“Pass through hell” .. photos of the White Army tell the battle of Corona



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Nurse Cao said she had to sleep 23 days in her car with her husband, who works with her at the same hospital, to protect others and facilitate their attendance at work.

Italian nurse Alicia Bonari posted a photo of her wounded face from prolonged use of the masks, and said the masks had prevented her from drinking water for up to 6 hours.

In a post attached to the photo on her Instagram account, Bunary added that the emergency due to the Coruña outbreak placed her in a “very bad” psychological condition, for fear of infection.

For his part, the Italian doctor, Nicolas Sagrebi, said on his Facebook page, after posting his voice scratching his face over his muzzle: “I do not claim heroism, I am an ordinary person, but now I am proud of my work.”

Sagarbi works in an intensive care unit at a hospital in Modena, and says he took his photo to remember him for his one-year-old daughter.

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Amy Gould, a British nurse working in the intensive care department, said she posted her photo on her Facebook account after 13 hours of continuous work, to invite people to the importance of staying home.

“This face seems to have passed from hell,” she added in a post that accompanied her with an image of her face full of bruises and wounds, due to the protective masks she was wearing.

Nurse Gould works at an educational hospital in East Retford, UK, and says she works more than 65 hours a week a week, and that her family has not seen for about a month.

The Getty photographer took a photo of Nurse Kao Shan, who works at the Wuhan Isolation Hospital, the epicenter of the outbreak of the Corona virus in China.

Nurse Cao said she had to sleep 23 days in her car with her husband, who works with her at the same hospital, to protect others and facilitate their attendance at work.

Italian nurse Alicia Bonari posted a photo of her wounded face from prolonged use of the masks, and said the masks had prevented her from drinking water for up to 6 hours.

In a post attached to the photo on her Instagram account, Bunary added that the emergency due to the Coruña outbreak placed her in a “very bad” psychological condition, for fear of infection.

For his part, the Italian doctor, Nicolas Sagrebi, said on his Facebook page, after posting his voice scratching his face over his muzzle: “I do not claim heroism, I am an ordinary person, but now I am proud of my work.”

Sagarbi works in an intensive care unit at a hospital in Modena, and says he took his photo to remember him for his one-year-old daughter.



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