Harry Ritchie, a Pharmacy Technician at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Glasgow, is working harder and longer shifts in a Covid-19 ward.
As part of his job, Harry makes up and discharges prescriptions for patients at the hospital.
However, since the Covid-19 outbreak, Harry cannot go into the rooms of the patients he prescribes for due to the high risk of infection.
Now, he has to go through a system of administering the drugs through a main pharmacy store which has led to even more paperwork and a delay in prescribing at a time when the hospital is getting busier and more hectic each day.
Harry said: “This system is making it a lot more difficult because you can usually get the drugs to the patients quickly but now we have to go through a main store so your day is a lot longer and awkward but people are dying so you don’t want to complain.”
Harry also faces a high risk of infection as he works in ‘pharmacy pods’ which are small rooms (roughly 12’ 6 feet in space) where technicians prepare prescriptions.
The small space but higher demand for drugs makes it almost impossible to abide by the 2-metre social distancing rules and this is made even more challenging with the hospital now seeing a shortage in PPE equipment.
George Mackay who plays football with Harry said: “He’s never once moaned about being in danger or the long hours. He’s a hero...though I am a blue nose and he’s a Hoop.”
Harry stresses that he is not the only one putting himself at risk as there are other key workers who he feels do not get the praise they deserve.
He said: “The nurses deserve the praise they get but there are so many other people who are working in the hospital that get forgotten about like the cleaners and porters who are working every day to make sure everyone else is safe.”
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