International Council of Nurses: Nurses – Heroes of the Beirut Disaster
The President of the Order of Nurses in
Dr
Before this catastrophe, Lebanese nurses were already facing a difficult situation,
And then, on 3 August, the dockside explosion happened. All the nurses in
"The situation is really very serious," said
Three hospitals were completely destroyed, and patients had to be evacuated. "Many wounded people were running to these hospitals to seek care not knowing they had been destroyed. Can you imagine the situation?" said
Unfortunately, five nurses lost their lives in the disaster while on duty. Four nurses died immediately when the explosion hit the hospital where they were working and the fifth, in a distant hospital, was pushed against the wall by the pressure of the blast, and also passed away. Many others were seriously injured.
"I was on the ground on Wednesday early morning and I went to every hospital. I even went to the hospitals in the suburbs to see where the injured nurses were, but in every street in
Despite this, even those nurses who had been injured in the blast, kept working. They helped to evacuate patients and continued to care for them.
When the
"As Lebanese nurses, we have one characteristic which may not be found in other people,"
On the morning after the explosion, the nurses went to the hospitals and started cleaning the units, assessing the damage, removing all the glass and other broken materials.
"This is something we have lived, we have experienced - obstacles do not stop us," said
When the journalists asked what help was needed in this catastrophe,
"We need medications for cancer, NCDs, chemotherapy; we lost them all. We don't have any back up supplies," she said "We need gloves, PPE, IVs, pads; we need the materials we can use to help people...
A major vaccination campaign had been planned for September/October, and
"We have enough hospital beds," she explained. "But what we need is help with finances, because what was used in one night is what we used normally in two months. We are lacking sutures, bandages, everything that is used in casualties, we are lacking IVs, needles, syringes. But we are not lacking human resources. We have enough numbers."
The extent of the health problems resulting from the explosion is unknown.
"We have to wait to see what the outbreak of COVID-19 will be," she said. "But almost 85% of population were wearing a face mask. Healthcare workers managed to get face masks to people even during the catastrophe, so we are hoping not to get a big outbreak after 14 days."
"Hospitals without nurses are empty buildings," she added. "So, we have to maintain and strengthen the nursing workforce and giving them their rights."
"I am worried about the nurses who will be without work for months," she said. "Three hospitals have been demolished. We pray for those who are dead, but we have to think of those who are alive and their families.
'We talk a lot about the compassion and caring of nurses, but what these tragic incidents highlight is the courage, is the commitment, is the heart...This year, this disaster, this coronavirus, is undoubtedly changing people's views and attitudes towards nurses."
"Frankly," he continued, "we have seen in far too many places a lack of prioritisation and support for nurses and other healthcare workers: problems with personal protective equipment, fake PPE, no supplies, no testing, not the right equipment, low pay, poor pay, and reneging on commitments for pay as well.
'Many nurses say the applause, the accolades, the recognition, is of course welcome. But if it does not now translate into practical support and investment in the nursing profession and into our health systems, that applause will ring very, very hollow in the ears of all healthcare workers.
'What we are seeing with this disaster, what we are seeing with COVID, is how intimately linked our health is to every other aspect of life - our economic prosperity, our ability to trade and to see people, our friends and family. We need politicians to come together to support health systems, but to do that in a very practical way through investment and recognise that it is an investment and not a cost. Our nurses, our health workers, are holding our societies, our communities together, making people safe and enabling
ICN has a disaster fund which is used in tragic times such as this to support national nursing associations in whatever needs they have identified. ICN has called on its member national nursing associations across the world to support this disaster fund and commits to ensuring that the support is based on the needs of the Order of Nurses in
"We pledge and commit to stand with you in supporting them, that they are not forgotten,"
To download the press release please click here (https://www.icn.ch/sites/default/files/inline-files/WS_28_Dr%20Myrna%20Doumit_press%20conference_FINAL.pdf).
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