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Kenneth Remy, a doctor and researcher at the University of Washington, Missouri, published a video clip that simulates the last moments of a person with a dangerous condition of an emerging coronavirus infection, with the aim of raising awareness about the prevention of the virus.
The video, which was filmed as from the patient’s point of view, shows an alteration and fluctuation in vision, before the ventilator tube is inserted into the person’s mouth with Corona.
Remy attached the video, which he posted on his Twitter account, with the words: “I don’t want to be the last person to look into your eyes in panic. Put on the mask.”
“This is what it looks like when you breathe forty times a minute, and the oxygen level drops below 80,” the doctor said in the video, in conjunction with his disturbed appearance to the patient.
“I hope the last moments of your life don’t look like this,” he added.
“Because this is the last thing you’ll ever see if we don’t start wearing a mask when we’re outside, when we’re not practicing social distancing, and when we don’t wash our hands frequently,” she said during her simulation of inserting a breathing tube into patient’s mouth in the recovery room.
He continued: “I promise that this will be the last you will see (…) and this is what your father, your mother or your children will see at the end of their lives when they become infected with Covid.”
“This is dangerous … I beg you to take precautions to reduce the transmission of Covid disease,” he said at the end of the video.
The doctor’s decision came at a time when the number of Corona-infected patients supervising their treatment exceeded 1,000 people, with more than 100 of them receiving artificial respirators, according to the USA Today website.
Since its publication, the video has gained tens of thousands of views, in addition to a large number of likes and forwards of the video.
Since the start of the pandemic, the United States has detected around 12.8 million cases of emerging coronavirus infection, of which death was the fate of 262,065 cases.
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