Five days before he was
admitted to hospital, Dr Chowdhury had appealed for "appropriate PPE and
remedies" to "protect ourselves and our families".
The doctor who warned the
prime minister about a lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) for NHS
workers has died after contracting coronavirus.
Consultant urologist Abdul
Mabud Chowdhury, 53, died at Queen's Hospital in Romford, east London, on
Wednesday.
Matt Hancock said the UK
has made a "Herculean effort" to deliver PPE.
Speaking at the
government's daily coronavirus briefing, he said the "plan to protect the
people who protect us" included creating a new domestic manufacturing
industry.
Dr Chowdhury's son Intisar
described the consultant urologist as a "kind and compassionate hero"
who had been in "such pain" when he wrote the appeal to the
government on Facebook.
"He wrote that post
while he was in that state, just because of how much he cared about his
co-workers."
He added he was "so
proud" that his father had had the "courage... to point out something
wrong that the government was doing".
"I'm glad it is
getting the attention now that it needs to protect NHS workers on the front
line because it pains me to say that my father is not the first and he is
unfortunately not going to be the last NHS front-line worker to die."
Dr Chowdhury, who worked at
Homerton University Hospital in east London, was admitted to hospital on 23
March.
The hospital's chief
executive Tracey Fletcher said he would be "greatly missed by every member
of the urology department, as well as by all those who knew him in outpatients,
wards, theatres and management".
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