Dairy of the doctor about the incident?
Answers
Answer:
The Financial Times is making key coronavirus coverage free to read to help everyone stay informed.
More than anything, what pregnant women need — just like most of the world — is more information. “We just don’t have enough information at this point,” my midwife tells me when I ask about changing my birth plan. Beyond coronavirus being so unprecedented that even experts don’t have answers, what fuels my anxiety is the threat of hospitals becoming so overburdened that, by the time I’m delivering, I’m in the care of an exhausted skeleton staff who are unable to access even the basic supplies for safe medical procedures. To top it off, I may be bringing a newborn into an environment that is overrun with infected patients.
Through all the doom and gloom, I am trying to stay positive. So far the pandemic has changed my day-to-day life by allowing me to work from home. It means my two-hour commute to the FT HQ — usually consisting of rammed trains, the polluted underground and the occasional commuter fight — is swapped with a swift jump out of bed, a tea run to the kitchen and a long cuddle with my bump.
This baby has become a beam of light in the middle of a dark storm. If anything I love this baby even more, knowing that we are going through this together. My fears vanish as I feel my baby kick inside me — as if my unborn child is reassuring me that this crisis is temporary, soon he or she will be with us, and this pandemic will be just a distant memory.
Answer:
sorry I can't...............