Nurses insulted after suggestions they are 'abusing and overusing PPE’

No protective equipment is more important than the lives of healthcare workers, a nursing union has said, after ministers said it should be treated as a "precious resource".

No protective equipment is more important than the lives of healthcare workers, a nursing union has said, after ministers said it should be treated as a "precious resource".

Health Secretary Matt Hancock had said there is enough personal protective equipment (PPE) to go round if it is used in line with official guidance, and his goal is that "everyone" working in a critical role gets what they need.

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But the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) dismissed any suggestions that healthcare staff were "abusing or overusing" PPE.

Nurses insulted after suggestions they are 'abusing and overusing PPE’Nurses insulted after suggestions they are 'abusing and overusing PPE’
Nurses insulted after suggestions they are 'abusing and overusing PPE’

RCN general secretary Dame Donna Kinnair told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Saturday that no PPE was "more precious a resource than a healthcare worker's life, a nurse's life, a doctor's life".

Speaking later on BBC Breakfast Dame Donna said that every day she was hearing from nurses saying they did not have enough protective equipment.

Dame Donna added: "I take offence actually that we are saying that healthcare workers are abusing or overusing PPE.

"I think what we know is, we don't have enough supply and not enough regular supply of PPE.

"This is the number one priority nurses are bringing to my attention, that they do not have adequate supply of protective equipment."

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The BMA medical union warned on Friday that PPE supplies in London and Yorkshire are at "dangerously low levels".

New Labour leader Keir Starmer said on social media that it was "insulting" to imply frontline staff were wasting PPE.

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He added: "It is quite frankly insulting to imply frontline staff are wasting PPE.

"There are horrific stories of NHS staff and care workers not having the equipment they need to keep them safe.

"The Government must act to ensure supplies are delivered."

Mr Hancock acknowledged distributing masks, gloves, aprons and hand sanitiser to frontline workers is requiring a "Herculean logistical effort".

He told BBC Breakfast on Saturday it was important that healthcare workers use the "right amount" of protective equipment.

Precious resource

He added: "I am not impugning anyone who works for the NHS and I think they do an amazing job.

"But what I am reiterating, stressing, is the importance to use the right amount of PPE both to have enough and also to use it as the precious resource that it is."

Mr Hancock also dismissed reports that he was not following social distancing rules, following a report in the Health Service Journal that video conferencing images seen by the publication showed him "surrounded by 10 and 20 colleagues at times".

Asked if that was the case, on the Today programme, he said: "No, not since the social distancing rules came in."

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The row comes as the Government is urging the public to stay at home over Easter, after the UK recorded its highest daily death toll from coronavirus since the outbreak began.

The latest figures from the Department of Health and Social Care showed that as of Thursday there were 8,958 hospital deaths from the disease - an increase of 980 on the previous day.

19 NHS deaths

Mr Hancock also said on Saturday that 19 NHS workers have died from coronavirus.

He said: "My heart goes out to their families, these are people who have put themselves on the front line.

"I'm particularly struck at the high proportion of people from minority ethnic backgrounds and people who have come to this country to work in the NHS who have died of coronavirus.

"I find it really upsetting actually and it is a testament to the fact that people who have come from all over the world have come and given their lives in service to the NHS and paid for that with their lives."

A British scientist has said that a vaccine to coronavirus could be ready as soon as September.

Sarah Gilbert, professor of vaccinology at Oxford University, told The Times on Saturday that she was "80% confident" that the vaccine being developed by her team would work, with human trials due to begin in the next fortnight.

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She said: "I think there's a high chance that it will work based on other things that we have done with this type of vaccine.

"It's not just a hunch and as every week goes by we have more data to look at... I would go for 80%, that's my personal view."

Stay at home

The Government is urging people to stay at home over Easter amid fears that with continuing good weather forecast, people would flock to parks and beaches and undermine its social distancing strategy.

Mr Hancock acknowledged the warm weather conditions but said it was too early to lift the social distancing measures.

He said: "We are just starting to see the curve flatten, we are just starting to see the number of new arrivals at hospital with coronavirus flatten.

"It's too early to lift the measures and people need to stay at home."

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