Dr Meenal Viz 💙 Profile picture
Apr 19, 2021 25 tweets 11 min read Read on X
One year ago, I protested outside Downing Street.

I was six months’ pregnant, and working as a doctor on the frontline. 👩‍⚕️

Within hours, I knew my life would never be the same.

THREAD: Image
Just a few days before, Nurse Mary Agyapong had passed away.

She was 28 years old, and never got to hold her daughter. 

She died at the same hospital where I was due to give birth. Image
I was heartbroken by Mary’s passing, and I couldn’t sleep for days.

When I became aware of the details, including attempts to obfuscate and hide the story from public attention, I knew that this was a grave injustice. Image
To this day, I don’t think it’s been appreciated: at the same time that hospitals were heaving with coronavirus patients, doctors' social media accounts were being monitored.

I felt that peaceful protest was the only way to send a clarion call.

More: theguardian.com/society/2020/m…
I’d never been a particularly confident or outspoken person.

My pregnancy sickness was debilitating.

At one point, my husband thought I was so unwell that he begged me to go to hospital, but I was equally worried that I would be unprotected as a patient and catch coronavirus. Image
I told my parents what I was going to do, and they were genuinely terrified. For my job, for my safety. 

I didn’t ask them for permission, but it was important to me that they trusted me.

I don’t think they got any sleep that night, either. Image
I chose a Sunday morning to protest.

Spring was in full bloom, with lots of birds tweeting.

Meanwhile, the hospital just across Westminster Bridge was heaving with coronavirus patients.

I was scared that I would be arrested, so I’d written phone numbers on my arm just in case Image
I walked down Whitehall, dressed in my hospital scrubs.

I stopped outside the gates of Downing Street, where I held up a sign for one hour:

“Protect Healthcare Workers” Image
My memories of that hour:

Pindrop silence, except for occasional ambulances hooting in solidarity.

I could feel my baby kicking. A poignant reminder of my true purpose. When she looks back and asks what I did during the pandemic, I can say that I stood for justice. Image
Also, like every pregnant woman ever, I needed to pee. Desperately.

I asked the police guarding Downing Street if there was a nearby bathroom I could use...
The next day, my protest was headline news in both The Telegraph and The Times.

I was featured in The New York Times.

I was featured in Indian mainstream news, which meant that my extended family saw me on TV - my parents finally took my protest seriously. Image
I realised the power we all have to speak up.

I realised that while our leaders abandoned and gaslighted, it was a doctor's duty to take a public stand.

Those who silenced doctors during a global health crisis must be held accountable.

Me w/ @BDUTT:
Doctors across the world contacted me because my one-woman protest inspired them to speak up.

As a South Asian pregnant woman, others were telling me that I had given them a voice.

I felt empowered to do more. ImageImage
Within weeks, my husband and I launched a judicial review.

Thanks in large part to the kindness of Twitter, we raised money to fund our @CrowdJustice campaign.

We made positive change in bringing about formal concessions from the government.

bbc.co.uk/news/uk-englan…
I was contacted by dozens of bereaved families - many of them who had been a son, daughter, husband or wife of an NHS worker.

Their stories were eerily similar. They felt like they didn’t have agency to speak up.

Some of these staff had been worried about inadequate PPE. Image
My own story continued to gather pace.

I think it hit a nerve in society, at a time when we were all becoming acutely aware of systemic injustices.

It was a great privilege to be shot by @misanharriman for @BritishVogue. 📸
I was on the same cover as the same people I had looked up to as inspirations.

This photo was taken when I was 37 weeks’ pregnant.

I chose to wear Indian dress to represent my heritage, and speak directly to Indian women: we are strong, we are powerful. Image
Radhika was born on 14th July 2020.

She was my hope.

She is my hope. ❤ ImageImage
I appreciate the platform that I’ve been afforded.

I view it as a privilege, and with that comes great responsibility.

If I don’t always hit the mark, I’m sorry, I’m still working this out. 😅

Just know I’m always aiming towards justice. ✊🏽 Image
I’m super-proud to have been recognised by Gibraltar, where i was born 🇬🇮

While I worked in Gibraltar, we managed to raise £15,000 for our orphanage in Kenya!

I have to thank @FabianPicardo and for supporting me - it is truly humbling. Image
We were recognised by Team Lionhearts.

Being a part of this team is a continued part of my mantra: “Just do good, and have a good time doing it!”

We hope to continue @captaintommoore's legacy via ongoing charitable projects:

Now, I want to help the world rebuild and recover. Which is why I’m thrilled to be a part of the @UN's campaign to get the world #vaccinated against COVID-19.

I post up-to-date information about vaccines and women’s health.
@projecthalo 

Follow me on TikTok.com/@drmeenalviz
I post this thread because I know that out there, there is a young girl thinking about speaking up or making change.

The last year tells us that the wider consequences of staying silent during a crisis are severe. 

Gently, we can shake the world.❤ Image
What does my future hold? 

Justice. Lots of justice. 

It’s not okay to me that while my colleagues were falling ill and dying, decision-makers were silencing frontline workers.

I want to be a GP (I’ll hear about my entry application any day soon…). Image
Thanks to all who have supported me over the past year. 

During a time of isolation, we have forged a sense of determination and community, and I hope that many of my Twitter friends will finally be able to come round for a summer garden party with cream tea ❤ Image

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More from @drmeenalviz

Apr 19
Five years ago, I stood outside in the spring air - masked, alone, and terrified.

There were no crowds. No chants. Just me and a sign in my hands.

What I didn’t know then was that this one act of courage would change everything 🧵 Image
Image
That photo was taken in April 2020.

I had just finished another shift, begging for masks. I was taking care of patients whose immune systems were already so fragile.

And I lived in fear that I might be the one to make them sick.
We were walking into rooms with barely any protection.

Day after day, I felt like I was being asked to risk everything - with no safety net.

But what broke me wasn’t just the danger.

It was the silence from those in power.
Read 10 tweets
Dec 9, 2022
THE GREAT PPE SCAM: A THREAD ⭐

1/13

It's taken two years for it to come to light, with Michelle Mone's involvement coming under scrutiny. 😲

But there is still a missing link...can we find it? 🤔

Here are my thoughts... ⬇️
2/

Back in March 2020, when my husband (@ThePalpitations) and I raised concerns about PPE, we briefly gained a big media profile.

This meant that *hundreds* of doctors, nurses and care workers phoned and emailed us in those early weeks.

They were worried about PPE.
3/ But we also received calls from other sources: CEOs in the manufacturing industry.

The story was always the same: the government made a huge deal that the UK would need a "wartime effort", and non-essential factories were otherwise going to shut.

CEOs wanted to help.
Read 14 tweets
Apr 19, 2022
Two years ago, I protested outside Downing Street.

I was six months’ pregnant, and working as a doctor on the frontline. 👩‍⚕️

Within hours, I knew my life would never be the same.

THREAD: 🧵
Just a few days before, Nurse Mary Agyapong had passed away.

She was 28 years old, and never got to hold her daughter. 

I was due to give birth at the same hospital where she died.
I was heartbroken by Mary’s passing, and I couldn’t sleep for days 💔

When I became aware of the details, including attempts to hide the story from public attention, I knew that this was a grave injustice.
Read 22 tweets
Jan 8, 2022
I felt uncomfortable watching the Sky News interview with consultant anaesthetist Dr Steve James, and I fear it will set us back. 😢

Badly. 😢

Why? 👇🏾 🧵1/14
Legitimate news source. Legitimate discussion. Legitimate setting. Legitimate doctor. Legitimate outfits. British accent. Regurgitates anti-vaxx sentiments. His opinion holds weight. It will be recycled and replayed for years, mostly out of context. It's the anti-vaxx wet dream.
Consultant anaesthetists are among the very best of us, and during the past two years there's no doubt Dr James will have saved/positively impacted countless lives. This should be recognised, and I do not wish to detract from this.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 4, 2022
The idea of the NHS being "overwhelmed" has been one of the most-repeated phrases of the pandemic. But it's been repeated so much that it seems that for much of the last two years, the NHS has been overwhelmed.

What do critical incidents & overwhelmed wards look like? 👇🏾
It is very simple: it means the occupational therapist might be absent, so they can't rehab the elderly patient who's had a fall, so they they stay in hospital. It means that the medication round gets delayed so antibiotics aren't given at optimal times.
It means that there are fewer doctors, working longer hours. If your case isn't life-threatening then you're well and truly in for a long wait in A&E. If you've been waiting months or years for a knee operation, and your surgeon is now isolating, you're out of luck.
Read 7 tweets
Jan 3, 2022
Last year, Tory MP Daniel Kawczynski spent £8,000 of your money on Polish lessons. 😧

Yet, I've found multiple examples of @DKShrewsbury on Polish TV & radio - here's part of a 16min interview from 4yrs ago where he speaks about EU, NATO etc. 🤔

What gives? 👇🏾
Sure, the Polish isn't perfect.

He trips up when he forgets how to say "work permit."

His accent is off.

But I'd suggest that most people wouldn't voluntarily and repeatedly appear on a foreign news channel, to discuss a complex topic, unless they were very confident.
A language tutor costs - at most - around £40/hr.

A language app costs around £200/year.

Kawczynski has claimed over £22,000 in the past few years on Polish lessons.

Can we justify that as value for money to the taxpayer? 🤔

Who gave the lessons? 🤔

Joke's on us, folks.
Read 4 tweets

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