Bhasha was
crowned Miss England in August 2019, shortly after gaining two medical degrees
from the University of Nottingham.
She'd spent
time training as a junior doctor on a respiratory ward, at the same time as
modelling and taking part in pageants.
In October
last year, she took a career break to compete in Miss World in London, before
heading off on the foreign charity trip.
The reigning
Miss England says it was "natural" she should want to return to her
job as a junior doctor during the coronavirus outbreak.
Respiratory
specialist Bhasha Mukherjee has travelled back from India, where she'd been
carrying out charity work, to return to the NHS.
The
24-year-old is due to start back at Boston Pilgrim Hospital, Lincolnshire next
week.
"I could
not be prouder to be both Miss England and to serve something of great national
pride like the NHS," Bhasha tells Radio 1 Newsbeat.
She was in
India as part of a humanitarian trip across Asia and was due to travel to
countries including Pakistan.
After seeing
the unfolding crisis in the UK, she wanted to "share the load".
"I felt
unfair getting dressed up in a place of safety while my colleagues were laying
their lives on the frontline," she says.
The NHS is
adapting to rising cases of Covid-19 in the UK through staff redeployment and
asking recently retired doctors and nurses to come back to work.
On 27 March,
the head of the NHS in England, Sir Simon Stevens, said: "We have
reconfigured hospital services so that 33,000 hospital beds are available to
treat further coronavirus patients."
Currently,
Bhasha is sorting out the logistical issues of her return to work, including
things like what shifts she'll be doing and where she'll be living.
She's
currently self-isolating in her home city of Derby, which is around 80 miles
from the hospital.
'My concern
is pressure on the NHS'
As a junior
doctor, she's aware the crisis means she'll probably have to do extra training
and be given a lot more responsibility than she would if the crisis wasn't
happening.
Bhasha also
knows the health risks of returning to the wards but is not worried about
contracting Covid-19 in the hospital.
"I could
have caught it anytime or anywhere. I could have picked it up at any airport or
while I was in India" she says.
"My main
concern is the pressure our NHS is under."
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