English, asked by astha10, 1 year ago

andrew visit to morgan give him pleasure and satisfaction that he had not achieved earlier justify

Answers

Answered by upenderjoshi28
306
Andrew’s visit to Morgans that night filled him with ethereal pleasure and satisfaction. That night he got an opportunity to test his medical learning, training, and knowledge. The circumstances threw him in a whirlpool of a situation. The baby was born limp with asphyxia, pallid (suffocation or unconscious condition caused by lack of oxygen and excess of carbon dioxide in the blood, accompanied by paleness of the skin, weak pulse, and loss of reflexes). The young doctor accepted the challenge. He not only saved the dying mother, but also brought the newly born life-less child out of his stupor. This saving of two lives filled him with ineffable exhilaration and sense of achievement. He had not felt so much of fulfillment and contentment earlier in his life.


Answered by Anonymous
54

Answer:

At half-past three, after an hour's difficult struggle, the child was born lifeless. Andrew attempted to revive the mother who lay collapsed and almost pulse-less. He injected the medicine and struggled to restore the lifeless Susan Morgan, and after a few minutes of intense effort, her heartbeat became steady. Andrew then turned his attention to the lifeless baby. He inferred the condition was caused by lack of oxygen in the baby's blood. He initiated the artificially induced method of respiration. Pouring cold water into one basin and warm, into other, he rushed the child, from one basin to the next, for fifteen minutes. As his last resort, he rubbed the child with a rough towel, rushing and releasing the little chest with both his hands, trying to get breath into that limp body.

Then miraculously, the tiny chest began heaving and they heard the child's cry. He had saved two lives and was eternally relieved at having 'done something real at last."

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