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2 Russian doctors are dead and 1 is in ICU after plunging from hospital windows

A Russian medical worker sprays disinfectant on his ambulance
A medical worker sprays disinfectant on an ambulance after delivering a suspected coronavirus patient to a hospital in St. Petersburg, Russia.
(Dmitri Lovetsky / Associated Press)
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Two Russian doctors have died and one remains in intensive care after falling out of hospital windows under mysterious circumstances.

The tragic incidents in the last two weeks made national headlines, with media reports saying all three doctors had come under pressure from their superiors over working conditions amid the coronavirus crisis.

In recent weeks, medical workers all over Russia have decried shortages of protective equipment and questionable infection-control procedures that turned dozens of hospitals into virus hotbeds, with hundreds of doctors and nurses contracting the virus. Many said they had been threatened with dismissal or even prosecution for going public with their grievances.

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Because of the coronavirus pandemic, spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it.

Dr. Alexander Shulepov, an ambulance doctor from the Voronezh region, about 300 miles south of Moscow, tumbled from a window early Saturday in a hospital where he was being treated for COVID-19. The fall broke several of his ribs and fractured his skull.

Shulepov, 37, was admitted to the hospital more than a week before the incident after testing positive for the coronavirus. That day, colleague Alexander Kosyakin posted a video on social media of himself and Shulepov complaining about protective equipment shortages. In the video, Shulepov said he was being forced to finish his ambulance shift despite having been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Five days later, local health officials shared another video of Shulepov on social media in which he retracted his earlier complaints, saying he was just being emotional.

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Five days later, Shulepov fell out of the two-story hospital building. The cause of the accident remains unknown. Some local media suggested he was merely attempting to smoke on a windowsill, while others reported that Shulepov was under a lot of pressure for publicly complaining.

Another doctor’s window fall occurred in Siberia on April 25. Dr. Yelena Nepomnyashchaya, acting head of a hospital in Krasnoyarsk, a city in western Siberia, fell out of a window of her office on the fifth floor. Local media reported, citing anonymous sources, that the tragedy took place right after she had a conference call with regional health officials.

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Media reports alleged that Nepomnyashchaya was arguing against repurposing a ward in her hospital for coronavirus patients because of severe shortages of protective equipment and trained medical personnel, but she failed to dissuade the officials. Krasnoyarsk health officials denied that the conference call took place.

Nepomnyashchaya died in intensive care Friday.

Only one day before Nepomnyashchaya’s fall, on April 24, another doctor sustained deadly injuries after plunging from a window in a hospital in Moscow. Dr. Natalya Lebedeva ran an ambulance station in the Star City, Russia’s spaceflight training facility just outside Moscow, which reported several dozen coronavirus cases in late April. She was admitted to a hospital in southeast Moscow with suspected COVID-19.

Lebedeva died immediately after the fall, with health officials insisting it was just a tragic accident. Some Russian media, however, said Lebedeva had been accused of not protecting her staff from becoming infected and died by suicide.

As many as 20% to 25% of healthcare workers in hard-hit areas, experts say, are likely to develop disorders such as anxiety, depression or post-traumatic stress.

Russia has reported 166,000 infections and 1,537 virus deaths, but health officials in the West have described those numbers as far lower than the likely reality.

There are no official data on how many Russian health workers have died working on the front lines of the pandemic. Russia’s Health Ministry did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

Last week, a group of Russian doctors compiled an online Memory List of doctors, nurses and other medical personnel who had died during the outbreak. The list currently has 111 names.

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