Jamaica Gleaner

Exhausted nurses back on the job after blitz

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/Staff Reporter editorial@gleanerjm.com

ALTHOUGH HAPPY that more than 75,000 Jamaicans took their first COVID-19 jab in the recent five-day vaccinatio­n blitz, Nurses Associatio­n of Jamaica (NAJ) President Patsy Edwards Henry said that the nurses across the island are now exhausted and hoping that there will not be a repeat.

The mass vaccinatio­n effort started on a small scale at the National Arena last Friday and blossomed into an islandwide effort over the weekend until Tuesday to utilise the 75,000 doses of AstraZenec­a vaccine that were a gift from the Africa Medical Supplies Platform as they were due to be expired on the Tuesday. Thousands of Jamaicans responded to the call to be vaccinated, resulting in the health team spending hours on their feet and, in some cases, unable to take breaks to have a meal.

“The entire team, they did an excellent job; 75,000 vaccines in five days is no easy feat,” said the NAJ president.

“We don’t want that again. We don’t want anything like that again. We will take a two-day blitz, but the five-day blitz? No, that’s extraordin­ary,” Edwards Henry told

The Gleaner.

Despite the burnout, the nurses were back to their regular routines at health facilities on Wednesday morning. Public health nurses had to do their surveillan­ces reports for submission, while others took up their usual posts, caring for patients.

Edwards Henry said that other appointmen­ts piled up at health facilities during the blitz, and chuckled at the idea of a break. She said her idea of a break would be for the nurses to be given a day pass or an overnight stay at a hotel.

“If they have a clinic for 10 originally, they now have a clinic for 30, so there is no break,” she said.

At the Linstead Health Centre in St Catherine, public health nurse Nickesha Fowler Holdham was busy assisting with COVID-19 testing, although she had worked at one of the blitz sites in the parish and didn’t get home until late. She said that there were days during the blitz campaign when she didn’t get home until 10 p.m.

“Sometimes the lunch came and it was really at the end of the day that you really got to have it,” she told The Gleaner.

BIG TURNOUT

She said she was surprised at the huge turnout for the vaccinatio­n blitz, which resulted in a few 12-hour workdays.

“We are tired; however, we are really happy that we were able to accomplish the tasks set out, so that we can say that none of our doses were wasted,” she said.

Zone coordinato­r for Linstead, Novlette Gordon Stennett, was a welcome sight for the large crowd that gathered at the Holy Trinity Anglican Church in Linstead on Tuesday as persons eagerly waited to be inoculated. The public health nurse, who was tasked with taking the vaccines to the site, said she had never had a day like Tuesday. She has been a public health nurse since 2002.

“We have been going, going, going, but this is what we do,”she said, while admitting that she was exhausted.

Both nurses were pained to see so many persons who turned up not getting the jab as supplies ran out, but they were comforted by the fact that there will be other opportunit­ies.

Sixty-six-year-old Banbury resident Dezmena McLeggan had visited the Anglican Church from 7:30 Tuesday morning, hoping to be vaccinated, but she was told that this was not possible since she did not have an appointmen­t and supplies were limited. She said that the team assured her that she would be contacted to come in for a jab at another time.

The senior citizen said that although her husband had taken the vaccine, she was hesitant. When she realised that several persons in the community were getting vaccinated, she decided to get her “jook”, albeit driven by a bit of misinforma­tion.

“True mi go hear them say now that you can’t go to no shop, you can’t go to any supermarke­t, you can’t go to no doctor, you can’t do this, you can’t do that, you can’t take the iron bird, mi say, ‘No, sah. Mi a go take my jook’,” she said.

Phased vaccinatio­n will resume on Monday for persons 60 years and over.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Health workers and hundreds of anxious people awaiting the arrival of the COVID-19 jabs at the Old Harbour Civic Centre in St Catherine on Tuesday. The vaccines arrived in the afternoon, hours after the scheduled 9 a.m. start.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Health workers and hundreds of anxious people awaiting the arrival of the COVID-19 jabs at the Old Harbour Civic Centre in St Catherine on Tuesday. The vaccines arrived in the afternoon, hours after the scheduled 9 a.m. start.

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