Physician who shook hands with Vladimir Putin a week ago tests positive for coronavirus 

Physician who shook hands with Vladimir Putin a week ago tests positive for coronavirus

  • Denis Protensko met with Russian President Putin last week for a hospital tour
  • Neither of the men were wearing personal protective equipment at the meeting
  • The Kremlin said today that Putin was being regularly tested for coronavirus and that ‘everything is okay’
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?

A major scare over Vladimir Putin’s health emerged today as Russia’s top coronavirus doctor was stuck down with Covid-19 – one week after meeting and shaking hands with the Kremlin leader.

Denis Protsenko, 44, heads Konnunarka infectious diseases hospital, which was visited by Putin last week.

The pair were seen close to together and twice shook hands without protective gear.

They were also in a meeting in Protsenko’s office with other top officials including Russian deputy premier Tatiana Golikova, 54, in overall charge of Russia’s coronavirus policy.

The Kremlin sought to reassure Russians today by saying that Putin was regularly tested for coronavirus and ‘everything is okay’.

However, symptoms take time to develop.

Putin hasn’t been seen in public so far today.

There had been concern in recent days at a lapse in security around the Russian president over the virus.

Putin wore a hazmat suit and elaborate mask when he toured the coronavirus wards but there was no protective clothing when he was in other parts of the hospital with the chief motor and his team.

Chief hospital nurse Lyudmila Larionova said she was ‘shaken’ by Putin’s decision to enter the coronavirus wing which is treating 350 victims, and where two died at the weekend.

Protsenko is being treated in his own hospital while also telling Podyom media he was still carrying out his duties.

‘I am working’, he said.

There is no clear plan for Putin’s succession if the all-powerful Russian leader is incapacitated long term.

Putin has been either president or prime minister since 1999.

Little known technocrat premier Mikhail Mishustin, 54, would temporarily take over the Kremlin if Putin was seriously ill or died.

But experts forecast a raging battle as competing secret services, defence and business clans vie for power at the end of the Putin era.

One candidate might be Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin, 61, who warned after the Kummunarka hospital meeting: ‘Nobody is safe.’

Putin’s spokesman on Sunday defended his visit to the hospital on 24 March.

‘He always prefers to see with his own eyes how things are going ‘on the frontline,’ said his spokesman and close aide Dmitry Peskov on nationwide TV.

‘Putin would not be Putin if he did not decide to go there.’

He claimed ‘all safety precautions were taken’ – but critics dispute this, pointing to Putin shaking hands with medics and holding hospital meetings without protective gear or social distancing.

Protsenko is an internationally recognised medic who was in contact with other doctors around the globe over Covid-19.

Real said this week before his infection was known: ‘I took a very hard decision to stop talking to my parents.

‘I deprived myself from happiness of seeing my elderly parents.

‘I have self-isolated myself from the family.’

He has been an open critic of the ‘British herd immunity’ theory.

He said: ‘What guarantee do we have that the herd immunity will actually start?’

He publicly supported extra protection measures saying it was ‘better to be safe than sorry’.