Day in the life of a doctor during Corona Virus pandemic. Express your views in 100 words .
Answers
Answer:
plz mark as brainly
Explanation:
In Madurai, Praveena Manimuthu, who has been married to Dr Prabhakaran Rathinam for 15 years, is worried though. Her husband is Professor and Head of the Department of Respiratory Medicine at Madurai Medical College and Government Rajaji Hospital, and while there are no cases yet in the city (at the time of going to press), it’s the tension of waiting that takes its toll. “I am not anxious that he will bring infection home, but I certainly worry about his health,” she says.
She has made him a small kit containing dry and wet tissues, a bottle of sanitiser, and a small bar of soap, to keep in his car. Even on regular working days, he is away from 7.30 am to 11 pm. “I keep reminding him his health is most important to all of us and get our kids (12 and seven) to speak to him at least once during the day over the phone,” says Praveena, who runs the household single-handedly.
She says she stopped complaining after one particular night emergency. “I heard him take a post-midnight call and say that he’d be at the hospital immediately. I lost my cool and asked why somebody else couldn’t be on call. He told me my father was admitted in the ICU. That moment I realised the importance of all patients in a doctor’s life.”
Another partner, Dr Sujatha Sangumani, says it is easier for doctors to relate to the fear during an epidemic, given that they understand the spread better. As the wife of Dr J Sangumani, Dean of Madurai Medical College & Government Rajaji Hospital, the gynaecologist is matter-of-fact about work. “We habitually wear masks and are constantly washing our hands after examining every patient. Unless we ourselves are convinced that these precautions work, how will we convince patients?”
Answer:
We have been here before. Almost. A long time ago, in 1918, the Spanish Flu infected 500
A century later, the world was supposedly making massive progress and scientists focusing on higher order problems — like blurring the boundaries between the real and virtual worlds. Armed with path-breaking tools such as gene editing, AI and big data, human beings were learning to play god, creating designer babies and disrupting death.
Explanation: