COVID-19 stole the lives of some 7,000 workers, Amnesty International reports

An estimated 7,000 fitness internationals have died after being inflamed with COVID-19, Amnesty International said in a recent analysis.

Amnesty International previously published a report on 13 July in which the figure was around 3,000 fitness workers. The human rights organization attributed the recent maximum figures to the accumulation of COVID-19 rates in many countries and to the increase in available sources of knowledge. .

According to Amnesty International’s new analysis, Mexico has the estimated number of deaths of fitness personnel due to COVID-19 with 1320 deaths, followed by the United States with 1,077 and the United Kingdom with 649; other countries with significant numbers are Brazil with 634 deaths. Russia with 631, India with 573, South Africa with 240, Italy with 188, Peru with 183, Iran with 164 and Egypt with 159. These latest figures did not mention Canada.

Medscape medical data maintains a list of international health care personnel who have died from COVID-19.

In a September 2 update, Medscape reported at least 17 fitness services deceased in Canada, the following information:

“This list is not yet complete and we want you to keep it up to date,” Medscape said in the press release.

The list does not specify whether all registered Canadians contracted exposure from the virus office to treat others with the disease.

Steve Cockburn, Amnesty International’s director of economic and social justice, called the deaths of around 7,000 people a “crisis of astonishing magnitude. “

“Every fitness employee has the right to be at work, and it’s a scandal that so many other people are paying the maximum price,” Cockburn said.

In its report of 13 July, Amnesty International presses that countries have an obligation to protect their fitness staff amid the COVID-19 human rights pandemic. and non-violent meeting, and free from discrimination and violence.

The same report contained Amnesty International’s recommendations to governments around the world for more effective coverage of fitness personnel in this public fitness crisis. Amnesty International has suggested that governments provide these staff with non-public protection equipment good enough to recognize COVID-19 as a work related diseases, and to promptly investigate attacks or acts of violence against such personnel, among other advised measures.

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