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Little Angel Suman

One small girl who had seen me first when she was in standard 7 that was in 2011. She was diagnosed to have neurogenic bladder. She was managed conservatively with CIC and anticholinergics. But she progressed to renal failure and ESRD.

Finally she underwent renal transplantation.

In spite of all these suffering she is ever smiling. God bless her.

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To consult me on online platform. You can use the app by apollo hospital Apollo247

Hi, Dr. Dr. Samiran Das Adhikary has invited you to the Apollo247 application.
Click here https://apl247.onelink.me/AEkA/117c926d to book the consultation with Doctor.

Please down load the app

Apollo247

Once you log in please search for my name in Bhubaneswar apollo.

Or click the above link

Then you can take my consultation on video chat from the comfort of your home.

90 % time No need to come out and see me physically.

If there is a need then only come out.

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COVID ’19 Update: Hi, I am now available for video consultation. You can book the appointment and get the consultation done through a video call. Please download Docon App from play store for android user https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.docon.patientapp and iOS users can download from app store https://apps.apple.com/us/app/docon/id1505731925?ls=1

And book your appointment.

Thanks

Thanks Dr Samiran Adhikary

Docon Id – doc24654

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Hello,

Check out this practice management software – Docon. I have been using Docon to create printed prescriptions. The app is super easy to use and they offer excellent service. I love it, and most of all, my patients love the experience.

Key features:
– Tap-based interface, no typing required
– Beautiful and detailed prescriptions
– Seamless Queue management for the receptionist

Using Docon, I have been able to digitize my whole practice at my clinic.

Check out their website at www.docon.co.in

Alternatively, you can call at 080 6823 6823

Regards,
Dr. Samiran Adhikary

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In this difficult time of Corona Pandemics when whole of mankind is on it’s knee . How do we consult a doctor. Can try a digital platform Apollo247 app on your mobile

Through this app I will be at your doorstep right in front of you. Can avoid coming to hospitals till this situation comes under control. It would take sometime. We are treating all medical conditions even during this extraordinary situation. Even in case situation demands surgical intervention, it can be done with proper precautions in place. But early consultation may avoid or postpone surgical intervention. So don’t hesitate to utilise this platform to get all clarification regarding the symptoms or difficulties you may be facing through and primary treatment with some basic tests and few pills which can easily be prescribed on this platform.m

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How to keep ourselves safe in this difficult and extraordinary situation of COVID 19

Professor M.S.Seshadri MD, PhD, FRCP
Former Professor of Medicine & Endocrinology
Department of Endocrinology Diabetes & Metabolism
Christian Medical College & Hospital, Vellore
Consultant Physician & Endocrinologist
Honorary Medical Director
Thirumalai Mission Hospital, Vanapadi Road, Ranipet Vellore 632404 &
Professor T Jacob John FRCP (Paediatrics), PhD (Virology), Former Professor&Head,
Department of Clinical Virology,
Christian Medical College & Hospital, Vellore632004
We have learned that recently in 2 hospitals in the country, where emergency surgical procedures were performed on patients and healthcare personnel got infected with SARS- CoV-2. These surgical patients developed COVID-19 pneumonia in the postoperative period, and succumbed. In these hospitals, a large number of health care professionals got infected. This had led to a lock down and containment situation of these hospitals. These incidents have many important lessons for the medical profession, other health care workers , administrators and health ministries.
The message is loud and clear. If asymptomatic (for COVID-19) individuals,who are actually in incubation period, develop COVID- 19 in the postoperative period, there are only 2 possibilities. 1. Their infection was nosocomial; 2. They came in infected, in which case community level spread is already occurring. Actually, nosocomial infection is also

indicative of community transmission, highlighting silent infection in medical staff or other admitted patients.
Italian doctors, after their heart-rending experiences with COVID-19, made a plea in NEJM Catalyst; their article carries the following messages for the rest of the world in the approach to COVID pandemic.

  1. The virus is exploiting centralized health care systems of the current era in a large number of countries
  2. Once you keep admitting very sick patients with high viral load, the hospital becomes the reservoir of the virus. Health care personnel acquire infection and unwittingly become vectors, whospread the infection to their patients and this leads on to further community spread. So hospitals become hot-beds of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
  3. A good number of health care professionals contract and some succumb to the infection they contracted in the hospital
  4. The way to deal with this epidemic is to consider the population as the individual patient and do your level best to keep the population healthy, even at the expense of some loss of lives
  5. If you do not do this, the human toll becomes huge as in Italy, Spain and the US.
  6. They recommend home based care as far as possible (level 1 and level 2 disease)
    with home oxygen if needed
  7. There is a place for a fully isolated, well-equipped COVID centre with all tertiary
    facilities manned by a committed team to take care of those who needpositive pressure ventilation.

There is an old saying ‘Physician, heal thyself! ‘ In the current COVID 19 context, this can be rephrased as ‘Health-care worker, protect thyself’. If health-care professionals are depleted because of COVID-19 or if the health-care force is demoralised because of personal risk and fear, the situation can become extremely difficult to handle.
How can we handle a catastrophe of this magnitude? How would a humane,caring person approach this problem?

  1. Shut down regular OPDs for chronic illness. These are vulnerable people who should not be coming to hospital – for their own safety, to reduce hospital crowd and avoidable workload of an already stressed group of healthcare staff
  2. Mobile telephone/telemedicine based counselling for patients with chronic illness through their usual caregiver with the understanding that if there is a medical emergency they will have to access a safe hospital not frequented by COVID-19 patients
  3. Home delivery of medications to avoid elderly coming out of their homes. They should be cocooned (reverse quarantined). When necessary, physicians wearing protective paraphernalia should make home visits — instead of patients coming to hospitals when their illness is of low/moderate severity and not life-threatening. For example acute exacerbation of asthma can be managed at home
  4. Multiple hot-linesshould be manned round the clock by appropriate personnel including medical professionals both for medical advice and for counselling for emotional and moral support . Tertiary level and medical college hospitals must serve as resource centres for practitioners in order to guide them in caring for

complex problems. [examples complicated Diabetes/hypertension/community
acquired infections etc]

  1. Samples for lab tests should be collected at home , transported to the lab and the
    results of tests communicated to concerned doctors/practitioners .
  2. Use a syndromic approach* to diagnose COVID-19 and treat such subjects and prevent spread to their family members using appropriate home isolation and other
    prophylactic measures.
  3. PCR or Rapid tests only forconfirming diagnosis when essential for care, or for well-
    designed and ethical studies, so that resources saved can be put to better use
  4. Dedicated ambulance services with adequately protected personnel to carry sick
    infected subjects to a dedicated COVID centre
  5. Have separate emergency facility for patients with acute respiratory
    problems.Adedicated respiratoryteam should handle this, adopting very effective respiratory and universal precautions. Those needing admission for respiratory failure to have a separate ICU facility for COVID-19
  6. Major hospitals in either private or public sector to take on the management of the town and surrounding villages and to set up a model system of referral and management
  7. At the same time continue to manageemergencies in non-COVID patients, who needhospitalbased care in a separate facility manned by a different set of healthcare personnel.
  8. Every patient coming to hospital for any emergency should be considered to be potentially infected with SARS-CoV- 2and suitable precautions (respiratory and universal) taken by all the staff.
  9. Surgicalprocedures must be reserved for emergencies. Each patient going for surgery to have a screening PCR on a nasopharyngeal swab and Ig M antibody and, lab report to be seen before taking up for surgery, similar to the present system in place for hepatitis B , C and HIV. As even this will miss out a proportion (~10 %) of SARS- CoV-2 infected patients, respiratory and universal precautions will be mandatory for every surgical patient and procedure.
  10. While we write about the scenario in India, we feel that the above suggestions are equally applicable to all the middle and low income countries which are trying to cope with this pandemic
    The natural history of the pandemic will be the eventual waning of the transmission. This will occur after at least about 50-60, possibly 70 % of the population have gone through the epidemic and developed immunity to the infection. This may take a few to several months.Till such time the priorities should be cocooning (reverse quarantine) the elderly and vulnerable subjects, restoring the confidence of health workers by demonstrating that they have acquired immunity and getting immune subjects from the population quickly back to work so as to resuscitate the economy, save livelihoods and lives.
    We make these suggestions based on scientific evidence and in the hope of bringing about a change in the approach to this pandemic.