‘My father might have lived’: families of Hong Kong’s Covid-19 victims urge hospitals to prioritise most vulnerable patients
- Long queues at hospitals put off some elderly patients who chose to go home, only to die later
- Expert agrees more lives could be saved if hospitals gave priority to those who need help most
The families of some Hong Kong Covid-19 patients who died want the government to ensure that medical help goes to those who need it most, so that more lives can be saved in the city’s ongoing fifth wave of infections.
They said their family members died after remaining at home because they found long queues of sick people waiting to be admitted to hospitals and did not receive timely treatment.
They urged the health authorities to give priority to admitting the most vulnerable patients, including elderly people and children.
Medical expert Dr Leung Chi-chiu agreed that lives could be saved if help went to those who needed it most.
Housewife Olivia Chung*, 40, said her 83-year-old father was infected on March 2, but the sight of elderly patients waiting on beds outside Kwong Wah Hospital in Yau Ma Tei had scared him off seeking treatment there.