The attention of those with sugar will be at least useful to our neighbors, of course
Diabetics should definitely read this
Written by Jitesh Madhavan in December 2018
It's about a doctor.
If this post is helpful to anyone.
My father is severely diabetic.
He takes insulin every
day but is active in his field; And a natural who hates a little. A few months ago, when my father was walking, he felt like he had a bruise on his leg. When asked, he said, 'I have a small wound on my leg, that's why.' When the shoe is removed & examined,
little toe & the next toe on the right foot is usually affected by pus.
He was rushed to a large hospital in Kozhikode. The diabetes specialist who examined the foot replaced his father and said:“It is a little more ripe. Let it dry with medicine. If it does not dry out,you
will have to have surgery to remove your little finger. ” Anyway I got the advice to see the surgeon right away. I saw the surgeon who owns the hospital. Wrote a few tests. Asked to be admitted.
Discharged after 4 days hospital stay. He was discharged from the hospital with a
prescription and a few prescriptions.
One day the surgeon said, "The pus is coming. I can not wait any longer. I have to cut my finger tomorrow because the part that connects the little finger to the next finger is almost completely ripe." He slowly moved his little finger and
convinced me. "The finger now has only a nominal connection to the bone. If it is not cut, it will affect the top, so get ready for surgery tomorrow morning. It can be easily cut as it is ripe." He listened to the doctor's advice and stepped down.
Every moment passed through the
ordeal that any son experiences. I left a message asking for comments on several WhatsApp groups and friends. I decided to go and see a doctor who was confident in it.
It was for Dr. P. Ramdas Naik of Malabar Hospital at Eranjipalam, Kozhikode along with his father. When I went
to pick up the token at the counter, the fee was 100 rupees !!. At that moment, almost all hope was lost. There is no fee of less than three hundred rupees for a specialist doctor. If so, do patients have to be examined for just a hundred rupees? The common sense of the common
Malayalee mind worked there. I thought I would go see it anyway. A man who looks forty or forty-five years old when he goes and sees her !!. The expectation is gone. Murian asked him a few questions in Malayalam and his explanation of a few moments led him to the decision to use
him as an experiment before surgery.
"I'm not a big man, but in my current experience, ninety-five percent of the change is pus." He consoled us and on that day he himself was bandaged by his father and for the next one and a half days he himself examined the wound and evaluated
its progress and treated it with the appropriate medicine. Surprisingly, in exactly one month the wound was completely healed !!
I got acquainted with the patients who got there. All were ‘ordered’ to have their organs amputated from various hospitals. Most of them are
in various stages of progress !!. Everyone says the same thing in one voice. This is the first time in their lives that they see a doctor - a doctor who selflessly serves patients from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. The doctor who calls the patient 'Sir' and the nurse 'Madame'. A doctor
who can call and talk at any time. A doctor who does not write off unnecessary tests and medications.
What does no one know about this man who cares for patients with peeling sores without a minute's break with an indelible smile ?.
The answer is very simple.
The annoyances
of self-marketing have never touched this man. He himself once answered my question, "Sir, there are many offers for better pay and facilities. I want patients who need me."
What I learned: In many hospitals, nurses bandage such wounds. They may not be able to assess the progress
of the injury and make decisions accordingly. Many diabetic wounds can be treated with medication by a doctor of good faith and experience.
Let me tell you another joke. The total cost of getting his father's finger amputated in the first hospital was thirty-five thousand.
The total cost of Dr. Ramdas Nayak's treatment, including medicine, is very less
Dr. Ramdas Nayak, Malabar Hospital, Eranjippalam,Kozhikode 0495- 2376833,
Help line: 9745323232
Mob: 9037417490
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Do u about Muthulakshmi Reddy?
She should be the role model of #womenempowerment
The lady behind the existence of Adayar cancer hospital!
She was born in 1886 in the princely state of Pudukottai in Tamilnadu. Father-Narayanswami Iyer & Her mother was a Devadasi who,
were women who were
ostensibly“dedicated”to temple deities tasked with passing on the baton of the art of dance to the next generation.Reality was different.They were often subjected to exploitation & were considered prostitutes by the British govt.
It was actually worse than
prostitution- no one chose to be a devadasi.
The prepubescent girl was initiated into the system by a religious ceremony which ensured her permanent status as a concubine. She would have a male patron,but no rights to his surname or inheritance. Devadasis needn’t marry and were
Here is Audio Clip published in Chanakya TV, on forceful eviction of Brahmin priest from Perumal temple,Sathur - Trichy at age of 67, citing reason as old age by EO Dhanalakshmi. His daughter narrating the whole incident. Also they are deceiving him by saying there is no record
It's a thread with 4 parts, only one is published? Where is other 3 parts !!!
of priest working in the temple so will not pay any kind of retiral benefits. His monthly salary is just 4K. Some new guy, who has no knowledge in Agamas has been appointed as Archakar. Kudos for all The Hindus who voted for this Party & to all Opposition sleeping on it..
Part 2
Many TV channels in India, especially India Today & NDTV are supporting & urging Indian govt to extend Visas of Afghan students studying in India
I am against giving shelter to the Afghan national in present situation because our security must be the priority.
No one knows who will enter our country in the name of shelter & what they will be doing here after then. So our govt must think about our safety first. (Only non-Muslim Afghan nationals should be given shelter if any still surviving there) (There are 56 Muslim countries
throughout the world to take good care of the Afghan nationals, They want Shariah & they will get that in all these countries. If they come into our country and find that Shariah law is not available here then then will start applying their #Democratic to live into the system
Great Post-Shared from Kailash Narayan Sharma’s wall
*Is Narendra Modi really transforming India*.❓
Replied by Jay Agarwal
Jay Agarwal, works at Federal Government of the United States
Answer:
Since I have not lived in India for almost 25 years, I can only answer this as a
perspective.
Note that as a US Citizen, I can neither vote in Indian elections, nor have any vested interest in the electoral outcome in India.
Hence, objectivity!
I will narrate two stories to make my point. And I will not even use any boring statistics!
Story 1
A routine Uber ride in Washington DC, and an Afghani driver picks me up. After a few minutes, he asks me if I am Indian, I say yes, and he smiles and says that he loves Bollywood.
I smile back.His next question, do you know when somebody will make a movie on Modi.
The CIA used the Naxalite movement to attack the dominant mainstream CPM in Kolkata and West Bengal in the 1960s and the
latter suffered the largest casualties in the resulting fratricide.
In the same vein, the British state sponsored a major anti Soviet British Trotskyite movement to prevent young students from professional backgrounds gravitating towards the CPGB, which was still pro Soviet.
Swapan Dasgupta was a Trotskyite student leader in London in the late 1970s. There were other episodes I suspected of the intelligence services sponsoring far left movements to attack mainstream leftists that were more influential.