Coronavirus: Doctor who warned prime minister about PPE dies with COVID-19
Written by News on 09/04/2020
A doctor diagnosed with coronavirus has died – three weeks after he warned the prime minister that health workers urgently needed more personal protective equipment (PPE).
Abdul Mabud Chowdhury, 53, passed away after 15 days in hospital with COVID-19.
On 18 March he wrote a message to Boris Johnson asking him to “urgently” ensure PPE for “each and every NHS worker in the UK”.
He told the prime minister that healthcare workers “are in direct contact with patients” and have a “human right like others to live in this world disease-free with our family and children”.
Dr Chowdhury was a locum urologist who worked at Homerton Hospital in east London and died on Wednesday at Queen’s Hospital in Romford after testing positive for coronavirus.
In a statement, the Muslim Doctors Association paid tribute to him saying: “We are deeply saddened by the death of Dr Abdul Mabud Chowdhury, Consultant Urologist at Homerton Hospital, after fighting for his life from COVID-19.
“He leaves behind his wife and two children. Our thoughts and prayers are with them.
“Two weeks before his admission to hospital he wrote a message to the prime minister urging for better PPE.
“May he rest in peace.”
In his message to the prime minister, Dr Chowdhury wrote: “Please ensure urgently PPE for each and every NHS health worker in the UK.
“Remember we may be doctors/nurses/HCAs/allied health workers who are in direct contact with patients, but we are also human beings to practice human rights like others, to live in this world disease free with our family and children.
“Otherwise in future our children will lose interest to go to medical school.
“We also should get first track facilities for coronavirus testing to help our patients to prevent the disease spreading.”
Family friend doctor Golam Rahat Khan said Dr Chowdhury had been worried about coronavirus “long before” it reached the UK.
“He was telling me and other friends that coronavirus was very dangerous,” he said.
Dr Khan, 45, who has known Dr Chowdhury for nearly 20 years, said he was a “life-loving person”.
:: Listen to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker
He added: “He liked singing and liked our own Bengali culture and loved English heritage.
“He was so caring, he would call us very often to come to his house. I last saw him on February 1 at my house for my son’s eighth birthday.”
Dr Chowdhury’s death is the latest in a list of NHS staff who have died fighting the pandemic.
(c) Sky News 2020: Coronavirus: Doctor who warned prime minister about PPE dies with COVID-19