Over 3 thousand and 600 health workers have died from COVID-19 in the U.S.

More than 3 thousand and 600 employees of the American health system have lost their lives in the first year of the coronary pandemic. This is what came out of a “report Lost on the Frontline”, a 12-month investigation by “Guardian and Kaiser Health NeWs (KHN). In full “report Lost on the [...]
This is what came out of a “report Lost on the Frontline”, a 12-month investigation by “Guardian and Kaiser Health NeWs (KHN).
In full “report Lost on the Frontline” for the deaths of U.S. health - care workers reveals that many of these deaths could have been prevented, as well as inequalities regarding race and ethnicity.
The federal government has not widely followed this data, but more calls have been added for the Benden administration to account. The project, which tracked who lost his life and why, provides concrete information on the functioning and failures of the US health care system during pandemic.
Among the main findings of the report are deep inequalities related to the race, ethnicity, and economic status in the American health care workforce.
Low - paying workers in the patient's day - to - day care, including nurses, relief personnel, and elderly house employees, were more likely to die in the pandemic than were doctors.
One-year-old investigative reports found that many of these deaths could have been prevented.
The lack of medical equipment and masks, the lack of testing of Ovidius, poor contact tracking, the unstable guidance of masks by politicians, the wrong steps from employers, and the smooth implementation of safety regulations at the workplace by government regulators all contributed to the increase in the risk facing health care workers.
Studies show that healthcare workers were more than 3 times more likely to contact Covid than the general public.










