The Star Malaysia

British pilot to fly home after virus recovery

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A BRITISH pilot who was Vietnam’s most critical Covid-19 patient is virus free and has recovered enough to make the long flight home on Sunday, doctors said.

A group of Vietnamese doctors who have been overseeing the treatment of the 42-year-old man from Scotland announced on Monday evening that he “has made substantia­l progress and his health condition allows him to travel” on the 12-hour flight to London.

The man is virus free, breathes normally without any support and is no longer treated as a Covid-19 patient, said Dr Tran Thanh Linh, the deputy head of the ICU ward at Cho Ray hospital where the man is receiving treatment.

Vietnam has gone all out to save the man, who was working for national carrier Vietnam Airlines when he tested positive for the virus in March.

The pilot had been critically ill and spent 65 days on life support.

Doctors said at one point they considered a lung transplant as the man’s lungs were 90% damaged and non-functional.

Linh said yesterday that the man now sleeps well and can sit up and walk with a walking frame.

He will, however, be accompanie­d by a team of doctors on a flight to London scheduled for this coming Sunday, the doctor said.

The pilot is known in Vietnam as “Patient 91” as he was the 91st person in the country confirmed to have the coronaviru­s. He was Vietnam’s last patient in the ICU and his recovery means Vietnam has still not had any Covid-19 deaths.

Vietnam has reported a total of 369 coronaviru­s cases. It has not found a local transmitte­d infection in nearly three months.

All recent cases are people who were infected abroad and the patients were placed in the government’s centralise­d quarantine facilities upon their arrival in Vietnam.

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