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Facing pain and anguish
2021-07-01 00:00:00.0     星报-国家     原网页

       

       PUTRAJAYA: In her five years of service as an assistant medical officer, Ashidah Abdul Rahman has never encountered as much heartache and mental anguish as she did since being placed on ambulance duty to pick up and send Covid-19 patients to the quarantine centre or hospital.

       One particular sight that will remain etched in her memory is that of a couple, both aged 60, who had tested positive for Covid-19 and wished to be quarantined in the same place – the low-risk Covid-19 quarantine and treatment centre at the Malaysian Agro Exposition Park Serdang (MAEPS) in Selangor.

       However, the wife could not be in MAEPS with her husband as her condition was not stable and her oxygen level was low.

       “It was a heartbreaking sight as the woman was very sad she could not be with her husband.

       “Before I could help her into the ambulance (to take her to the hospital), she cried and hugged her husband and even asked for his forgiveness – it was as if she knew she was going to leave him forever,” said Ashidah, who is attached with the Bandar Tun Razak health clinic in Kuala Lumpur.

       She said a few days later she called one of the couple’s children to find out how they were and was shocked to hear the woman had succumbed to the disease.

       “Who would have known that it was their last farewell and hug. Apparently, the woman died one day after she was admitted to the hospital’s emergency ward,” said the 29-year-old mother of three.

       Although she met the woman only briefly, Ashidah felt devastated as she had comforted her during the ambulance ride and kept assuring her that she would recover soon and be with her husband again.

       This is just one of the many heart-rending scenes healthcare frontliners have to witness practically every day as they work tirelessly and sacrifice their time and energy to save the lives of Covid-19 patients.

       Besides managing and treating the patients, the frontliners are also the ones who are beside an individual right from the time he or she tests positive for Covid-19 and has to be taken to either a low-risk quarantine centre or hospital.

       This is because family members are not allowed to accompany the patient.

       Heavy responsibility: Muhammad Syahril talking about his experiences as an ambulance driver. — Bernama

       Ambulance driver Muhammad Syahril Md Nazri, 33, also goes the extra mile to ensure the comfort of the patients he has to ferry to the quarantine centre or hospital.

       “My duty is not just to drive the ambulance. I also help to carry the patient if the person is elderly and cannot walk, particularly those living in high-rise buildings.

       “There was this case of an 80-year-old woman who lived in one of the upper floors of a building and couldn’t walk.

       “It was not easy and we had to use all our strength but we couldn’t ask for help from others because they were not wearing PPE (personal protective equipment),” he said.

       It has been a tiring affair for Muhammad Syahril, too, and he recalls an occasion when he had to slap his face to keep himself alert while driving his ambulance at 2am.

       “I was really tired that day.

       “Daily, we’ve to drive over 400km ferrying patients.

       “This shows how critical the situation is (in our country),” he said, adding that as an ambulance driver, he must not only drive carefully but also to reach the destination as fast as possible.

       “I still remember transporting a patient who seemed all right initially but suddenly the person’s blood pressure readings plummeted.

       “I had to drive as fast as I could as the patient was elderly and in the high-risk group,” he said.

       Much has been reported in the media of the sacrifices by the nation’s healthcare frontliners.

       Many of them have not been able to see their loved ones for months.

       They are not able to get enough rest. Yet there are people out there who think the Covid-19 virus is a hoax.

       “Covid-19 is certainly not fictional. A friend of mine didn’t believe that Covid-19 was real but he ended up getting infected and it was I who drove him to the hospital as he had difficulty breathing.

       “After he recovered, his wife and children became infected,” said Muhammad Syahril, adding that he regretted the attitude of people who took their children to public places when cases involving children were rising day by day. — Bernama

       


标签:综合
关键词: Covid     Muhammad     ambulance duty     frontliners     patient     patients     quarantine     Ashidah Abdul Rahman     hospital     Syahril    
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