Showing posts with label Published Writeups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Published Writeups. Show all posts

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Political Source: The Latest Criteria for ICU Admission [My Letter in The Frontier Post]


Admission to ICU!
Posted on February 18, 2012

A young lady, aged between 25-30, came to the civil hospital with severe abdominal pain, she was referred from casualty department to surgical emergency ward, where she was diagnosed as a case of “Tuberculous Intestinal Perforation” after all the necessary laboratory & radiological investigations and clinical examination.The possible and necessary treatment for her was Surgical Repair of the perforation, all her attendants and relatives present in the ward were informed about it. She came with a huge protocol, full of political source, all her relatives belonged to a political party.They told the doctors that give her the VIP protocol, in other words they meant that give her the VIP protocol otherwise it won’t be good for you and hospital. After surgery, her relatives didn’t allow doctors to keep the patient in the ward, as they were not satisfied with the cleanliness of the ward. They forced the doctors and administration to vacate a bed in ICU and shift their patient to ICU. This patient was stable after surgery, and she really didn’t need ICU management, patients like her are easily managed in the ward without ICU support and monitoring.Now the important thing is this that the ICU in civil hospital comprises only 8 beds, and the count of ICU needy patients is more than that. So if people will force administration on political source to shift their patients to ICU although they don’t need ICU support, will let the other ICU needy patient, who is poor and has no political source, to suffer and may die.

Dr. Mubashir H. Shaikh
Hyderabad




[Published in The Frontier Post on Sunday, 18th Feb 2012]

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Learn CPR: Become a Life Saver (My Letter in The Frontier Post)


‘Become a life saver’
Posted on February 15, 2012

Last month I had a chance to attend a 4-hour Basic Life Support (BLS) workshop in Dow University, Karachi, in which techniques and procedures of Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) were taught to us. CPR is a combination of artificial breathing given mouth to mouth and an artificial heart beat produced by chest compressions, given to victims of sudden cardiac arrest (who stops breathing) in order to save the life until advanced life support can be given by health care providers. In our part of the world, this workshop is mandatory for healthcare proffesionals only, but if you look around in developed countries, you will see that this life saving procedure is commonly taught in schools, colleges, universities and other institutes, not only this but their adults learn this technique on their own will. In USA, there are many government and independent institutes who teach CPR, and many people attend this because they know the importance of this life saving procedure. The point I want to raise here is that the health ministry of Pakistan should initiate a national CPR teaching programme, not only for health care providers but for all adults. As we all know that in Pakistan, programmes like Polio, TB, Malaria, and Hepatitis prevention and control programmes have done quite well. They have not achieved 100% success, but still have managed things very well. Many of our people are taking benefits through these programmes specially in rural areas. It also reminds me of PPHI (people’s primary healthcare initiative), through which medical facilities have reached in remote areas, and have re-opened the closed BHUs (basic health units) to help the poor patients free of cost. If our officials start such project country wide to teach Basic Life Support Techniques, it will surely decrease the number of deaths, and will save the lives. Ambulance may get late, so every citizen should be armed with the CPR technique, it will not only benefit others but you also.

Dr. Mubashir H. Shaikh
Hyderabad



(Published in The Frontier Post - 15th Feb 2012)

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Patients Nibbled by Rodents (My Letter in The Frontier Post))


Patients nibbled by rodents
Posted on February 13, 2012

Recently I read a news report in an Indian newspaper, that a comatose patient, being kept on ventilator in an ICU of Mathura Das Mathur Hospital Jodhpur, was nibbled by rodents on ear, lips, cheeks and nose, while the nursing staff slept. In reaction, the responsible staff was suspended.
This story reminds me of some scenes that I have seen in Civil Hospital, Hyderabad, a hundred times. One being healthy cannot take care of him/her self here, I have seen staff nurse being bitten by a cat twice, one doctor friend, while examining a patient was bitten by a cat on foot. Cats are not only inside hospital but in the wards too. Poor people, accompanying patients, usually sleep on floors along with their food and other stuff, beacuse of lack of place.
Cats touch their stuff, half eat their food and lot more. In or near surgical OTs, these cats have been noticed eating the human flesh, which is taken off from body during some opertation, like placentas, appendix, etc. Patients visit hospitals for cure or care, but here unfortunately the caretakers are not even safe. At night, when the hospital is quiet and the inside roads are empty, one is scared to walk there because of stray dogs.
Before we experience a bad scene due to presence of these animals in the hospitals, the authorities should take them out of hospitals, and they should seal all such entrances of the wards and rooms where from cats and rodents can enter. This was one of the several basic problems of government hospitals. By focusing and taking care of these basic things, one can make these public sector hospitals, better place for the sick ones.

Dr. Mubashir H. Shaikh

Hyderabad, Sindh

Monday, January 30, 2012

Dog Bites on the Rise in Hyderabad: Posing a Potential Threat of Rabies



Dog bite on the rise
Posted on January 30, 2012

In Hyderabad, the number of stray dogs is increasing day by day, posing a potential threat of rabies in the city. Rabies is a very painful and deadly viral disease, that invades the central nervous system and disrupts its functioning. It is spread through the bite of affected animals, usually dogs, bats and foxes, but can affect any animal, it is present in their saliva. I am a young doctor from Hyderabad, have spent a year now in civil hospital, and on average have seen 5 to 6 cases of dog bites daily, including all age groups and children being the most affected one. These cases are not all from Hyderabad, few are referred from nearby villages and cities. In US, rabies is rarely spread through the bites of dogs and other rabid animals, because most of the animals are vaccinated in the states, but in our part of the world, where half of the human population is not vaccinated for the common preventable diseases, how can one talk about ‘vaccinating the animals’. Here, in our settings, killing dogs by giving them poisonous capsules or transferring them to some other place are the only valid options. Administration may adopt an animal birth control method to control the increasing population of stray dogs. I hope that the responsible administration is aware of the deadly outcome of rabies, and will soon initiate a full-fledged campaign to take some actions to prevent dog bites and rabies.

Dr. Mubashir H. Shaikh
Hyderabad

This was published in Dawn on 4th of feb 2012, and in Frontier Post on 30th of january 2012

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Cricket in Turmoil

Cricket In Turmoil

(Published in Daily Dawn, on 2nd september 2010)
Link: http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/letters-to-the-editor/cricket-in-turmoil-290

THE ex-chief executive of the International Cricket Council (ICC), Malcum Speed, has reportedly stated that Pakistani cricketers have been involved in match-fixing for the last few years, so banning the Pakistani cricket team will be a correct decision. “They should take rest from international cricket for some time”, he said.

Banning our team will be injustice to those who were not involved. The right course to take at this juncture is a lifetime ban on the cricketers involved in the scandal.

Let us give a chance to the other junior cricketers. A lifetime ban will create a sense of sincerity in the upcoming junior cricketers.

However, if the involved players are not punished, the international media will blame the innocent along with the guilty players, and Pakistan will lose whatever respect it has internationally.

MUBASHIR SHAIKH
Hyderabad




Suggestion by ICC executive


Mubashir Shaikh

(Published in Pak Observer on 2nd september 2010)
Link: http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=50247


While talking to a British newspaper, the ex-Chief Executive of International Cricket Council (ICC), Melcum Speed has stated that, Pakistani Cricketers have been involved in match fixing since last few years, so banning Pakistan’s cricket team will be correct decision for current situation. They should take rest from international cricket for some time”. I think that banning our team will be the injustice to those who were not involved. For the current situation, the correct decision will be the, life time ban on involved cricketers and let us give the chance to other junior cricketers who are waiting for their turn. Life time ban will create a sense of sincerity in upcoming junior cricketers.

—Hyderabad

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Negligence of Doctors?









My Letter Published in The Frontier Post on Sunday 29th August 2010


Negligence of doctors?
Mubashir Shaikh - Hyderabad
In a leading Sindhi newspaper, I read that, on 24th August, a woman died in Orthopaedic ward PMC Hospital, Nawabshah, and the relatives of that woman refused to take away the dead body by saying that the doctor injected her a wrong injection, and that has caused her death, we won't take the body until we get justice.

If the relatives know about the right injection and the wrong one, then why did they came to visit hospital ? Relatives are neither doctors nor paramedical staff, then how does they know? We all know that education in our part of world is not that much good that an ordinary man declares an injection as right or wrong. The journalist who reported this news, should have described the condition of the woman (patient) plus the name of that injection which according to their relatives caused her death. By reporting the patients history and name of injection, that journalist would have enabled all the readers especially doctors, to judge that whether the drug (injection) was right or wrong for that particular condition of the patient.


This respected profession (doctoring) is losing its respect, not every doctor is careless, and doctor is also not the cause of every death. Our people and journalists should give them respect, otherwise if doctors will start taking actions in the form of protests then our people, including these journalists, will be the one most affected.




Link: http://www.thefrontierpost.com/News.aspx?ncat=le&nid=338

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Technical Problem in NIP Website

[This was published as a letter in Yesterday's Frontier Post i.e., 13th August 2010]

I wish to draw the attention of the concerned authorities, through the columns of your esteemed newspaper, towards a technical error in the Application Form of National Internship Programme (NIP), available on their website, i.e., http://nip.gov.pk/ApplicationForm.aspx.

The last date for applying is 31st October 2010, and so, many people would have started filling this form online but unfortunately the form is not working, the link given to date calendar is dead, and keeping one box blank, will cause an error in form submission. I am facing this problem on NIP website since a month now.

The concerned authorities are therefore requested to look into this matter without further delay, as there is a big queue of unemployed graduates waiting to apply for National Internship Programme.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Controlling Infections - My Letter in Daily Times

My Letter in Daily Times (19th July 2010)


Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Well Wishers of Sindh [My Letter in The Post]

Today [13th July 2010], My letter is published in The Post, here is the JPEG image of that letter.


Controlling Infections [My letter in The Frontier Post and The Post]

My Letter, "Controlling Infections", published on Monday, 12th July,2010 in two English Dailies of Pakistan, i.e., The Post and The Frontier Post.



Monday, July 5, 2010

Medicines - My Letter in The Post

My Letter in The Post [Tuesday, 6th July 2010], an English Daily, with the title, "Medicines".



Sunday, July 4, 2010

Expensive Medicines [My Letter in Daily Times]

My Letter in Daily Times, an English Daily from Karachi. (Monday, 5th July, 2010)

Title: Expensive Medicines (with no efficacy)


Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Is There Any Hope? (My Letter in Daily Times)

My Letter in Daily Times, an English Daily from Karachi.
Title: Is there any Hope ? (Wednesday, 30th June, 2010)

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Healthcare Initiatives - My Letter in Daily Times

Yesterday (Thursday, 24th June, 2010), my letter got published in Daily Times, an English daily from Karachi.
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