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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
National
Joseph Locker

Covid-19 'has taken its toll' on NHS workers as 100 more coronavirus deaths reported in Notts

Health bosses say the coronavirus pandemic has clearly "taken its toll" on NHS workers in Nottinghamshire's hospitals after another 100 people died as a result of the virus in the past week.

Amanda Sullivan, accountable officer for the NHS Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), spoke during a public health briefing on Friday, February 5, about the impact the pandemic has had on healthcare workers.

She said they had coped very well, considering the UK has already experienced a number of significant waves of Covid-19, particularly the most recent month of January.

Ms Sullivan revealed there had been a further 100 deaths related to Covid in the seven days to February 3 across all hospitals in the county, emphasising it was a "very significant number and every one of those deaths is a tragedy for that family."

"People are holding up remarkably well and the level at which people have been flexible in their roles," she said.

"People have moved between departments and whole wards have changed their functions, and I think it is very evident in general.

"We have had a first wave, a second wave and this very difficult month in January with people working under extreme pressure.

"People have seen some very traumatic events, it is very difficult when people are very ill and out of touch with their families. Staff are tired and coping remarkably well.

"But it has taken its toll."

More positively Ms Sullivan said hospital admissions had decreased in the most recent week, marking the first decline in many weeks.

There were 342 admissions in the seven days to January 31, compared to 467 in the previous week.

In total there were 668 people in hospitals as of February 2, more favourable than the 749 on January 26.

Of all patients in hospital around 10% are on ventilators.

"I'm very pleased that the hospital admission rates are starting to reduce," she added.

"But we are still in a very serious position in that we have got more than double the number of people in hospital than we had at the peak of the first wave in April. We do still have high rates.

"We are starting to see some significant reductions but we are still in a very serious position.

"Unfortunately we are still seeing high rates of deaths in hospitals, there is always a time lag between people having the infection and needing hospital admission and some sadly dying."

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