Text: Anoop Bhuller
Graphics: Jeamy Navarro-Schrank
The coronavirus has affected many communities. Filipinos have been particularly badly hit. Piecing together reports and research, it is clear that a large proportion of healthcare workers who have died in the UK are of Filipino origin.
Through our research, we have created a timeline that pieces together the key events that have impacted the Filipino community during the outbreak.
To do this we have cross-referenced news reports from both local and national media outlets, as well as posts from Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Campaign and community organisation websites were also used to gather information.
Some deaths were reported by the media late, and some not at all. But to the best of our knowledge, this is an accurate timeline of events.
The origins

The main events

Covid-19: The timeline in detail
3rd April – First two Filipino healthcare workers die
Elvira Bucu, 50, . She at her home while she was self-isolating. John Alagos, 23, was a nursing assistant at Watford General Hospital. John’s colleagues told his mother . At the time of his death he was believed to have been the youngest UK medical worker to die from the virus. His death is also believed to have been the first of a Filipino healthcare worker to be reported in the UK media.
Credit: /John Alagos
5th April – Oxfordshire Filipino community effort
– distributes to the NHS.
10th April – Third nurse to die in Wales
Leilani Medel, 41, was a hospital Her husband, Johnny Medel Junior, was after being treated for two months in the hospital for “severe coronavirus.”
20th April – Philippine Ambassador to the UK appeal
to “ensure that those heroes that put their lives on the line for us all are
24th April – UK broadcasters start to ask questions
Questions begin to be raised in the national media about why Filipino healthcare workers are disproportionately dying. ITV becomes the high death rates of Filipino medical staff. This is followed by April and the
Early May – New group created to provide assistance to Filipinos
is created in response to the impact of the worsening pandemic. It aims to help Filipino individuals and families affected by the UK outbreak.
10th May – 40th Filipino Healthcare worker to die in the UK
Rustom Carpo had a nursing home for more than ten years.
Our 40th Filipino colleague who died due to Covid-19. RIP Rustom Carpo??????????My deepest condolences and heartfelt sympathies to Rustom’s family and friends???????????????? ??????
— Francis Fernando, RN.BSN, MSc,Nurse Ambassador2020 (@fernandof1974)
12th May – Fundraisers start walking
, run and swim nearly 7,000 miles to raise money for the families left behind by Filipino frontline workers. So far, more than.
16th May – Important new data
A new analysis sheds fresh light on the impact of the virus on UK Pinoys. The Press Association reports that 23 of the 173 healthcare workers that – around 13% of all healthcare deaths. to better understand deaths from Covid-19.
19th May – New Filipino helpline
The NHS sets up a new telephone support line to The line is managed by Tagalog-speaking counsellors and support workers.
22nd May – Anti-hate crime campaign
The campaign is launched. It’s a new campaign . It aims to tackle the rise of hate crime against south and east Asian communities during Covid-19.
We the undersigned, call on to announce a zero tolerance policy to racism by the police, and an inquiry into the three-fold increase in hate crime towards people of East & Southeast Asian heritage.
— End The Virus Of Racism (@EndRacismVirus)
14th June – 57th Filipino healthcare worker dies
Rizal Manalo, a 51-year-old father-of-two who . Staff pay respect to him with a .
51 yr old nurse Rizal Manalo originally from Philippines worked at a N Wales Hospital has died from His wife,Agnes:”Zaldy is a hard working person who loved his job dearly. He's a good husband & a loving father 2his children.He protected &cared for us." ??
— Aamer Anwar?✊?#BlackLivesMatter (@AamerAnwar)
16th June – Government sees “racism” as factor in BAME coronavirus deaths
Public Health England (PHE) releases its second report looking at the impact of Covid-19 on BAME communities. contracting and dying from coronavirus.
24th June – Kanlungan Filipino Consortium report
An extensive focusing on the impact of the outbreak and lockdown in the UK on precarious Filipino migrants and their vulnerability to Covid-19. It includes personal stories from those who have been affected by the pandemic.
2nd July – Filipino Nurses Association UK is founded
for Filipino nurses to discuss issues of collective interest. They can then signpost members to the right place to help resolve their issues.