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Ambulance workers in largest walkout

The walkout, an effort by three unions that was expected to include over 20,000 workers, is the latest labor strike across numerous industries in recent weeks in Britain…reports Asian Lite News

Thousands of ambulance workers in England and Wales went on strike on Wednesday, walking out on their shifts and joining picket lines to demand pay increases and better working conditions in the largest labor unrest to hit Britain’s emergency services in decades.

The walkout, an effort by three unions that was expected to include over 20,000 workers, is the latest labor strike across numerous industries in recent weeks in Britain as a mounting cost-of-living crisis, spurred by double-digit inflation, grips the country. On Tuesday, nurses went on strike over pay that has not kept up with inflation, and rail workers and border control workers are scheduled to do the same this week.

In the ambulance services, workers have raised alarms about record delays for patients seeking emergency treatment, and paramedics have pointed to staffing shortages and burnout, as well as fears of arriving too late to help some callers.

Those issues have been exacerbated by entrenched problems within the National Health Service, where a high level of staffing vacancies has led to backlogs and long waits in hospital emergency rooms. Health workers are exhausted after working under highly stressful conditions during the pandemic, which also put their own lives at risk, and amid years of austerity measures that hollowed out public services after the 2009 financial crisis.

“We just cannot deal with the volume of calls,” said Antonia Gosnell, 53, who has worked as a paramedic for 33 years and was on a picket line in South London on Wednesday afternoon. “They all came out clapping for us during the pandemic, and now there’s nobody here to listen to what we want.”

Throughout the day, the ambulance services were prioritizing the most critical cases. Before the walkout, some hospitals asked people to arrange their own transportation to hospitals, including pregnant women going into labor. Patients needing nonurgent care were advised to look elsewhere for advice, including by telephone or from general practitioners or pharmacists.

With Christmas and end-of-year celebrations underway, health leaders urged people to avoid risky behavior on a day when services would be stretched. “Don’t get so drunk that you end up with an unnecessary visit to A. & E.,” Stephen Powis, the N.H.S. medical director for England, said in a BBC interview, referring to the Accident and Emergency departments at hospitals.

The health service’s management said before the strike that there was “deep worry” about potential harm to patients at a time when the service was already under intense pressure.

“This is not something N.H.S. leaders would ever say lightly, but some now tell us that they cannot guarantee patient safety tomorrow,” Matthew Taylor, the chief executive of the N.H.S. Confederation, which represents the service’s organizations in England, said on Tuesday.

The NHS planned to manage the walkouts by calling in military personnel and volunteers, increasing staffing at call centers and discharging patients from hospitals where possible to free up beds for patients arriving in the reduced number of ambulances that were operating.

Unions representing ambulance workers blamed the government for the impasse. Workers argue that a pay increase of 1,400 pounds — about 2 to 7 percent — proposed by a government review body amounts to a cut in real terms. Inflation in the country has soared to as much as 11.1 percent in recent months, the highest in four decades.

“None of them want to be here, but if we don’t take a stand now, the ambulance service will just crumble and die,” Christina McAnea, the general secretary of Unison union, said from a picket line in South London.

In a letter to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, NHS England leaders said that on health grounds “it is clear that we have entered dangerous territory.”

“We urge you to do all you can to bring about an agreed solution,” they said. “Otherwise more members of the public will suffer unnecessarily.”

Sunak has called the industrial action disappointing and threatened to impose laws that would limit the reach of trade unions.

Despite worries over the strikes’ impact, some people affected by delays in ambulance services expressed sympathy for the workers.

ALSO READ-Massive strikes to hit UK during Christmas

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UK to donate fleet of ambulances to Ukraine

These world class NHS ambulances will now help bring lifesaving care directly to those injured in the conflict.”…reports Asian Lite News

A fleet of NHS ambulances will provide urgent care for those injured by Russian attacks in Ukraine following a donation from the UK.

The donation of around 20 NHS ambulances will help bring vital lifesaving care to Ukrainians remaining in towns and cities under attack from Russian bombardments.

This donation will help replace those Ukrainian ambulances lost to Russian attacks, bolstering the existing fleet’s resilience as the barbaric war goes on.

It is estimated more than 12 million people are currently in need of humanitarian assistance across Ukraine.

The conflict has stretched Ukraine’s health services, with Russia’s indiscriminate attacks targeting civilian shelters and even hospitals.

South Central Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SCAS) is leading the way, donating four of its ambulances, with further donations from NHS trusts across the country soon to follow.

The first ambulances will arrive in Ukraine this week, destined for Lviv in the west of the country, where they will be transported on to those areas most in need.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said, “We have sadly seen day after day the horrific impacts of Putin’s cruel war on the people of Ukraine, including evidence of appalling acts by Russian troops in towns such as Irpin and Bucha. The UK has been among the biggest aid donors, providing food, medicines and generators to help those affected. These world class NHS ambulances will now help bring lifesaving care directly to those injured in the conflict.”

Meanwhile, Health and Social Care Secretary, Sajid Javid, said, “The UK government has stood shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine and provided them with the lifesaving medical equipment they need. The invasion has damaged key medical infrastructure and the generous donation of four ambulances by South Central Ambulance Service will ensure people in Ukraine can receive urgent care. It marks the first of many ambulances the UK government and the NHS is donating to Ukraine in the coming days.”

This latest funding and donation comes in addition to the nearly £400 million (£394 million) already pledged by the UK for the conflict in Ukraine, including £220 million of humanitarian aid.

To date, the UK has donated more than 5 million items of medical supplies to Ukraine to help the country cope with the medical emergency caused by the Russian invasion. Last month the UK government also brought 21 Ukrainian children with cancer to receive care through the NHS in England.

ALSO READ-Ukrainians fleeing war to get free NHS healthcare

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Film Review Lite Blogs

‘Ambulance’ – a heist drama, unexceptional as its basic title

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II plays William Joes Sharp aka Will, an Army veteran – who is desperate for money after his wife is diagnosed with some serious, unexplained health issues.

(Running in Theatres); Duration: 136 minutes, Director: Michael Bay, Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Eliza Gonzalez, Garret Dillahunt, A Martinez, Devan Chandler Long, Keir O’Donnell, Colin Woodell, Moses Ingram, Rating: ***

Despite a few strong emotional beats, ‘Ambulance’ – a heist drama, is as unexceptional as its basic title. This unoriginal story of two brothers drawn into an ill-fated robbery is notable for raising one pervasive question: What is Emmy winner Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, who was earlier seen in films like ‘Candyman’ and ‘The Matrix Resurrections’, and Oscar nominee Jake Gyllenhaal, who featured in ‘Zodiac’ and ‘Spiderman: Far From Home,’ doing in such a disposable potboiler?

The film begins with a sketchy insight of the characters and then directly plunges into its inciting moment.

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II plays William Joes Sharp aka Will, an Army veteran – who is desperate for money after his wife is diagnosed with some serious, unexplained health issues.

He assures his wife that he would even be willing to work in a warehouse as a forklift driver, but in his desperation, he approaches his adoptive brother Danny – a hard-core bank robber, who asks him, “How much do you need?”

Will replies, “231,000 for an experimental surgery, and the insurance does not cover experimental surgery.”

Danny offers him a chance to make his money by sharing a piece of the 32 million heist he planned. “It’s the biggest bank heist in Los Angeles history,” he boasts. He then coaxes Will with, “It’s time to do something for yourself and your family,” and ends his conversation emphasising, “Your family.”

Will bites the bait.

But, when the heist goes awry, the despairingly frantic brothers hijack an ambulance with a bleeding policeman and paramedic Cam Thompson (Eiza Gonzalez) onboard.

What follows is a high-speed pursuit that never stops. Despite their attempt to evade the Los Angeles Police Department and the FBI, who are on their trail, and their attempt to keep their hostages alive, things go south for the brothers.

While the elements go south for the protagonists, the plot, which began on a sketchy or wobbly note, unexpectedly inches north, making the viewing engrossing.

On the performance front, the actors deliver their parts earnestly.

There are many thrilling moments in the 137 minutes runtime, with the police vehicles and helicopters chasing the ambulance, along with gun battles and ambushes. Unfortunately, these over-loaded action sequences appear generic and tedious at times. Despite this, it is during their escapade, that the brothers’ characters surface, and there is an emotional connection that bonds the viewers to the screen.

Later, when you reflect on the film, Danny’s line, “We are not the bad guys, we are just the guys trying to get home,” resonates in your mindscape.

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