Docs Not Cops International Video Collaboration

Collating perspectives on migrant access to healthcare during the coronavirus pandemic

What are we doing?

The COVID19 pandemic is an international emergency. We want to live in a world where everyone’s health is valued, and where no one is afraid to access the health care they need.

We are asking 10 health workers and migrant rights’ campaigners to share their knowledge and experience about the impact of the coronavirus crisis on:
— migrant access to healthcare,
— on healthcare workers themselves, and
— what a response based on international solidarity should look like.

We want to draw on similarities and show solidarity between campaigns working towards universal healthcare, and to promote amazing successes like those in Ireland and Portugal, where immigration policing in healthcare has been stopped during the COVID19 crisis.
We’re inviting contributions from across the world, including India, Spain, USA and the UK. We’ll use the responses to make short social media videos, one ‘teaser’ promotional video and a longer report video exploring each issue outlined above.

Docs Not Cops (www.docsnotcops.co.uk) is a UK-based grassroots organisation campaigning for free healthcare for all, and against restrictions to the National Health Service that erode universal healthcare. We will use these videos as part of our ‘Patients Not Passports’ campaign in England with our partners Medact, Migrants Organise, and the New Economics Foundation.

We would like you to please:

  1. Record yourself for our promotional ‘teaser’ video (see step 1 below)
  2. Respond to our questions for the longer report video (this can be on video or in writing, step 2)
  3. In 2 weeks we’ll come back and ask you to record 1 or 2 more lines for the final videos

How to record your video:

  • You can use your phone, or a friends if they have a better camera
  • Record your video in landscape (your phone on it’s side).
  • Wear something that identifies you as a health worker, or be in a healthcare setting.
  • Leave 3-5 seconds video time before and after the recording,
    speak slowly and clearly, to help with editing
  • Send the video to docsnotcops@gmail.com (don’t send on whatsapp)

Step 1 – promotional ‘teaser’ video

  • Looking into the camera, please read the short phrases below, in English and also your own language.
  • please leave a 5 second gap between each one
    — “Patients Not Passports!”
    — “No one should be afraid to access healthcare!”
    — “Healthcare must be free for all!”
  • Please send us this video before Friday 17th April 2020

Step 2 – Report video questions

  • Answer the following questions below (either by video, or in writing)
  • There is no fixed time limit, but please try to keep your video to less than 5 minutes).
  • We will be back in touch if you reply in writing, or if we want to repeat any of your video, to help with the editing.

Questions

What’s happening where you are?

  • What is your name
  • Which town/city and country are you working in?
  • What is your normal specialty, or job role? How has this changed during the COVID crisis?
  • Was your hospital/health system prepared for a pandemic? If not, why?
  • Do you have everything you need to do your job right now? If not, why?

Access to Healthcare

  • What impact has this crisis had on migrant access to healthcare?
  • What are the barriers stopping migrants accessing healthcare?
  • What action is being taken to combat this, from healthcare workers and migrant communities?
  • Has the Government responded to this action or change any policies during the crisis?
  • What do you think the solution should be?

International Solidarity

  • Are you worried about how COVID-19 will affect countries in the Global South, specifically those with weakened health systems?
  • What kind of solidarity can we extend to those countries and people within those countries?
  • How do you think that countries and people around the world can work together to combat this pandemic, and to ensure situations like this don’t happen again?
  • What message do you want to send to your colleagues around the world?

How we will use the video

  • We’ll produce a promotional ‘teaser’ video, cut together from clips from all contributors
  • We’ll produce a longer ‘report’ video exploring each of the three areas outlined above
  • These videos will be used on Twitter, Facebook and posted on the blog section of our website www.docsnotcops.co.uk along with our allies websites (New Economics Foundation, Migrants Organise, MedAct)
  • We will produce a short promotional video for an event we are co-organising with our allies in the UK to release a report into international struggles for universal healthcare.

Thank you very much for reading the proposal, looking forward to hearing from you!

We are not prepared for a pandemic and the Tory Government are to blame

In 2017, 323 Conservative MP’s in the House of Commons publicly displayed their stance on adequate healthcare provision in a disturbing scene; cheering and applauding a successful block to Labour’s bid for public sector pay rises and improvement of emergency services. Last week, Boris Johnson applauded the work of NHS staff on national television outside No.10 joining the country-wide ‘Clap for our Carers’ action. He was shouting ‘‘Thank you for what you are doing, we are going to keep supporting you in any way we can ’. The Prime Minister has been brandishing his stance of #StayHomeSaveLives on social media, stating his utmost priority is to ‘Protect the NHS’. As the leader of a Conservative political party that has systematically undermined the health and social care sectors for the last ten
years under austerity cuts, this could not be more ironic.

Let’s get one thing clear – the point is not to discredit acts of appreciation towards frontline workers. The Covid-19 pandemic has instilled a sense of solidarity within our communities that recognises the need to care for one another during a time of great uncertainty and panic. But as the clocks tick in A&E departments and a sense of impending doom preoccupies the minds of care workers, we should all reflect upon the circumstances that have led us here.

The Prime Minister apparently feels strongly about supporting members of the healthcare workforce, yet we are amidst a staffing crisis . Under the Conservative government cuts to training budgets, pension changes, record patient demand and an increasingly pressured working environment saw nurses and doctors leaving the NHS in droves over the last five years. Let’s also remember that one fifth of the NHS workforce are not British citizens – so we will continue to see a reduction of staffing as Brexit unfolds. The UK has one of the lowest numbers of both regular hospital beds and critical care beds per capita in all of the EU. There are 6.6 Intensive care unit (ICU) beds per 100,000 people in comparison to an EU average of 11.5, and 12.5 in Italy. ICU units are already running at 80-100% capacity on a ‘good’ day. To top it off, the UK has the second lowest health spending per person out of all G7 countries. We are not equipped for a pandemic, and the Conservative Government are to blame.

Chart showing "The Countries With The Most Critical Care Beds Per Capita" as "Total number of critical care beds per 100,000 inhabitants in selected countries": U.S 34.7, Germany 29.2, Italy 12.5, France 11.6, South Korea 10.6, Spain 9.7, Japan 7.3, UK 6.6, China 3.6, India 2.3. Most recent US and EU data from 2009 and 2012 respectively. Asian data is from 2017. Sources: National Centre for Biotechnology Information, Intensive Care Medicine (Journal), Critical Care Medicine (Journal)

A genuine interest to ‘#SaveLives’ means prioritising the health and well-being of all individuals and communities whether there is a pandemic or not. How has the government provided necessary support measures for vulnerable groups such as people living with disabilities, people in the asylum system, people living in poverty,
people with no accomodation, people in need of mental health support? Under the Tory government we have seen relentless cuts to not only public sector provision, but also grassroot and community based groups who have been striving to take issues into their own hands. As a result, Covid-19 will impact our society in unequal measures. The psychological and emotional strain secondary to unemployment and physical isolation will have a disproportionate impact on people in precarious work, living on low incomes, with little savings or with insecure immigration status.

Groups such as Medact and Doctors for the NHS have written this open letter to Matt Hancock describing the unsustainable long term crisis underpinning the situation now. Demands from the health community include immediate secure housing, secure incomes and access to healthcare for all. Docs Not Cops have been campaigning for the latter goal since new UK policies were introduced in 2017. Theresa May previously stated she wanted to ‘create a really hostile environment for migrants’ back in 2012. Hostile Environment immigration policies saw the introduction of ID checks for people accessing secondary healthcare, in a drastic shift away from founding principles of the NHS. This policy has been working to change the culture – creating a system where
access to care is dependent on ability to pay. There are people living in the asylum system within the UK who already struggle to access and receive adequate medical care. During the next few months, it is imperative that every individual has free access to healthcare. It’s also time to challenge the government directly on their ethical
stance regarding the human right to this access.

When will the Conservative government stop putting a human price on austerity? When will they stop protecting the UK economy above its people? How many more crises will it take to get the message across? Will the Conservative government make radical policy change to create an adequate health and social care sector? Andrew Meyerson (Junior Doctor) hit the nail on the head in his article published just before the General Elections last December:

““Prime Minister, the NHS is not safe in your hands. Your negligence and that of your party over the past decade has contributed to the deaths of nearly 5,500 patients, and if you were a junior doctor like me, your licence would now be revoked, and you would be sent to prison.”

We are at a juncture where our sense of normality has been dramatically shaken and it will fundamentally reshape our perspective on societal values and priorities. The world won’t be the same again, so let’s work towards taking our future from the greedy hands of those who believe our health and happiness can ever be weighed up against profit. Never mind if they are clapping.

Anna O’Neill

Doctor and member of Glasgow Docs Not Cops