Selangor Journal
A healthcare worker wearing a powered air purifying respirator (PAPR) hood works at a drive-thru Covid-19 testing site at the Sanford Sports Complex Clinic, as the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) outbreak continues in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, US, on October 28, 2020. — Picture by REUTERS

Thousands of healthcare workers die of Covid-19 in US — Report

NEW YORK, Feb 22 — Nearly a year into the life-altering Covid-19 pandemic, the United States is about to surpass the line of 500,000 deaths and the fatalities of healthcare workers were already measured in thousands, Xinhua news agency quoting USA Today reported on Sunday.

   The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recorded nearly 409,000 coronavirus cases and 1,438 deaths among healthcare personnel nationwide, but the agency acknowledges its data is incomplete.

   A report in late December by Kaiser Health News and The Guardian said the number of healthcare fatalities was close to 3,000, it added.

  “They have been working endless hours amid constant death and suffering, forsaking time off and exposing themselves to the disease, leaving them exhausted and with no real indication of when the pandemic will relent,” said the paper. “The toil has taken a toll.”

  Many Americans are fed up with wearing masks, desperate for a return to normalcy and numb to the relentless stream of grim numbers, but healthcare workers don’t want to hear any of that, it said.

The arrival of vaccines in mid-December has removed some of the worry for medical workers, who were at the front of the line for inoculations, it added.

As of Sunday afternoon, the Centre for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University reported 498,254 deaths in the United States, the highest in the world, with California, New York and Texas being the top three states of fatality.  

 

— Bernama

Top Picks

KLIA shooting: Accused charged with attempted murder of wife

Freedom Flotilla joined by Mandela’s grandson, urges world to block Israeli ships

Ringgit soft as US dollar remains elevated