Skip to main content

111 at Bheri Zonal Hospital(1 month, 11 days)

 



The global pandemic that extended its root from China took a huge toil on my home country(Nepal) and my family suffered the way most Nepalese families did. We never imagined the intensity of this situation but when it came knocking at our door we realized; this was trouble. 

I came back home after a three day long trip from Chitwan. Mom was a bit drowsy than usual but my brother on the other hand lost his sense of smell and taste which he realized the other day. So he got his SWAP test done right away. He was tested positive a day after but dad got breathing issues out of nowhere and we rushed him to hospital.

We got dad's chest X-ray done and the doctors at Nursing Home revealed he had pneumonia feeding of his lungs; a sureshot indication of Covid. They referred him to Bheri Hospital seeing my dad's serious condition.

Been a month and eleven days since we came here and within these days alot of things happened. The situation got worse with each passing day during our initial days. Lack of medical attention, wrong medication, shortage of oxygen supply, fluctuation in saturation. A lot happened and finally we can see him recovering. 

During these days, we witnessed many death. A father lost his young daughter while a mother lost her son, a child lost his parent and someone lost their grandparent. With mortality rate being high due to massive oxygen shortage 3 to 5 death was the new normal here. Who is to blame?

The incident that happened at Bheri where the health workers life was at stake shook us all but it came with a lot of realization too. The frontline health worker are at rage and in some way it can be justified but what about the voices that are still unheard. 

My dad, 58 years old got his first attack after spending a few days at I.C.U. making him eligible for a ventilator at saturation level 35. The saturation maintained with a CPAP mask and ventilator but he still felt uneasy. We were worried. I didn't know much about the monitor since it was my first time seeing one but my brother noticed. Dad's BP was 224/129. 

I rush to the nursing station there were nurses and doctors who were monitoring from inside and they came after an hour at his rescue. For medical queries we had to ask at least twice or thrice sometimes leading to heated argument and sometimes they don't listen at all. Carelessness from the other side was concealed with medical terminology and the patient was the one to blame at most. 

Dad's saturation scoop below 45 every time when there was oxygen shortage but the worst happened when saturation drop down to 35. We kept asking him to keep faith, breathe. The oxygen came after 4 minutes but my dad saturation was 22. I looked at the ventilator and it notified  "no oxygen supply". The machine was not working. We cried, we rushed it was afternoon but we could hardly find any one. The doctor arrived when his hands and feet were numb(saturation level zero). 

My dad who had his meal sitting on a chair, whose x-ray report showed recovery an hour ago was now getting a CPR. He got back to normal breathing after a lot of struggle but he was merely conscious.

 3 days after that attack a nurse on duty checked his blood sugar. His sugar was 93(lower than usual, doesn't require insulin at all) and he was given insulin without informing us. His sugar dropped down to 23 at night and we only realized because of excessive sweating on his forehead. 

There was no one around to help us. Some of them were sleeping, few were unavailable. We had a doctor on the other side who had his father and sister admitted. He was not a staff at Bheri but he still helped. 

Dad got out of the ventilator two weeks ago. Covid put a huge toil on his lungs and it might take a while. He gets nightmare on a daily basis and barely sleeps because of the trauma. 

POV: There are frontline health workers who are doing great. Many put their life at stake, leave their family home and work day and night for us. The work they do is remarkable.

 Along side bad experiences we had good ones too. A sister(health worker) used to come and check on my dad every day before leaving. Few of them came rushing when my dad suffered, few wished for his well being and some doctors tried their best. I'm grateful for every breath that's gifted to my father. 

There's two side to everything.
Outburst and rage during a crisis can lead to severe repercussions and both side suffer.

"Stay safe ❣"





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Conscious choice of words: An art still undiscovered

"Line carve an alphabet, those bind together to form a word."  The burden of a word can sometimes be troubling, at times it can shatter your soul leaving you with an invisible scar. Many can relate but only few actually understand before the tragedy falls upon them.  We, on a daily basis spill words we don't even mean or words we might even forget after a while. We never imagine what sort of emotional baggage we are rendering to someone through our words. Words can make you, break you, take you to your boundless limits and let the unimaginable happen.  A person well appreciated for their effort always does his best. A child constantly converged with the idea that he is not good enough, for his whole life, end up believing it. Harsh words from a lover? Well, there's a  strand of tear rolling down your eyes.  Struggling, not feeling good about yourself, having self doubt and lack of self esteem at most cases is the result of the criticisms one ...

Mustang, Nepal" - one from my bucket list.

"As facts state- bordered by the Tibetan plateau and sheltered by some of the world's tallest mountains; Mustang undoubtedly is your ultimate destination." "This year, we got lucky. Followed by bunch of friends and teachers on our side, off we went to our dream destination." "The journey long as it may seem was worthwhile. If you ever plan on visiting Nepal add Mustang on your list. Mountain biking, trekking, swirling round on 108 dhara to wash away your sins and visit to Muktinath temple is a whole lot of overwhelming experience you'll witness here." "My share of experience includes horse back riding, 7 hours long trek, selfies and eye catching  view to ease out the stress." "The weather won't torment you if you visit during Mangsir(nepali month). A pair of neck warmers and fur down your sleeves works fine. If you want to experience snow fall, a little later after the broadcast is the most appropriate time...