The Borneo Post

WHO estimates 80,000-180,000 health workers died from Covid by May 2021

-

It’s a shocking indictment of government­s. It’s a shocking indictment of their lack of duty of care to protect health care workers who have paid the ultimate sacrifice. They are now burnt out, they are devastated, they are physically and mentally exhausted. And there is a prediction that 10 per cent of them will leave within a very short time.

Anne e Kennedy

GENEVA: The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) said Thursday that 80,000 to 180,000 health care workers may have been killed by Covid-19 up to May this year, insisting they must be prioritise­d for vaccinatio­n.

WHO said the fact that millions of health workers remain unvaccinat­ed is an ‘indictment’ on the countries and companies controllin­g the global supply of doses.

A WHO paper estimated that out of the planet’s 135 million health staff, ‘between 80,000 to 180,000 health and care workers could have died from Covid-19 in the period between January 2020 to May 2021’.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said health care workers needed to be among the first immunised against the disease, as he slammed the global inequity in the vaccine roll-out.

“Data from 119 countries suggest that on average, two in five health and care workers globally are fully vaccinated. But of course, that average masks huge difference­s,” he said.

“In Africa, less than in one in 10 health workers have been fully vaccinated. Meanwhile, in most high-income countries, more than 80 percent of health workers are fully vaccinated.”

He added: “We call on all countries to ensure that all health and care workers in every country are prioritise­d for Covid19 vaccines, alongside other atrisk groups.”

Anne e Kennedy, president of the Internatio­nal Council of Nurses, said the organisati­on grieved for all health care workers who had lost their lives in the pandemic — ‘many needlessly; many we could have saved’.

“It’s a shocking indictment of government­s. It’s a shocking indictment of their lack of duty of care to protect health care workers who have paid the ultimate sacrifice,” she said.

Kennedy warned: “They are now burnt out, they are devastated, they are physically and mentally exhausted. And there is a prediction that 10 per cent of them will leave within a very short time.”

The WHO wants each country to have vaccinated 40 percent of its population by the end of the year, but Tedros said 82 countries are at risk of missing that target, chiefly through insufficie­nt supply.

In high-income countries, as categorise­d by the World Bank, 133 doses have been administer­ed per 100 people. In the 29 lowestinco­me nations, the figure drops to five.

Former British prime minister Gordon Brown, now a WHO ambassador for global health financing, said the Oct 30-31 G20 summit in Rome would be a critical juncture in combating the pandemic.

If the world’s richest countries cannot mobilise an immediate airli of doses to the unvaccinat­ed in poorer nations, ‘an epidemiolo­gical, economic and ethical derelictio­n of duty will shame us all’, said Brown, who hosted the 2009 G20 summit.

He said that by February, wealthy nations could have built up an unused stockpile of one billion vaccine doses, and denying them to the unvaccinat­ed would be ‘one of the greatest internatio­nal public policy failures imaginable’.

“It’s a moral catastroph­e of historic proportion­s that will shock future generation­s,” he said.

The novel coronaviru­s has killed at least 4.9 million people since the outbreak emerged in China in December 2019, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP, while nearly 242 million cases have been registered.

Brown said that without reallocati­ng the growing stockpile, the WHO’s latest forecast was that there could be 200 million more Covid cases, with five million lives hanging in the balance.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A health worker is seen injecting her colleague with a dose of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford Covid-19 vaccine in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.
— AFP file photo A health worker is seen injecting her colleague with a dose of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford Covid-19 vaccine in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia