An old man rejected him from the hospital after suffering “Corona” … and his son found a way to save his life.



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When the Indian Suri Nathani (81 years old) returned from the custody hospital due to his “crown” injury, he grabbed the hand of his son Raj and asked him one thing: “allow him to die at home”, where Raj Nathani said: ” He said to me: Please promise me one thing … If I died, I would die while I was here … Don’t bring me back. “

However, death was not an acceptable option for Raj, 55, although he knew that his father’s chances of surviving the new Corona virus were not in his favor, according to the American network CNN.

Raj, the director of an advertising company, has been following the virus since last January, including the losses of multigenerational families and older people with chronic illnesses, like his father, making them more likely to die from the virus.

While he was helping his father with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease after coming home from Watford General Hospital, outside London, Raj said to his father, “You will not die … We will take care of you here,” and he did not know. how successful would it be to achieve this.

“I am not a gambling player, but if I were to do it, I would definitely bet I couldn’t do it,” said Bharat Thaker, a family doctor.

Raj, who recovered from a heart attack last November, was ready for weeks of closings in the UK, going into self-isolation at home alone with his 80-year-old mother and father, trying to protect all members of the family.

But his father’s condition began to deteriorate on March 25, when he had trouble breathing, and Raj suspected he had “Covid-19”. When calling the ambulance the next day, the family discovered that a Syrian lung was filled with fluid.

Suri was rushed to the hospital, but doctors called Prague shortly thereafter to tell him that they were 95 percent sure that his father was infected with the virus, but that they wanted him at home. Raj says doctors told him that if his father’s condition worsened, they would not be able to put him on a respirator, given his obstructive lung disease.

Raj points out that he has two options: keep him in the hospital, risk not seeing him again, or bring him back home and expend all his energy to make him comfortable. In the end, he chose the latter.

Before a Syrian returned to his Watford home, Raj spent the day cleaning the house, isolating his mother downstairs, and turning his parents’ room on the first floor into a temporary hospital ward.

Raj started his journey with his father with little medical knowledge and advice from the hospital on how to take care of health, and resorted to doing something good for him, which is data collection and analysis, so he created a Google spreadsheet to help track your father’s temperature, blood pressure, and oxygen saturation readings, which are vital factors that can be measured at home.

To limit the amount of time Raj spent in the room with his father, use a baby monitor installed on the iPad that left him in the room. This allowed the rest of the family to help monitor the father when Raj needed rest, and also allowed them to reach Syria, which would help alleviate their isolation.

Raj also turned to the family doctor for advice, advising him in case the father’s breathing worsened with the air compressor that was already present due to a Syrian disease with COPD.

3 days after his discharge from the hospital, a Syrian was delirious and fighting for food, and he told Raj that he believed in his death. Raj thought this was because his brain lacked oxygen, and the family doctor advised him with an antibiotic, and the need to help a Syrian lie on his stomach for several hours a day, a practice that helps increase amount of oxygen entering the lung.

Under his son’s watchful eye, a Syrian gradually began to recover. “I knew he would recover when he became strong enough to bother me,” says Raj. “He started complaining, saying the tea he was making was bad, then he ordered pizza and fries.”

In the end, a Syrian made a full recovery. Last week, he was able to walk in the garden of the house, using a device that helps him walk.

Family doctor Bharat Thaker says he cannot pinpoint exactly what Raj and Suri were successful at, explaining: “We don’t know if it was the family caring for him or the available vital data that made a difference … Maybe that it was just luck, and it wasn’t time to die. “

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