Prepared by Professor Alan Whiteside, OBE, Chair of Global Health Policy, BSIA, Waterloo, Canada & Professor Emeritus, University of KwaZulu-Natal – www.alan-whiteside.com1 – note: this blog includes an Appendix written for parents “Supporting Children During Lockdown”.
Introduction
On the weekend of 11th April Boris Johnson, the British Prime Minister, was released from St Thomas’ Hospital in London recovering from Covid-19. He was hospitalised for a week, including three days in intensive care. To his credit he has not returned to work but will spend time recuperating. In a brief video message, he recognised that the National Health Service (NHS) saved his life and took the opportunity to name some of the carers. He specifically ‘called out’ nurses from New Zealand and Portugal. Hopefully this will give rise to renewed respect and additional funding for the NHS, and a realisation as to how dependent the nation is on migrant health workers.
The latest article I have copublished has a Swaziland theme. It is with Robin Root and Arnau van Wyngaard, titled Food insecurity and ART adherence in Swaziland: the case for coordinated faith-based and multi-sectoral action, in Development in Practice, Issue 5,