Argyllshire Advertiser

Veterans on frontline tackling coronaviru­s

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Veterans are providing vital skills across a range of projects to help the country tackle the current coronaviru­s outbreak. From helping to build Nightingal­e Hospitals to delivering essential supplies to those who are shielding, they have helped thousands of people across the country. We take a look at how one such veteran is helping out.

THIS IS not the first time former soldier Joshua Ryder has seen a pandemic close up, having volunteere­d to visit Sierra Leone during the West African Ebola virus outbreak.

The 30-year-old worked in what was known as a “red zone” in Kerry Town, 19 miles from capital Freetown.

As a member of Royal Army Medical Core, he worked as a combat medical technician, receiving awards for Top Trainee and Adult Learner of the Year.

Joshua said: “We treated patients with confirmed or suspected Ebola. The symptoms are similar to those of malaria and gastroente­ritis.

“We triaged and tested patients to determine whether they had these or Ebola.”

The West African outbreak began in 2014, ending in Sierra Leone in 2016.

Two-and-a-half years after the first case was discovered, the outbreak resulted in more than 28,600 cases with 11,325 deaths.

Such was the volatility of the strain – most widespread outbreak of the disease in history – Joshua was only allowed to work in the area for 30 days.

He said: “I loved the country. It has some beautiful sights and the people are really friendly.

“It was sad to see the devastatio­n caused by the pandemic. We didn’t only focus on the pandemic. We visited orphanages and helped build something for the country.

“It was moving to see the children who lost their parents to the virus.”

During the coronaviru­s outbreak he is again working, but the environmen­t could not be more different.

Having left the army in 2018, he is now a trainee nursing associate on a Midlands Partnershi­p NHS Trust acute mental health ward in Stafford.

Joshua, who is father to Tia, aged 12, and her 10-yearold sister Lola, said: “Day to day I am more involved with the physical well-being of the patients – calming them, making physical observatio­ns, doing ECGs and bloods.

“I go to Keele University one day a week and am due to start my second year in September.”

It was Joshua’s experience­s and expertise in the army that led him to the NHS in general, and mental health in particular.

He said: “I have worked in demanding conditions in various locations around the world. I am adaptable to suit many environmen­ts and job roles.”

In the military he saw firsthand soldiers suffering poor mental health. One of his friends, also serving in the army, committed suicide.

He said: “I entered the NHS through the Step into Health programme, which has been brilliant.

“I was able to show them what I had done and my experience­s counted. There was a lot of competitio­n for the Trainee Nursing Associate place.

“I have been able to prove myself and have had really positive feedback.

“I won an award for

Outstandin­g Impact Since Joining the NHS at the programme’s first ceremony.”

Joshua is helping to treat patients through more difficult times than usual.

“We are doing absolutely brilliantl­y,” he said. “It would be abnormal, with all the constant changes, if we did not experience stress and anxiety.

“We have adapted and made changes.

“Here our patients have been brilliant.

“We have got a good team

here, a good mix of people with different skills. We all support each other and do everything we can for our patients.”

Joshua has also been a volunteer with men’s mental health charity Men Unite, supporting males in crisis.

He ran a half marathon last year to raise £500 for Mental Health UK.

“And this month I am running 100 miles, having so far raised £795 for the same charity through JustGiving,” he said.

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 ??  ?? WELL DONE: Joshua Ryder receives Outstandin­g Impact Since Joining The NHS award from Career Transition Partnershi­p Head of Employment Lorraine Cadle and NHS Employers Chief Executive Danny Mortimer at March’s Step into Health Awards, attended by Prince William. (photo: NHS Employers)
WELL DONE: Joshua Ryder receives Outstandin­g Impact Since Joining The NHS award from Career Transition Partnershi­p Head of Employment Lorraine Cadle and NHS Employers Chief Executive Danny Mortimer at March’s Step into Health Awards, attended by Prince William. (photo: NHS Employers)

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