Coronavirus: Egypt medical union issues warning over health system

Egypt has recorded more than 16,000 Covid-19 cases and over 700 deaths

(FILES) In this file photo taken on April 19, 2020, an Egyptian doctor wearing two protective masks checks a patient's lung X-ray at the infectious diseases unit of the Imbaba hospital in the capital Cairo, during the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic crisis.   Four months after Egypt reported its first coronavirus case, experts say the health system is approaching a "critical threshold" in its capacity to tackle the disease. The Arab world's most populous country of 100 million inhabitants has so far declared JUST OVER 12,000 coronavirus cases and 600 fatalities from the COVID-19 respiratory disease. / AFP / Ahmed HASAN
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Egypt's top medical union on Monday warned the country's health system was in danger, accusing the health ministry of negligence in failing to protect healthcare workers from coronavirus.
"The syndicate is warning that the health system could completely collapse, leading to a catastrophe affecting the entire country if the health ministry's negligence and lack of action towards medical staff is not rectified," the Egyptian Medical Syndicate said in a statement.
Covid-19 has killed 19 doctors and infected more than 350, according to the EMS, a body representing thousands of Egyptian doctors.
"The EMS holds the health ministry entirely responsible for the mounting deaths and infections among doctors due to its negligence... that is tantamount to death through a dereliction of duty," it added.

Egypt, the most populous Arab country, has recorded more than 16,000 Covid-19 cases and over 700 deaths.
The EMS called on the "executive, judicial and legislative" branches of government to force the health ministry to comply with its demands.
These included providing all doctors with personal protective equipment (PPE), training for dealing with coronavirus cases and testing for those with symptoms or who have come into contact with infected people.

Hospitals have been hit by a flight of doctors abroad in recent years while the frontline staff left behind face shortages of medical supplies and protective gear that heightens the risk of infection.
The EMS statement came after 32-year-old doctor Walid Yehia died on Saturday after being unable to secure a bed in an isolation hospital.
The country's 17 isolation hospitals reserved for novel coronavirus patients reached their maximum capacity at the start of the month, deputy health minister Ahmed al-Sobki told local press last week.
A colleague resigned in protest from the same Cairo hospital where Yehia worked.