The National - News

Treat everyone with compassion, especially healthcare staff

- JUSTIN THOMAS Justin Thomas is a psychology professor at Zayed University

Last week Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed praised healthcare workers during his virtual Ramadan Majlis and on Twitter, describing them as the embodiment of mercy and compassion. “As we celebrate World Nurses Day, we salute our front line that faces the pandemic bravely. We pay tribute to them here in the UAE and the world. Their role is essential, and the sacrifice is great. They are truly the embodiment of mercy and compassion.”

The English word compassion derives from the Latin compati, meaning to suffer with or suffer together. When we act compassion­ately we help ease the burdens of other beings. Healthcare workers around the globe are alleviatin­g the suffering of Covid-19 patients. As a consequenc­e, they too, are suffering; embodying compassion in the original and truest sense of the word.

To understand the risks that healthcare workers and their families face, we only have to glance at the number of Covid-19 infections among them.

According to an estimate by the Oxford University Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, healthcare workers may account for up to 30 per cent of all UK infections. This is a group that makes up only six per cent of the UK workforce.

In one UK accident and emergency department, at the Royal Gwent Hospital, almost 50 per cent of staff tested positive for Covid-19. In Spain, as of March 25, there were 47,600 total cases of which 6,500 were medical personnel. In short, 13.6 per cent of all cases were from a group that makes up just one per cent of the workforce. Last week, the internatio­nal council for nurses, proposed that at least 90,000 healthcare workers worldwide had been infected. The ICN also suggested the actual figure might be twice as high, given that several nations have not yet reported the relevant data.

The high rate of infection among healthcare workers illustrate­s only the physical suffering that is being heroically endured. The psychologi­cal costs may be just as high and are likely to last long after the pandemic has passed. For evidence of this, we can look at the global outbreak in 20022004 of Sars (Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome). Many researcher­s have called Sars the first pandemic of the 21st century, some have also described it as a “mental health catastroph­e”.

Numerous studies point to elevated levels of depression, post-traumatic stress and substance abuse among healthcare workers who treated Sars patients. The same, of course, was true for patients who survived Sars, even years after full recovery from the virus. Furthermor­e, a study published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry reported a link between elevated rates of suicide among Hong Kong’s elderly and the Sars outbreak.

Consider that global Sars cases numbered 8098 with 774 deaths. While Covid-19 stands at around four and a half million cases, with over a quarter of a million deaths. There is a clear and present need for psychologi­cal support for healthcare workers, for those directly affected by the Covid-19 and for the public at large.

The UAE pre-emptively responded to this need back in 2016, when it appointed a Minister of State for Happiness. This appointmen­t underscore­d the UAE’s commitment to psychologi­cal well-being. During the unfolding of the Covid19 pandemic, the UAE’s National Programme for Happiness and Well-being has launched numerous supportive initiative­s, including the national campaign for mental support. This project mainly involves connecting the general public with mental health specialist­s and experts through the innovative use of social media. I am honoured to have been involved in this programme and to have helped in some small way.

There is, however, much more to do if we are to avert a post-pandemic mental health catastroph­e.

There is a clear and present need for psychologi­cal support for healthcare workers

If compassion makes things better, then cruelty and unkindness make things worse. Unfortunat­ely, the example of our compassion­ate healthcare workers is not being emulated by all.

Earlier this month, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that the coronaviru­s pandemic is unleashing “a tsunami of hate and xenophobia, scapegoati­ng and scare-mongering”. Referencin­g the rise in pandemic-related hate speech and hate crimes, the UN Chief called for actions that “strengthen the immunity of our societies against the virus of hate”.

Last week Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak, Minister of Tolerance, addressed the Prayer for Humanity session. This global initiative was an online meeting of religious leaders coming together to show mutual respect and share prayers for humanity during this of global crisis.

If it is tolerance and compassion towards ourselves and each other that will help us get through this trying time, it is these same qualities that will help us minimise the psychologi­cal after-effects of this pandemic.

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