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HEALTH

Why Spanish health workers are staging protests outside hospitals

Spanish health workers on the front line of the fight against coronavirus gathered on Monday outside hospitals in the Madrid region to rally against shortages of protective equipment.

Why Spanish health workers are staging protests outside hospitals
Healthcare workers hold a banner reading "Healthcare workers needed" during a protest calling for a reinforced healthcare system outside the Gregorio Maranon hospital in Madrid. Photos: AFP

Nurses, doctors and other workers protested in their uniforms, some in scrubs, under the slogan “health workers essential”.   

They stood silently for two minutes at the gates of several institutions in and around the capital, holding placards and homemade signs that read “we are fighting without weapons”, “who cares for the carers” and “public healthcare can't be sold”.   

The goal is for people to become aware of “the precariousness of our jobs”, said Silvia Garcia, an intensive care unit nurse who joined hundreds of others outside the Gregorio Maranon hospital.

“COVID-19 only intensified a situation that we were experiencing before,” she told AFP.

“We need to have the means to care,” said Victor Aparicio, another intensive care nurse at the same hospital.   

“We need to guarantee that we can rest and protect ourselves so that we can carry out our work in the best possible conditions.”    

Caregivers say they are exhausted and complain both about staff shortages and a lack of protective equipment to deal with the coronavirus outbreak.    

One-third of all Spain's cases and deaths have been recorded in the capital, where the health system was on the verge of breaking down at the height of the crisis.

The protesters want the Madrid region to keep on the extra 10,000 staff hired to deal with the pandemic.

Officials have only offered guarantees that they will be kept on until the end of the year.

READ ALSO: Spain revises its coronavirus death toll by nearly 2,000 cases

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HEALTH

Are Danes cutting back on cigarettes and alcohol?

Danish stores sold a significantly lower quantity of alcohol and cigarettes over the counter last year, new data from Statistics Denmark show.

Are Danes cutting back on cigarettes and alcohol?

Some 3,852 cigarettes were sold year, which amounts to 804 per person over the age of 18. But that compares to a figures of 854 per person on 2022.

Cigarette sales in Denmark have been declining since 2018.

Sales of sprits, beer and wine fell by 7.8 percent, 5.3 percent and 0.9 percent respectively.

Danish business sold the equivalent of 44.4 million litres of pure alcohol, which works out at 11.9 units per week on average for each person over the age of 18.

Although that is a lower value than in 2022, it still exceeds the amount recommended by the Danish Health Authority (Sundhedsstyrelsen).

The Health Authority recommends that adults over 18 drink no more than 10 units per week and no more than four in a single day.

READ ALSO: Should Denmark raise the minimum age for buying alcohol?

“The numbers are still too high and it’s an average that could have a skewed distribution,” University of Southern Denmark professor, Janne Tholstrup, said in relation to the alcohol sales figures. Tholstrup has published research on Denmark’s alcohol culture.

That is in spite of a 30-year-trend of falling alcohol consumption, according to the professor.

“The majority of Danes stay under the recommended 10 unite per week. That means there is a large group with a persistently excessive consumption of alcohol,” she said.

The Statistics Denmark figures also show that sales of loose tobacco – such as the type used in roll-up cigarettes and pipes – also fell last year. Some 58 tonnes less were sold compared to 2022.

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