How to Manage Weakness Post COVID-19 CARE?
ATTEMPT THESE STRATEGIES TO MANAGE WEAKNESS, MODERATE ENERGY:-
UK’s National Health Service (NHS) suggests that recovered COVID-19 patients should keep a note of how fatiguing their standard exercises are to understand the example of weakness as well as to oversee and adjust to it better.
Given what we think about COVID-19 and the massive effect it has on patients’ carries on with, the way to recovery is required to be more serious. Getting back in a structure after any infection is a disturbing trip. What’s more, given what we think about COVID-19 and the shocking effect it has on patients’ carries on with, this path to recovery is normally expected to be more serious...read more...
67 crore Indians may get coronavirus by end of 2020: Nimhans Doctors at the National Institute of Mental Health & Neurosciences (Nimhans) believed that after the Lockdown 4, COVID-19 cases will increase further and India will enter the phase of community transmission.
It, however, said that 90 percent of these people will not even know that they are coronavirus positive because most of the people do not show any symptoms, and only 5 percent in critical condition are admitted to hospital.
If merely 5 percent of the 67 crore people in India fell seriously ill, this figure would be around 3 Crore.
So, if you will be one of them… Are your financial planning will be able to handle this COVID-19 situation?
The hospital expense of it may be around 3-10 lakhs in a private hospital depending on the facilities….
So, it’s time to recheck the following things- Are your current Health Insurance policy (Individual/Group) covers Covid-19?Is the Sum Assured is in the range of a minimum of 5-10 lakhs?Are your parents are covered under Health Insurance policy?
In addition, we are also mourning lost habits and ways of life that are casualties of the coronavirus.Going out with friends, hugging a grandparent, even opening a door in a public place are on hold.
However, even as states begin to open up, changes in how we interact with each other and the world will likely continue for far longer.
"Mourning is hard work," Sigmund Freud once wrote in his essay, "Mourning and Melancholia."
Letting go of what we have lost helps us move on with our lives, although we will always miss the people, places, and things we have lost; in that sense mourning can never be complete.Mourning and grief are an important part of coping with loss and essential in managing changes and accepting new realities.
Recognizing that our pre-COVID lives may never return is a loss to be mourned, and the work involved in this mourning can help us move on and into the new reality.
However, some people struggle with the process more than others, and resist by responding with illusions of control, refusing to take precautions, and showing contempt for politicians and public health officials who try to explain the changing realities of daily life.In an article post on APsaA’s Psychology Today blogsite, psychotherapist Shelley Galasso Bonanno, MA, LLP, writes, "Each person processes and expresses grief in their own individual ways, yet there is comfort and power in understanding that one is not alone during this pandemic."
Rajalakshmi group of educational institutions in Chennai is familiar for their versatility of academic excellence and research activities.
In the group, Centre for Medical Imaging is formed with the objective of creating proficient solutions in medical imaging applications.
The centre has members from faculty fraternity, students, and medical imaging professionals.Ever since the onset of the pandemic COVID-19, the members of the centre discusses the research progress across global in the aspect of medical imaging to detect COVID-19 through various imaging modalities like X-Ray.
Initially, we were thinking to use ultrasound images but due to some technical issues, we couldn’t follow it up.Later we decided to use chest X-ray images and incidentally, we were able to get around 100 COVID-19 affected subjects’ chest X-ray images through open-source Canadian research forum.
With the acquired images we planned to develop an Artificial Intelligence (AI) tool to detect COVID-19 condition from the test chest X-ray image.We decided to add the provision for detecting CAP (Community-Acquired Pneumonia) besides to COVID-19 in the proposed tool.
We used 14,148 chest X-ray images of all these three classes for rigorously training the neural network inbuilt in the AI tool.
At this time, if the entire world is worried about something, it is the novel coronavirus (nCoV) or also known as the Wuhan coronavirus.
Not to mention that this outbreak has already created much fuss across the world including India.
Coronavirus which is caused by SARS-CoV-2 was first identified in Wuhan, Hubei, China in December 2019.
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