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Aleksandras Bartusevičius, Head of the Department of Anesthesiology and Resuscitation at Jonava Hospital, died of COVID-19 on Wednesday. “I lost a friend tonight. We joked five days ago, we sent greetings, even though Alexander was already sick. But the rescuers have seen it all. So he seemed calm”, a sensitive message was announced on Facebook by the head of Kaunas Anesthesiology Clinic, Prof. Dr. Andrius Macas.
“But God (or fate, whoever believes it) predicted otherwise: the disease continued to progress fiercely,” the professor wrote Wednesday night. – When I studied in the residence, I worked as an assistant in the Kaunas Hospital – invaluable experience – Aleksandras also worked there. The healthy humor of the male company was always fun, the excellent technical skills and quick orientation were surprising, logical, and weighed “yes” and “no”. For me, a resident without feathers, it was a healthy school with good moral standards. Alexander soon became the head of resuscitation at Jonava Hospital. He’s always fresh and in a good mood. “
I lost a friend. We joked five days ago, we sent our regards, even though Alexander was already sick. But we rescuers have seen it all. He seemed calm then.
Professor A. Macs recalls that the first contact took place even earlier, around 1996. “Perhaps in the second year, when VMU, as an open university, allowed French lovers (who want to break their language) to learn this language. There Alexander, a portly young doctor, broke his tongue perfectly. Then the two students were impressed with the cadet, who asked him what he worked for, he replied that he was a doctor. We medical students wonder why he didn’t mention that earlier. And he laughs: “What will be praised here when the son goes to the doctor, is a disgrace in the family.” Even now, even tonight, I think these words are not true when talking about a doctor who has a calling and makes a total sacrifice for people. What a shame the team of doctors and nurses who worked at home tonight and both made an effort to save Alexander. Wonderful family and children who hold themselves so stoically. Perhaps by the doctors themselves who work in resuscitation and other critical medical departments. All those considerations and philosophies of ours – I will adhere / not to quarantine, I will / will not go to celebrate, I will / will not be vaccinated – are so useless. Square and hedges this debate seems. Lazdijai, nurses from Kaišiadorys, who have just over fifty, assistant nurses, who are just over forty, surgeons Kėdainiai and Mažeikiai, heads of Šilalė Hospital. Whats Next? Okay, so there are healers … Okay, there are so many healers. But they are also dying. Not just strangers, distant strangers, there are also loved ones. As in the 1950s, all families were affected in one way or another by exile and the horrors of war, so few families were affected by the disease, the professor wrote. – It was so close. Just a few weeks before the first batch of vaccine. Alexander was only 54 years old. “
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