Dead Nurses

Dead Nurses




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June 3, 20202:07 PMUpdated a year ago
GENEVA (Reuters) - More than 600 nurses worldwide are known to have died from COVID-19, which has infected an estimated 450,000 healthcare workers, the International Council of Nurses said on Wednesday.
The death toll among nurses more than doubled in the past month from 260 on May 6, according to its figures, which are based on data from more than 30 countries.
β€œIn the last two months, we have seen the number of deaths of nurses as a result of coronavirus around the world rise from 100 to now in excess of 600 and we think worldwide the number of healthcare workers who could be infected by the virus is around 450,000,” Howard Catton, chief executive officer of the Geneva-based ICN, told Reuters Television.
β€œThese are numbers that keep going up,” he said.
The pandemic’s true cost among health professionals was not known, the association said, renewing its appeal for greater protection for them and systematic collection of reliable data.
On average, 7 percent of all cases of COVID-19, the lung disease caused by the novel coronavirus, are among healthcare workers, which means that nurses and other staff are at great personal risk β€œand so are the patients they care for”, it said.
Extrapolating from more than 6 million reported cases gave its estimate of some 450,000 infections among healthcare workers.
Infection rates among healthcare workers vary greatly between countries, with fewer than 1% in Singapore and more than 30% in Ireland, it said. Spain and Germany have recorded low numbers of fatalities among healthcare workers despite large outbreaks, it added.
β€œWhy do the rates of deaths among nurses appear higher in some Latin American countries?” it asked, referring to the region that the World Health Organization (WHO) says has emerged as the new epicentre for the pandemic.
β€œWhy are some countries reporting disproportionate deaths among black, Asian and minority ethnic HCWs (healthcare workers)? This is an issue raised directly by the Philippine Nurses Association to ICN, concerning Filipino HCWs in the UK,” it said.
The ICN represents 130 national associations and more than 20 million registered nurses.
Reporting by Cecile Mantovani and Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Alex Richardson
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An estimated 1,500 nurses from a number of countries lost their lives during World War I.[1] Some died from disease or accidents, and some from enemy action.
29 Australian nurses died from disease or injuries; 25 of these died on active service, and 4 died in Australia from injuries or illness sustained during their service.[2] Most of these nurses were serving in the Australian Army Nursing Service; however, a small number were serving with Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service, one of a number of British Army nursing services during World War I.[2] Other Australian women made their own way to Europe and joined the British Red Cross, private hospitals or other allied services.[3]
Edith Cavell was executed for treason by a German firing squad on 12 October 1915 in Brussels, Belgium.
In March 1915, four Scottish nurses died in Serbia of typhus.[37] They were part of a group of Scottish women - nurses, doctors and volunteers - who had travelled to Serbia to establish Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service:
Marjory Eva May Edwards served for three and a half years in Britain and France and died of measles in England on 4 January 1918. Her name is listed on the village war memorial at St Mary's Church at Streatley, Berkshire.[38]
Catherine Miller was working at the 1st Western General Hospital in Liverpool, England when she died on 24 December 1918. She had contracted malaria while serving in Russia.[39][40]
On 31 December 1917, the British troop ship, HMS Osmanieh (1906) struck a mine near the entrance to Alexandria Harbour. The ship sank in under 10 minutes and almost 200 service personnel died. Among the dead were eight nurses.[41] Two of them belonged to the Queen Alexandria’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS):
and the rest belonged to the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD):
53 Canadian nurses lost their lives during the war.[42] In one incident, on 27 June 1918, 14 nurses were killed when their hospital ship HMHS Llandovery Castle was torpedoed while travelling from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Liverpool, England.[43] The nurses who died were:
Mary Agnes McKenzie.[12]
Christina Campbell.[13]
Carola Josephine Douglas.[14]
Alexina Dussault.[14]
Minnie Aenath Follette.[14]
Margaret Jane Fortescue.[14]
Minnie Katherine Gallaher.[14]
Jessie Mabel McDiarmid.[14]
Rena McLean.[14]
Mary Belle Sampson.[14]
Gladys Irene Sare.[14]
Anna Irene Stamers.[15]
Jean Templeman.[15]
Rosa Vecht (18 July 1881 – 23 January 1915) died when she was injured by shrapnel at Veurne in West Flanders, while saying goodbye before a planned evacuation. She died after an operation to amputate her leg.[44]
16 New Zealand nurses died during the war, including 10 who died in the sinking of the hospital ship SS Marquette.[45]
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Killed when a German aircraft bombed the field hospital she was in
Tuberculosis, contracted while nursing
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Drowned in the sinking of the SS Marquette
Ecaterina Teodoroiu was a Romanian nurse who enlisted as a soldier and died on 3 September 1917 during active service.[47]
Nurses Clara Ayres and Helen Burnett Wood were the first two women to be killed while part of the United States military when they died on 17 May 1917, following an accident on board USS Mongolia.[48]
Helen Fairchild died in France on 18 January 1918, from post-operative complications following surgery for an ulcer.[49]
Lucy Nettie Fletcher (1886-1918) was the first Red Cross nurse in General Pershing's army to die in the performance of duty.[50]
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