Covid. Rome, Sulpl: Cluster in the local Police Public Safety Group
The Unitary Union of Local Police Workers (SULPL) announced that “three other cases of positivity to Covid 19, which are added to the nine already in illness yesterday, at the Emergency Public Security group of the Local Police Corps of Rome Capital“. A press release with which, to all intents and purposes, the management of these positive cases within the institution is condemned.
Milani: “Incredible that there are no measures”
“It seems incredible that in the face of a series of infections, which today culminate in a percentage of positives that largely exceeds 10 percent of the staff, the group has not yet been closed down, aimed at a dutiful and efficient sanitation which is accompanied by a screening of the health status of all operating personnel “ declared, in a note, the Roman Deputy Secretary, Marco Milani. It is in fact highlighted that the idea of finding a solution to heal a situation of evident difficulty has not been taken into consideration.
“We work in contact with citizenship”
“When you are in the presence of a situation that sees more than ten positives on a group of seventy people, you should not limit yourself to buffer sanitizations lasting a couple of hours, nor rely on the will and the wallet of individuals in order to proceed with a screening, which goes to identify the possible presence of involuntary healthy carriers of the virus Milani continues – we must not forget, as the work of the local policeman, foresees presence on the territory and contact with the citizens, making more careful measures on the safety of workers, greater attention to the safety of the citizens themselves”He concluded, highlighting the fact that a situation of poor management of the trend of infections within the Local Police would also put many other people at risk.
Management problem
Case management Covid remains one of the most discussed topics in the workplace. At a time when the infections are rising but many voices speak of a possible arrival point, we can run into the risk of leaving the discussions inherent to the management of infections and prevention in the background, thus risking to create real outbreaks in working environments.
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