The Philippine Star

Nurses balk at request for deployment in Tokyo Olympics

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TOKYO (AP) – Some nurses in Japan are incensed at a request from Tokyo Olympic organizers to have 500 of them dispatched to help out with the games.

They said they are already near the breaking point dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Olympic officials have said they would need 10,000 medical workers to staff the games, and the request for more nurses comes amid a new spike in the virus, with Tokyo and Osaka under a state of emergency.

“Beyond feeling anger, I was stunned at the insensitiv­ity,” Mikito Ikeda, a nurse in Nagoya in central Japan, told The Associated Press. “It shows how human life is being taken lightly.”

The appeal for more nurses is typical of the impromptu changes coming almost daily as organizers and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee try to pull off the games in the midst of a pandemic.

The Olympics are set to open in just under three months, entailing the entry into Japan – where internatio­nal borders have been virtually sealed for a year – of 15,000 Olympic and Paralympic athletes and thousands of other officials, judges, sponsors, media and broadcaste­rs.

In a statement from the Japan Federation of Medical Workers’ Unions, secretary general Susumu Morita said the focus should be on the pandemic, not the Olympics.

“We must definitely stop the proposal to send as Olympic volunteers those nurses, tasked with protecting the fight against the serious coronaviru­s pandemic,” Morita said. “I am extremely infuriated by the insistence of pursuing the Olympics despite the risk to patients’ and nurses’ health and lives.”

A protest message saying nurses were opposed to holding the Olympics went viral on Japanese Twitter recently, being retweeted hundreds of thousands of times.

Even before the pandemic, Japanese nurses were overworked and poorly paid compared with their counterpar­ts in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Nursing is not only physically taxing, but also emotionall­y draining, said Ikeda, who has been a nurse for 10 years. He said many nurses worry about getting infected themselves, with vaccinatio­n rates in Japan reported at only one to two percent.

“It’s hard for any hospital to go without even one nurse, and they want 500,” Ikeda said. “Why do they think that’s even possible?”

Deaths attributed to COVID-19 in Japan have just passed 10,000.

 ??  ?? File photo shows a nurse receiving the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Fujita Health University Hospital in Toyoake, Aichi prefecture in central Japan.
File photo shows a nurse receiving the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Fujita Health University Hospital in Toyoake, Aichi prefecture in central Japan.

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