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Thailand's coronavirus medics feel strain even as cases decline


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Thailand's coronavirus medics feel strain even as cases decline

By Jiraporn Kuhakan

 

2020-04-28T052706Z_1_LYNXNPEG3R0B7_RTROPTP_4_HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-THAILAND-ICU.JPG

Nurse Tatsanee Onthong, 26, wears personal protective equipment (PPE) as she attends to a COVID-19 in the Emerging Infectious Disease Clinic intensive care unit at King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand, April 22, 2020. Picture taken April 22, 2020. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha

 

BANGKOK (Reuters) - For Bangkok nurse Kanjana Kamoun, the coronavirus Intensive Care Ward is not only where she works all day, it is where she thinks she is when she wakes up in the middle of the night, anxious and afraid.

 

Even as the number of new cases are slowing in Thailand - the first country outside of China to report a coronavirus infection - the strain is showing for the doctors and nurses who have worked for weeks to keep patients alive.

 

"Sometimes when I wake and my throat hurts, I get worried and wonder if I made mistakes at work or not," Kanjana, 36, told Reuters. "All I can do is think that I did my best."

 

Since March 9, the King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital in Bangkok has treated nearly 200 coronavirus patients, and the medical staff there pride themselves on having not lost a single one.

 

"I don’t want anyone to die, I want them to only get better," said Tatsanee Onthong, one of the nurses from the Intensive Care Unit.

 

HOW MANY THERE GOT INFECTED? HOW MANY IN THAILAND?

The hospital pays close attention to preventing infections among staff.

 

Patients who arrive for the first time see the doctor only on a screen. Consultations are carried out remotely.

 

The Intensive Care Unit is behind double barriers of glass. Only those who absolutely have to enter the room ever do so. One patient is kept in each room.

"It requires five to six medical staff, which each time takes up a lot of personal protective equipment suits," said infections diseases specialist Opaa Putcharoen.

 

"It makes us worry that if we have a lot of severe cases we will use up a lot of resources and increase the chance of infection."

 

But unlike in China or parts Europe and the United States, Thailand's emergency wards have never been overwhelmed with coronavirus patients.

 

And the number of cases reported has been slowing.

 

On Monday, Thailand reported nine new cases - the first time the number had fallen to single digits since March 14.

 

Despite having some of the earliest coronavirus cases, Thailand has reported only 2,931 cases in total - ranking 58th worldwide.

 

It has seen 52 deaths, while 2,609 patients have recovered.

 

Onthong recalled a patient who had arrived unconscious. Elderly and with another medical condition, the chances looked slim.

 

"But later the patient got better and recovered," she said. "That lifted my spirit to keep on fighting."

 

(Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-04-28
 
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7 minutes ago, webfact said:

"It makes us worry that if we have a lot of severe cases we will use up a lot of resources and increase the chance of infection."

she was doing so well.... all of a sudden reality hits back and the $$$$$$$ got involved

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The numbers might be declining country overall, but these health care professionals won't get a break for a long time to come.

Long after new infections will be all those on ventilators and all the rest that are still showing no symptoms. All my highest regards 

to these folk who continue long after totally drained.

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Biggest non-story I've read since one entitled "On Not Visiting Elsinore" in The Lady magazine. Anything, it seems, to keep the pandemic pot bubbling. 

Edited by Krataiboy
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