Covid
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Dr Sanjay Nagral explains why he’s disturbed by some claims made by Dr Shashank Joshi on Prime Minister Modi’s latest radio show.
This time-tested, effective strategy could help tackle COVID-19 but poses unique challenges in India
“Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine’, now in its 20th edition, was our favourite even in the 1980s. Amongst its multiple editors is a diminutive soft-spoken man who has had a remarkable career as an infectious disease scientist. Anthony Fauci must be doing something right.
Undoubtedly, the hierarchy of the Covid vaccine ladder will be one of the most fiercely contested spaces the world has seen for some time; both between countries and within them. It won’t be surprising if Adar Poonawalla’s phone is ringing incessantly with calls from the who’s who for keeping that one vaccine reserved.
During the first month of Covid, when I wrote in this column that an acquaintance had called to ask whether he could ‘prebook’ an ICU bed, I received incredulous responses. I don’t know whether the gentleman needed an ICU bed, but in a devious sort of way he was indeed far-sighted.
In an attempt to distill out the ‘positives’ from the debris of Covid, there are some big ideas that were executed seriously by the state for the first time, that need to be kept alive.
The COVID-19 pandemic may have unwittingly led to some desirable changes; the challenge is to build on this
Mumbai embarks on a pathbreaking experiment of a massive expansion of ICU facilities to deal with one needs to realise that there are challenging areas difficult to fix quickly but the earlier we recognise their importance the faster we will move from optics to effective action.
The virus reminds us that it is in our collective interest to look at health security and not just national security
I popped in hydroxychloroquine in a prophylactic dose. I also got myself tested and was thankfully COVID -ve.
A common problem in the medical response to any mass disaster in India where an already overburdened system becomes dysfunctional under the strain of large numbers.
In his talk, Dr. Sanjay Nagral draws a neat line between bedside manners and clinical empathy, and stresses why the latter is the need of the hour for the healthcare community.