51³Ô¹ÏÍø

Frontline Healthcare Workers At St Vincent's Hospital Adapt To Life Between The Red and Green Zones As Pandemic Approaches Third Year

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - NOVEMBER 26: Niegel Vas, Senior Campus Environmental Services Coordinator poses at St Vincent's Hospital on November 26, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. Since the World Health Organisation declared a global pandemic on March 11, 2020 St Vincent's Hospital staff have been at the forefront of research and response to COVID-19 in Sydney, Australia, providing emergency care in specially designed COVID care wards including negative pressure bubbles (the bubble), facilitating vaccination hubs, virtual COVID care in the community, swab processing and outreach programs to treat the homeless, as well as inmates in correctional centres. To combat infection spread the hospital set up a separate COVID-19 section of the emergency department, utilising a newly built section of the hospital to have a Red (COVID-19) zone and a Green (general emergency zone). During the rise and spread of the Delta variant, some 774 people were treated as inpatients for COVID-19 while 731 people were cared for via St Vincent's virtual hospital program. Patients hospitalised due to COVID-19 often required increased staffing ratios per patient and stay on average over 14 days in hospital. Staff expect the demand for ongoing treatment will continue to grow as an estimated 30% of people who contract COVID-19 suffer persistent symptoms, known as 'long COVID'. As the COVID-19 pandemic enters a third year, St Vincent's frontline staff are comforted by Australia's high vaccination rate and prepared for what may come as new variants emerge. (Footage by Sean Foster/Getty Images)
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - NOVEMBER 26: Niegel Vas, Senior Campus Environmental Services Coordinator poses at St Vincent's Hospital on November 26, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. Since the World Health Organisation declared a global pandemic on March 11, 2020 St Vincent's Hospital staff have been at the forefront of research and response to COVID-19 in Sydney, Australia, providing emergency care in specially designed COVID care wards including negative pressure bubbles (the bubble), facilitating vaccination hubs, virtual COVID care in the community, swab processing and outreach programs to treat the homeless, as well as inmates in correctional centres. To combat infection spread the hospital set up a separate COVID-19 section of the emergency department, utilising a newly built section of the hospital to have a Red (COVID-19) zone and a Green (general emergency zone). During the rise and spread of the Delta variant, some 774 people were treated as inpatients for COVID-19 while 731 people were cared for via St Vincent's virtual hospital program. Patients hospitalised due to COVID-19 often required increased staffing ratios per patient and stay on average over 14 days in hospital. Staff expect the demand for ongoing treatment will continue to grow as an estimated 30% of people who contract COVID-19 suffer persistent symptoms, known as 'long COVID'. As the COVID-19 pandemic enters a third year, St Vincent's frontline staff are comforted by Australia's high vaccination rate and prepared for what may come as new variants emerge. (Footage by Sean Foster/Getty Images)
PURCHASE A LICENSE

Get personalized pricing by telling us when, where, and how you want to use this asset.

DETAILS

Editorial #:
1359257280
Collection:
Getty Images News Video
Date created:
November 26, 2021
Upload date:
License type:
Rights-ready
Release info:
Not released.ÌýMore information
Clip length:
00:00:08:00
Location:
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Mastered to:
MPEG-4 8-bit H.264 4K 4096x2160 25p
Source:
Getty Images News Video
Object name:
a002c0003_20211126091408_0001