the exhaustion – but determinat­ion – on the faces of those on the frontline. The wellbeing of healthcare staff – whether that’s hospital doctors, GPS, nurses, reception and admin staff – is crucial.

Obviously as a doctors’ union, first and foremost our priorit y is to protect the rights of S cotland’s hard-working clinicians – but above and beyond that I believe at times like this we need to look out for ever yone.

That’s why our BMA Care B oxes that we distribute­d throughout hospitals at the end of last year and have restocked regularly this year are for all staff members.

It’s why we are calling for all NHS boards to provide free access to menstrual products in all of their staff toilets, free parking to continue, access to hot food and drinks on nightshift­s, quiet areas for healthcare staff to rest on their breaks during busy shifts. None of this is a luxur y – they are basic, essential comfor ts that can potentiall­y make a huge difference to the day-to - day working lives of our healthcare staff.

B ehind the scenes, there are healthcare workers suffering from long- Covid – a longterm effect of the virus that no one anticipate­d back in March.

Numbers are down as many members of staff fight to get back to full fitness that will allow them to return to work.

S omeone recently described the feeling of long- Covid to me as constant physical and mental exhaustion – that walking their children to school meant they would have to lie down in their beds for the rest of the day.

We recently agreed special leave guidance with the S cottish government that will give healthcare workers long-term securit y if they are affected by long- Covid.

Masks and PPE hide wear y faces, but make no mistake, healthcare workers are exhausted.

My plea to any NHS workers reading this is to take care of yourselves and your colleagues – it’s much easier said than done at times, but maintainin­g mental and physical health is how ever yone – healthcare workers and the public alike – will get through this.

Dr Lewis Morrison is chair of BMA Scotland

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