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Inside Health

Southampton update; health anxiety; death certifications; fast-track drug screening

Inside Health

BBC

Health & Fitness, Science

4.4575 Ratings

🗓️ 21 April 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Every week we’re heading to Southampton General Hospital, where we’ve heard a lot about the doctors and nurses doing amazing work. But this week Erika Wright has been talking to Gemma Blanchett who does a job you might not even associate with the virus or with intensive care – and that’s physiotherapy. Gemma is a respiratory physiotherapist who has the joy of watching some recover with her extraordinary help.

Recovery is going to be a long haul for some and can even take time for those who’ve had the virus with mild symptoms at home. So what do we know about how long a complete recovery takes? James Gill GP and Honorary Clinical Lecturer at Warwick Medical School discusses the latest insights.

For people who have already found themselves worrying excessively about their health or who have an obsessive compulsive disorder related to hand washing, this is a particularly difficult time. With all of us now on the look-out for symptoms, Claudia Hammond speaks to Jo Daniels, a Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology at Bath University who specialises in health anxiety, and David Adam, author of the Man Who Couldn’t Stop – an intimate account of the power of obsessional thoughts.

There’s been a lot of discussion about how to get accurate numbers for the people who have died from the virus outside hospital and one issue that’s been raised is whether doctors are wary of putting Covid-19 on a death certificate, when there’s been so little testing in the community. GP Margaret McCartney examines the current dilemmas.

Amidst a host of trials to find effective treatments against Covid19, are there existing drugs which no one has thought of yet? We hear from Dr Lindsay Broadbent whose team at Queens University are testing more than a thousand drugs on human lung cells infected with Covid19 in the lab, to see what might work for both mild and more severe infection.

Producer Adrian Washbourne

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, I'm Greg Jenna and good news, Your Dead to Me is back for a new series. Here we go. Yes, we'll explore Emperor Nero's notorious reign with Professor Marybeard and Patton Oswald. I would not want my daughter having the remote control, not alone an empire. We'll dissect the decadent life of Philippe Duke-Dor-Leon with Tom Allen. I've often tried to pretend I'm an aristocrat and being very quickly knocked down.

0:23.0

And there'll be so much more with comedians like Olga Koch, Mike Mosniak and Rihalina.

0:26.9

I'm excited.

0:27.6

You're dead to me.

0:28.5

The comedy podcast that takes history seriously.

0:31.0

Listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:34.5

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:38.1

Hi there, this is Claudia Hammond, and this is the podcast of Inside Health, the virus.

0:43.0

First broadcast on Tuesday, the 21st of April 2020.

0:47.1

A lot of people are saying their mood varies a lot day to day at the moment,

0:50.9

and maybe that's inevitable that we hear hopeful news about vaccines or treatments

0:54.7

or other countries lifting lockdowns. And then we hear the daily figures representing so many

0:59.5

real tragedies taking place. Now, this programme encompasses both of those today, too, and the space

1:05.0

in between. From the concerns that some GPs are avoiding writing COVID-19 down on death

1:10.6

certificates, to the virologist

1:12.4

who hopes that by testing more than a thousand different drugs in the lab, her team might be

1:17.5

able to find the ideal combination to treat the disease. Before all that, every week we're heading

1:23.0

to Southampton General Hospital. To date, the hospital's temperature remains relatively stable,

1:28.9

with 156 cases. Twenty-eight of those patients are in intensive care. We have heard a lot

1:35.3

about the doctors and nurses doing amazing work, but inside health's Erica Wright has been

1:40.5

talking to someone who does a job you might not even associate with the virus or with

1:45.0

intensive care and that's physiotherapy.

...

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