Chelsea are third in the Premier League standings behind leaders Liverpool and reigning champions Manchester City
football4 hours ago
Some of them have contracted the virus in the line of duty, but that did not stop them from returning to the frontlines after recovering.
Living the community spirit
A customer care executive at NMC Specialty Hospital - Al Ain, Pakistani Mehran Khan's work was routine until the pandemic struck. Soon, his work became far more demanding and challenging. He represented his hospital at the mobile screening camp operated by the government to conduct mass screenings at various workers' accommodations in Al Ain.
Despite taking all precautionary measures, he was tested positive and got admitted. "Those 20 days of medical care in isolation made me realise how important life is. After testing negative, I was in home quarantine for 14 days," said Mehran.
To step up and begin helping again, he consulted his doctor for plasma donation and has been cleared for it after completing the required 28-day period post his second negative test result.
Fighting the virus a couple goal
An urgent care nursing in-charge with NMC Specialty Hospital - Al Ain for five years, Nikhil Sabu encounters numerous Covid-19 cases every day. Urgent Care, being the entry point of the virus, puts him and his colleagues in stressful situations to evaluate, triage and stabilise the critical and non-critical patients and decide the future course of disease management.
"We have come across various life-threatening cases throughout our career, but Covid-19 comes with totally a new dimension - the challenge of fighting an unknown enemy," said Sabu, who hails from Kottayam, Kerala.
Sabu's wife Anumol Joy, a nurse working at a government hospital in Al Ain, is pregnant with their second child and has also boldly accepted the challenge. "We have limited our engagement with our 2.5-year-old, who is now taken care of by a nanny. It's painful and hard but we have to avoid direct contact with the child."
He healed while all alone
Dr Dhanaraja Devadiga, a general practitioner in the intensive care unit (ICU) at NMC Speciality Hospital - Abu Dhabi since 2009 was tested positive to the virus, despite taking all precautions.
He started having symptoms of fever, headache, muscle pain with a sore throat on April 22. "I immediately got a Covid-19 test done and as I suspected the report was positive," said he said.
Not having the family with him, Dr Dhanaraja had to battle with the encouragement of his colleagues.
"Initially, I was anxious about my recovery as, at that time, there was no definitive treatment and the only way was to improve one's immunity. So, I followed our dietitian's advice. Fortunately, I recovered significantly and was confident to get back to work", said Dr Dhanaraja, who has joined back after the required isolation period and now in-line for the plasma donation.
reporters@khaleejtimes.com
Chelsea are third in the Premier League standings behind leaders Liverpool and reigning champions Manchester City
football4 hours ago
This mega project is expected to boost fish numbers
environment4 hours ago
The hosts were skittled for 104 in the morning session courtesy of a sublime haul of 5-30 from stand-in captain Jasprit Bumrah
cricket4 hours ago
Remember? After India's U19 win in 2008, Kohli was signed by RCB — and the rest is history
cricket5 hours ago
The mixed martial arts star denied the allegation and said he had 'fully consensual sex' with the plaintiff Nikita Hand
world6 hours ago
Modi lost his majority in parliamentary elections held between April and June and had to depend on fickle allies to form a government
asia6 hours ago
Sporadic fighting between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in the mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province has killed around 150 over the past months
asia6 hours ago
Imagine if a nurse or doctor didn't feel safe to report an error seen by colleagues — consider how many patients could be at risk
jobs7 hours ago