April 17, 2020

Living In Times of COVID

It was late 2019 when the novel coronavirus broke out in Wuhan, China. The viral infection manifests with flu-like symptoms of cough, fever, colds and sore throat. These are common symptoms usually ignored and resolve spontaneously. It has a minimal fatality rate but according to statistics, elderly patients and those with co-morbidities such as hypertension and diabetes present with severe manifestations.  There's no enough study yet to prove that drugs (hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin, oseltamivir) can bring cure, but more researches are being developed. Nobody thought that like the Chinese, the virus that is unknown to the medical experts would spread all over the globe, and no cure has been identified yet. 

It has been a month since Metro Manila and some parts of the country (as well as most countries all over the world) is in lockdown. Only frontliners --- healthcare workers, policemen, supermarket staff --- are allowed to go out. This posed a huge problem especially to the daily wage earners which constitutes a major bulk of the metro dwellers. Most people have lost income, largely those in the business sector, posing a domino effect on the nation's economy.

Almost empty Taft Avenue crossing Finance Road.

The virus held a tight grip to the entire world, it crippled the world economy and rendered people immobile in the safety of their homes, if they're lucky to have one. This has never occurred to the greedy beasts in the business industry, they thought nobody can stop them from gaining profits. This crisis has shown us small to large scale leadership. It has shown us who are the true leaders in the workplace, community and the nation as a whole.

Empty Rizal Park
5th week of lockdown

How's life for healthworkers like us?

Family Medicine female residents wearing a donated PPE from Quorom, a female lawyers' sorority group. 

PUI tent

My co-resident, Jhem.

Checked on Jhem at the triage.



We continue to work in spite of the risk and the anxiety of being infected. The chronic loopholes of the nation's public health is out in the open for scrutiny. I think it's too late to criticize, what we can do is to cooperate with the nation's leaders. I hope this government sees the importance of public health and gives value to it.

I know it will never be the same after this pandemic, people have lost their loved ones while some lost their jobs, I can only be grateful that I am one of those who only want this to be over so I can return to the normal daily grind of my residency training.

Right now, I enjoy the sweet calmness reigning all over the metro. I never thought I would hear the noisy streets in complete silence while I drive to almost-empty roads in Manila. It's a sad sight though seeing the homeless street dwellers, the only ones left on the streets begging food for daily survival.

 

I want our lives to return to normal again. I want to bring my baby out so we can enjoy the outdoors again --- the malls and her daycare. If there's one thing I realize, is how I lack time for my baby Amal. She's more than a year old but I haven't really seen her grow. I spend more time at work, coming home to a sleeping baby most of the time. InshaaAllah, after all these, I will spend more time with her especially during weekends, the way I was with her two older sisters.

In these trying times, we can only cling to our faith. Allah (subhaana wa ta'ala) has sent us an unseen enemy. He has shown us a sign of His might --- that He alone can stop the world, that He can topple the most powerful nation, the most powerful human being can fall into His mercy.