NHS nurses are being made to use various items they can find – including bin bags – in the hospital to help protect themselves, with many using plastic aprons over their head, buying wellies or wrapping clinical waste bags around their feet.
One nurse, who did not wish to be named, said:
Widespread nurses are making their own PPE [personal protective equipment]. I know friends I trained with doing the same. We have to protect ourselves, some of us have children and babies. We are trying to help people but have to protect families. I don’t know why we are not getting PPE.
She added:
I don’t think it’s about money but management. Some third world countries are dealing properly with this pandemic but we are not. We are doing our best – really doing our best but in terms of the equipment needed to help patients they are failing. Ventilators, for example. If we have unwell patients but no ITU [intensive treatment unit] capacity we can’t do much.
Nurses in the Royal Free hospital in north London have been tying clinical waste bags around their legs, the Guardian has been told. In North Middlesex hospital they have been tying plastic aprons around their heads.
The UK communities secretary, Robert Jenrick, has reiterated government warnings for people to maintain social distancing, refusing to dismiss the idea of an Italian-style lockdown if needed to curb the further spread of the virus. He told Sky’s Sophy Ridge on Sunday:
We want to continue in a free society. But this isn’t a game, people need to follow the advice.
Discussing a plan announced overnight to write to 1.5m people perceived as vulnerable due to underlying health conditions, urging them to stay indoors for 12 weeks, with provision for care packages to be sent to them, Jenrick said these people could remain with other household members, saying he is “not expecting families to be broken up”.
Jenrick said that while people should stay healthy and go out for exercise, he said they should not pack together in parks, and stay physically apart from people
Failure to follow the advice could see the NHS overwhelmed, he warned, even with measures to increase critical care capacity:
We’re doing all the things we can, but let’s be clear, the numbers are rising, we need to follow the advice of healthcare professions.
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