HORROR PLUNGE Top Russian doctor ‘falls’ from fifth floor window ‘while on call to bosses complaining about lack of PPE for medics’
https://www.thesun.ie/news/5362927/top-russian-doctor-falls-window-ppe-medics/
Will Stewart
26 Apr 2020, 20:09Updated: 26 Apr 2020, 20:59
A TOP Russian doctor plunged 50 ft from her office window as she complained to bosses on a conference call about a shortage of PPE for coronavirus medics.
Dr Yelena Nepomnyashchaya, 47, a mother of two, is thought to have objected to her hospital having to take in coronavirus patients because of an “acute shortage” of personal protection equipment for doctors and nurses.
⚠️Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates
Top Russian doctor Yelena Nepomnyashchaya is reported to have fallen from a window during a call about PPE shortages
5
Top Russian doctor Yelena Nepomnyashchaya is reported to have fallen from a window during a call about PPE shortagesCredit: vestnick.icdc
Dr Nepomnyashchaya, 47, runs the Krasnoyarsk Regional Hospital for War Veterans
5
Dr Nepomnyashchaya, 47, runs the Krasnoyarsk Regional Hospital for War VeteransCredit: Google Maps
She is now fighting for her life in intensive care after the fifth floor fall but medics are "refusing to talk" about her chances of survival, TVK Krasnoyarsk reported.
The respected doctor was on a call with Minister of Health for the Krasnoyarsk region Boris Nemik on Saturday at the time of the fall.
Police are investigating the circumstances of the fall.
Reports say she had been told that 80 beds at the Krasnoyarsk Regional Hospital for War Veterans were to be given over for coronavirus patients.
She is thought to have been against the plan because of a shortage of protective equipment for doctors.
The Ministry of Health has since claimed that the hospital was ready to accept Covid-19 patients.
Deputy head of Krasnoyarsk region’s government Aleksey Podkorytov said Dr Nepomnyashchaya's fall could have an explanation besides those reported by local media.
“So many things could have happened,” he said.
“It could have been because it was Spring, the overall stress, something in her family.
“It’s difficult to say what could have happened.
“There was nothing extraordinary happening at the time, just a routine conference call with doctors’ reports."
He added: “At the time [of the accident] there were no patients with coronavirus, yet the hospital was on high alert with all necessary equipment in place.
“She just reported that there were no coronavirus patients.
“They in fact [have] started to be admitted into the hospital, but only a very few with the lightest form of the virus.”