ASEAN

SOS for personal protective gear in Indonesia

JAKARTA: Medical workers are urging the Indonesian government to provide adequate personal protective equipment and warned they will stop treating Covid-19 patients if the shortage persists.

The warning was made in a joint statement issued by several medical worker associations, including the Indonesian Medical Association (IDI), the Indonesian Dentist Association (PDGI) and the Indonesian Nurses Association (PPNI).

IDI chairman Daeng M. Faqih confirmed the joint statement issued on Friday, according to The Jakarta Post.

“We issued it for the sake of our colleagues’ safety. If they are infected with the disease, who will treat patients at medical facilities?” he said over the weekend.

The associations asserted that without wearing protective equipment, medical workers were susceptible to the disease, especially the ones handling people infected by Covid-19. The equipment shortage could also cause disruption in delivery of medical services.

The statement was issued in the wake of the death of at least 10 medical workers involved in treating Covid-19 patients over the past few weeks.

Daeng said despite it all, there are still some medical workers who continue to treat Covid-19 patients despite wearing no protective equipment. Such concern also urged the associations to issue the statement.

“We are also raising concern over the matter because infected medical workers will only add to the burden on their colleagues,” he added.

To further protect the safety of medical workers treating the disease, the IDI and the PDGI also issued circular containing Covid-19 prevention guidelines for medical workers. The circular, he said, had been disseminated to all medical facilities along with the statement on Friday.

“We acknowledge that the guidelines are not perfect. However, we hope that the management of the medical facilities will follow what we have suggested,” Daeng said.

Since mid-February, Indonesia’s health workers, doctors and nurses have been working overtime to treat Co pvid-19 cases, despite many of them having inadequate personal protection.

Many of the medical workers were found to have worn makeshift personal protective gear, including raincoats, instead of hazmat suits.

To address the issue, the Indonesian Military (TNI) has been distributing 151,000 pieces of protective equipment from the national warehouse at Halim Perdanakusuma Air Base for the past week.

The distribution, however, has drastically decreased the supply of the equipment as only 19,000 pieces of equipment remain in stock from the initial 170,000.

Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Mahfud MD admitted that the stock was inadequate to accommodate medical workers across the country as Indonesia needed millions of pieces of protective equipment until September, according to the government’s worst-case scenario of the pandemic.

However, he said the government had conducted a meeting regarding the issue on Friday to prepare the budget and the distribution mechanism of the equipment.

“We were slightly worried after realizing that the equipment had started to run out, but we have prepared the budget to buy more,” Mahfud said.

“We are optimistic to address the issue since many local manufacturers have also committed to producing more protective equipment.”

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