Khaleej Times

Emirati shares his Covid-19 recovery tale

- Ahmed Shaaban ahmedshaab­an@khaleejtim­es.com

The doctors changed the antimalari­al medicine on the second day as it did not suit me. They gave me other medicines, including powerful antibiotic­s to beat pneumonia. I really do not remember how many days I was kept there. I could not identify day from night. I wanted to sleep all the time.” Mohamed Salem Al Kaabi, 59-year-old Emirati

sharjah — Exhausted, shivering, nauseating with severe pain — this is how 59-year-old Emirati Mohamed Salem Al Kaabi, who just recovered from Covid-19 infection, described his second day after returning from a trip to the US.

“Everything was fine, but suddenly, things turned upside down,” Al Kaabi told Khaleej Times on Monday. “I had a severe headache and lost balance and control over my body. I could not even hold my mobile phone.”

Sharjah-based Al Kaabi, chairman of the Emirates Human Rights Associatio­n, had not imagined how harsh it would be to become a Covid-19 patient. “I was returning home with my father — a cancer patient — along with my brother. However, I was the only one who contracted the virus.”

All precaution­ary measures had been strictly observed with Al Kaabi’s father, whose immunity was vulnerable. “It was me who was moving around to finish all due procedures and paperwork. That might mostly be the reason behind my Covid-19 infection,” he said.

Luckily, Al Kaabi, along with his father and brother, was automatica­lly quarantine­d in a Dubai-based hotel when they arrived in the UAE on March 25. “We first thought that we would remain home for 14 days, but the rule was changed, and anyone coming to the country was admitted to a hotel-based quarantine,” he said.

“I was feeling severe cold and my temperatur­e spiked. I was immediatel­y shifted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of a nearby hospital.”

Al Kaabi was treated with the chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine on the first day. “The doctors changed this anti-malarial medicine on the second day as it did not suit me. They gave me other medicines, including powerful antibiotic­s to beat pneumonia. I really do not remember how many days I was kept there. I could not identify day from night. I wanted to sleep all the time.”

Thankfully, Al Kaabi was closely monitored and attended to round the clock. Three days later, he was shifted from the ICU to a private room where he stayed for 10 days.

After recovering from the virus and testing negative for Covid-19, he was permitted to return home, with full observance of an additional 14-day quarantine. “This quarantine is kind of a follow-up to make sure that there is no chance to infect others.” He has not told his father about contractin­g Covid-19. “He is a cancer patient and I did not want him to feel sad.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates