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It was November 18 when 10 hospital nurses from Crete arrived in Thessaloniki, to voluntarily help in the battle that the city’s hospitals are fighting over the pandemic.
“The corona virus is really a dangerous enemy,” they had said a few days after getting a job, in a teleconference they had with Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, when they shared the first difficult moments they had lived in the Thessaloniki hospitals, describing their act is “deeply patriotic”.
“We received all the applause, but also the employees of the Thessaloniki hospitals deserve a very big applause, it must be said and it must be seen. We were all received with a lot of love ”, he said in the conversation he had on November 21 with Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Bania Malamati who traveled from Agios Nikolaos to Ippokratio in Thessaloniki.
“The situation is worse than we had imagined,” Katerina Michailidou, a nurse at Heraklion University Hospital, said in an interview, leaving two young children and her husband to offer her valuable services to Hippocrates.
Some of the nurses have already returned to their functions in the island’s hospitals, as their period of voluntary movement has ended, while this afternoon another four are expected to arrive in Heraklion and according to information from Crete24, at the “Nikos Kazantzakis “and the Commander of the 7th RAE Lena Borboudaki will be there to welcome them and have the opportunity to learn from the unprecedented moments they lived in the Intensive Care Units of the co-capital.
It is worth noting, as reported by crete24, that arrangements are being made for two of the Cretan nurses to remain in the Thessaloniki hospitals.
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