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Health workers should be top priority for vaccines: Nurses' group

Cecile Mantovani (Reuters)
Geneva, Switzerland
Tue, July 28, 2020

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Health workers should be top priority for vaccines:  Nurses' group Nurses wearing protective face masks lie on the ground with signs bearing the names of healthcare professionals who died from the COVID-19 during a protest amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Brasilia, Brazil May 12, 2020.Nurses and other health workers must be top priority for the first COVID-19 vaccines, especially as they are often left without enough protection against the virus in their frontline jobs, the International Council of Nurses said on Monday. (REUTERS/Adriano Machado)

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urses and other health workers must be top priority for the first COVID-19 vaccines, especially as they are often left without enough protection against the virus in their frontline jobs, the International Council of Nurses said on Monday.

An estimated 1.5 million health care workers have been infected, three times the number in early June, it said, citing figures from the World Health Organization (WHO) on the novel coronavirus which has infected some 16 million people worldwide.

"We are continuing to receive reports of nurses and health care workers not having enough personal protective equipment, not being able to access testing, working under incredible strain and pressure," Howard Catton, chief executive officer of the Geneva-based ICN, told Reuters Television.

"To be frank, many governments have just been too slow to prioritize nurses and healthcare workers. So we are saying, when it comes to vaccines, no excuses, no ifs, no buts, we are putting governments on notice now, that nurses and healthcare workers must be prioritized for a vaccine when it becomes available," he said.

Researchers are making "good progress" in developing vaccines against COVID-19, with a handful in late-stage trials, but their first use cannot be expected until early 2021, the WHO's top emergency expert Mike Ryan said last week.

WHO's chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan said last week that it was drawing up a framework to ensure "fair and equitable access" would give priority to three groups including frontline workers such as medics and the police.

The ICN, which represents 130 national nursing associations, has appealed throughout the six-month pandemic for sufficient personal protective equipment for nurses.

Catton, referring to nightly public tributes in some countries, said: "Nurses, quite frankly, have had enough of the applause. They are saying, ‘we want action’, the applauses are ringing very hollow.

"Action, committing to vaccination for healthcare workers, ensuring personal protective equipment, testing nurses and healthcare workers: these are the issues which will really make a difference to nurses, but also to the people that they look after."

 

            

 

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