San Diego Union-Tribune

RUSSIAN DOCTORS UNDER DURESS

Mystery surrounds deaths of physicians who cited shortages

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

MOSCOW

Two Russian doctors have died and another was seriously injured in falls from hospital windows after they reportedly came under pressure over working conditions in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The exact circumstan­ces of the separate incidents in the last two weeks remain unclear and they are being investigat­ed by police, but they underscore the enormous strains that Russian doctors and nurses have faced during the outbreak.

Reports said two of the doctors had protested their working conditions and the third was being blamed after her colleagues contracted the virus.

Across Russia, doctors have decried shortages of protective equipment and questionab­le infection control procedures at dozens of hospitals, with many saying they have been threatened with dismissal or even prosecutio­n for going public with their grievances. Hundreds of medical workers also have gotten infected.

Dr. Alexander Shulepov, who works on an ambulance crew in the Voronezh region, 300 miles south of Moscow, fell from a second-floor window May 2 at a hospital where he was being treated for COVID-19, breaking several ribs and fracturing his skull.

In a video posted earlier on social media by his colleague, Alexander Kosyakin, both complained about shortages of protective gear. In the video, the 37-year-old Shulepov said he was being forced to finish his shift despite being diagnosed with COVID-19.

Kosyakin was accused of spreading false news about the shortages after posting the video and is under investigat­ion. He refused to comment to The Associated Press.

It is unclear what caused Shulepov’s fall. Some local media reports suggested it was due to the pressure for airing his complaints in public.

A doctor died from injuries she sustained in an April 25 fall in the city of Krasnoyars­k in western Siberia. Dr. Yelena Nepomnyash­chaya, acting head of a hospital, fell from her fifth-floor office window right after she had a conference call with regional health officials.

The reports said Nepomnyash­chaya had argued against converting a ward in her hospital for coronaviru­s patients because of severe shortages of protective equipment and trained personnel, but she failed to sway the officials.

 ?? OLGA MALTSEVA GETTY IMAGES ?? Cemetery workers wear protective gear to bury a COVID-19 victim outside St. Petersburg, Russia.
OLGA MALTSEVA GETTY IMAGES Cemetery workers wear protective gear to bury a COVID-19 victim outside St. Petersburg, Russia.

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