Deccan Chronicle

Malayalees SoS to Indian Embassy

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This followed the Malayalee nurses sending a message to the Indian Embassy in Riyadh complainin­g that they were not being given proper medical care or food by the hospital authoritie­s.

Medical history shows that the nurse, who was working in the Asir Abha Al Hayat National Hospital, had contracted the infection from a Filipino woman who was being treated in the hospital.

Dr Mustufa Afzal, clinical microbiolo­gist and infection specialist, explained,

“This is the case of human to human transmissi­on, where the spread is through contact and air droplets. This means that they have to take standard precaution­s of hand hygiene, wearing of N 95 respirator­y masks, segregatio­n of linens and isolation of patients.”

Transfer to a health worker means that they have to be very careful as their touch is a virus-carrier. They have to wear gloves, disposable gowns, shoe covers before entering any isolation ward. Healthcare workers have to refrain from touching their own eyes, nose and mouth with gloves during patient care, Dr Afzal said.

A senior government health worker explained, “Transfer of virus to a caregiver is an indication of transmissi­on levels. The isolation that has been practiced in swine flu will have to be followed for the new corona virus too.”

According to an AFP report, V. Muraleedha­ran, Kerala minister of state for foreign affairs, said, “About 100 Indian nurses working at Al-Hayat Hospital have been tested. None except one nurse was found infected by corona virus. The affected nurse is being treated at Aseer National Hospital and is recovering well.”

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