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Covid-19 - Devastating Second Wave in India - Updates and Discussion

Mighty be the only time this organization saved someone's life

Still good to start from somewhere
 
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85-year-old COVID-positive RSS Swayamsevak gave up his bed and life so another person can live

We have seen time and monetary sacrifices being made to give someone a better life, however, sacrificing one's own life to ensure a long life for the other is surely an act not many can fathom.


27 April, 2021
OpIndia Staff
narayan-.png
RSS swayamsevak Narayan Dabhadkar, who gave up his COVID-bed for another patient so that person could live (image courtesy @shefvaidya on Twitter)



As the pandemic has wreaked havoc in the lives of many, stories of kindness, selflessness and sacrifice act as a ray of hope in such dark times.

In one such incident, an RSS sevika, Shivani Wakhare, shared the story of the ultimate sacrifice made by the 85-year-old RSS worker Narayan Dabhadkar from Nagpur.
The incident was then shared by a swayamsevak Rahul Kaushik on Twitter attaching the images of the original post.


The incident originally narrated in Marathi on Facebook reads, Narayan Dabhadkar an RSS worker who spent his entire life serving the society contracted covid amid the second wave of the pandemic. As his SPO2 levels dropped, his daughter frantically tried to get him a hospital bed in the city.
Facebook-post.jpg
Facebook post narrating the incident

After umpteen attempts, she managed to reserve a bed for him at the Indira Gandhi hospital. Dabhadkar kaka, as he was fondly known as, started getting breathless while he was being taken to the hospital by his grandson-in-law, Wakhare wrote. As the two waited for the hospital formalities to be completed, Dabhadkar kaka saw a woman in her 40’s along with her children crying and begging the hospital authorities for a bed to admit her husband who was in a critical condition.
Without giving a second thought, Dabhadkar kaka calmly informed the medical team tending to him that his bed should be offered to the lady’s husband. He said, “I am 85 now, have lived my life, you should offer the bed to this man instead, his children need him.”

Facebook-post-2.jpg

Facebook post narrating the incident

He then made his grandson-in-law call his daughter to apprise her of the decision. Perplexed on hearing his decision, she hesitantly agreed with him after a while. Dabhadkar kaka immediately signed a consent form saying he was forfeiting his bed for the young man and asked his grandson-in-law to take him back home.
After battling the virus bravely for the next three days, he left for his heavenly abode.

We have seen time and monetary sacrifices being made to give someone a better life, however, sacrificing one’s own life to ensure a long life for the other is surely an act not many can fathom.
With this let us also take a moment to thank our frontline workers, medical staff and individuals who have been serving society selflessly and tirelessly as the nation battles the pandemic.

100% paid story, Now BJP / RSS needs story to remain in power.....WTF
 
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85-year-old COVID-positive RSS Swayamsevak gave up his bed and life so another person can live

We have seen time and monetary sacrifices being made to give someone a better life, however, sacrificing one's own life to ensure a long life for the other is surely an act not many can fathom.


27 April, 2021
OpIndia Staff
narayan-.png
RSS swayamsevak Narayan Dabhadkar, who gave up his COVID-bed for another patient so that person could live (image courtesy @shefvaidya on Twitter)



As the pandemic has wreaked havoc in the lives of many, stories of kindness, selflessness and sacrifice act as a ray of hope in such dark times.

In one such incident, an RSS sevika, Shivani Wakhare, shared the story of the ultimate sacrifice made by the 85-year-old RSS worker Narayan Dabhadkar from Nagpur.
The incident was then shared by a swayamsevak Rahul Kaushik on Twitter attaching the images of the original post.


The incident originally narrated in Marathi on Facebook reads, Narayan Dabhadkar an RSS worker who spent his entire life serving the society contracted covid amid the second wave of the pandemic. As his SPO2 levels dropped, his daughter frantically tried to get him a hospital bed in the city.
Facebook-post.jpg
Facebook post narrating the incident

After umpteen attempts, she managed to reserve a bed for him at the Indira Gandhi hospital. Dabhadkar kaka, as he was fondly known as, started getting breathless while he was being taken to the hospital by his grandson-in-law, Wakhare wrote. As the two waited for the hospital formalities to be completed, Dabhadkar kaka saw a woman in her 40’s along with her children crying and begging the hospital authorities for a bed to admit her husband who was in a critical condition.
Without giving a second thought, Dabhadkar kaka calmly informed the medical team tending to him that his bed should be offered to the lady’s husband. He said, “I am 85 now, have lived my life, you should offer the bed to this man instead, his children need him.”

Facebook-post-2.jpg

Facebook post narrating the incident

He then made his grandson-in-law call his daughter to apprise her of the decision. Perplexed on hearing his decision, she hesitantly agreed with him after a while. Dabhadkar kaka immediately signed a consent form saying he was forfeiting his bed for the young man and asked his grandson-in-law to take him back home.
After battling the virus bravely for the next three days, he left for his heavenly abode.

We have seen time and monetary sacrifices being made to give someone a better life, however, sacrificing one’s own life to ensure a long life for the other is surely an act not many can fathom.
With this let us also take a moment to thank our frontline workers, medical staff and individuals who have been serving society selflessly and tirelessly as the nation battles the pandemic.


Made up story to gain some sympathy. He was already dead when the spot became available.
 
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Mighty be the only time this organization saved someone's life

Still good to start from somewhere
Obviously u don't know about RSS.

They are among the first responders doing relief in every calamity in India.

In action in recent covid surge


They have opened a 6000 bed Covid care center in Indore, MP

1619548547168.png

Made up story to gain some sympathy. He was already dead when the spot became available.
RSS is very popular among Hindus all kinds of political views including congress party. They don't need to gain sympathy.
 
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Indian Premier League cricketer Andrew Tye has said the coronavirus situation in India is "harrowing", and he is relieved to have flown home.

The 34-year-old left early on Sunday to return to Australia as India struggles with a surge in cases.
Tye said he felt "well looked after" inside the IPL's bio-secure bubble.

But, speaking to Stumped, he added: "You're almost cut off, it's weird. I found in a way that I sort of lost touch with the outside world."

The IPL - the world's richest Twenty20 league - has faced calls for a suspension over the Covid-19 crisis.

There have been more than 300,000 cases and 2,000 deaths in India in the past 24 hours.

Crematoriums in the capital Delhi have been forced to build makeshift funeral pyres, as the city runs out of space to cremate its dead.

Since Tye - plus compatriots Adam Zampa and Kane Richardson - flew home, the Australian government has suspended flights from India.Australians Pat Cummins, Steve Smith, David Warner, Chris Lynn and Ricky Ponting remain in the country, where more than a million Covid-19 cases have been recorded in just a few days.

Tye, whose IPL franchise the Rajasthan Royals helped him on to a flight home, will now have to quarantine in Perth."Inside the bubble it's incredibly safe and we are very well looked after," he said.

"It's just the craziness of what's going on outside of it, we get incredibly well sheltered from, that's a bit harrowing.

"You can drive through the streets and not see any of it but then you look on the news and you see what's happening and it's just stark in comparison to what they are actually saying."

Cricketers won't be prioritised for flights - Australian PM

Chris Lynn
Australia batsman Chris Lynn has played one game for Mumbai Indians in IPL 2021
The league format of the tournament ends on 23 May before the play-offs and the final, which is on 30 May.

Flights from India to Australia have been suspended until at least 15 May and Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison says cricketers who are competing in the IPL will not be prioritised for a return home.

"They're under their own resources and they'll be using those resources to, I'm sure, see them return to Australia," he said.

India's cricket board has told players it will do "everything" to ensure their safe return home after the tournament.

"Rest assured that the tournament isn't over for BCCI till each one of you has reached your home, safe and sound," they said.

Mumbai Indians batsman Lynn said he had asked Cricket Australia to arrange a charter flight back home for Australia's players at the end of the IPL after the governing body had contacted players about their health and travel plans.

"I texted back that, as Cricket Australia make 10% of every IPL contract, was there a chance we could spend that money this year on a charter flight once the tournament is over?" Lynn told News Corp.

"We are not asking for shortcuts and we signed up knowing the risks. But it would be great to get home as soon as the event is over."

England limited-overs captain Eoin Morgan, who is skipper of Kolkata Knight Riders, says the tournament should continue as long as it does not hamper the efforts to combat Covid-19.

New Zealand also has a number of players taking part in the IPL, including Kane Williamson, Trent Boult, Kyle Jamieson and Mitchell Santner.

"There's no doubt they're certainly anxious about what's happening in India and what they're witnessing," said New Zealand Cricket Players Association chief executive Heath Mills.

"But they feel well looked-after by their IPL franchises and safe in their bubbles."

..........strange isn't it? The additional medical and testing resources that go into making sure Andrew Tye and his buddies were so well looked after in the bubble while conditions just outside the bubble were so "harrowing" could in all probability have saved the lives of poor locals, yet the cricketers, the BCCI and cricket sponsors and TV networks all have their priorities.

Perhaps the guilt was too much for Tye and he finally saw sense.
 
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Doctors of a leading hospital in South Delhi was attacked by family members of a Covid patient after the patient died in the emergency ward as ICU beds were not available. The incident took place at Apollo Hospital in Sarita Vihar, South Delhi on Tuesday (April 27) morning. Several people were injured in the incident that was caught on camera.

 
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This is a south asian thing unfortunately where the communication gap between doctors and patients exist. I believe this would remain a third world problem.
 
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Nurse Slapped Doctor Under Stress in Rampur, Uttar Pradesh | COVID 19 Updates
This is a south asian thing unfortunately where the communication gap between doctors and patients exist. I believe this would remain a third world problem.
It happens everywhere, it's a problem in China too, I guess US is the same, the sudden surge of such incidents in India is the result of the mounting pressure from Covid, I guess.
 
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WOW huge fall in new cases and big increase in recoveries :

27Apr-3.23 L 26Apr-3.53 L 25Apr-3.49

You only have to look at the situation in the hospitals etc to know these numbers are 7x lower than they should be...
 
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You guys are such shameless and sick people. When terrorist attacks were common occurrence in Pakistan you guys used to talk about how the attacks were karma for Pakistan. You guys even went as far as calling all 97 people in the PIA plane crash in Karachi terrorists.

And now you are hoping Pakistan sees similar or worse fate compared to what India has seen. What happened to the karma again?
You seem angry ,use this energy for something useful like protecting your country from the virus.

its not gloating of any kind ,just a caution.
 
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