Nursing care: evolution of a profession

Index Home Nursing is a parental instinct. This innate emotion to provide care transcends beyond human species. Word ‘nurse’ has its origin in latin ‘nutrire‘ to suckle. Maternal and child care is an ancient nursing task. Various cultures describe wet-nurses – who would take care of children and even breast-feed them. Ancient nursing was more of… Continue reading Nursing care: evolution of a profession

Diabetes: Not so sweet

Index Home A not so sweet disease Diabetes is a chronic disease. Individuals with diabetes have high blood sugars, pass more urine, and get more thirsty. While urine is sweet and sugar in blood is high, disease is not so sweet. Individuals need to restrict their diets, exercise more, and take tablets or insulin injection for… Continue reading Diabetes: Not so sweet

A not so small-pox

Index Home Small-pox had a high mortality, a third of all infected would die. Survivors would become blind, and carry a scarred face for life. Every infected person would have fever, followed by a typical skin-rash. Disease earned its name from the small-bumps that covered entire body. But, small it would not remain as it devastated… Continue reading A not so small-pox

1962 – A malaria story

Index Home Malaria is an infection, caused by a tiny bug – Plasmodium and its species. This bug enters human body by a mosquito-bite and multiplies, leading to fever. Bug also exits through a mosquito completing a cycle. Malaria cycle was discovered in 1897 by Ronald Ross, which earned him 1902 Nobel in Medicine. We however… Continue reading 1962 – A malaria story

Leprosy: Saga of an eternal discrimination

Index Home Leprosy is an infection, affecting skin and the nerves. We discovered organism causing this infection, Mycobacterium leprae in 1873, nine years before its more famous counterpart Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Saga of discrimination and leprosy is eternal. Society discriminated against sufferers of this disease, and scientific community against Dr Gerhard Hansen – a Norwegian Physician who… Continue reading Leprosy: Saga of an eternal discrimination

COVID pandemic: A turbulent cove on a straight coastline

Index Home World before COVID: A straight coastline Beginning of 2019 was quite oblivious to the coming times. We had extended pains of terrorism, Syrian civil war, human displacements, Donald Trump, Brexit, environmental pollution, and anti-establishment protests from the previous years. On the global health front, 2018 Ebola epidemic had passed into 2019. We believed that… Continue reading COVID pandemic: A turbulent cove on a straight coastline

Tuberculosis: A wasting illness

Index Home TB: A wasting affection of the Lungs Tuberculosis (also known as TB), is a disease with devastating health, social, economic and cultural consequences. Greeks called it pthisis, and Romans called it consumption. Both these words mean “getting wasted”, or to “whither away”. We also know it as “white plague“, with sufferers becoming pale, before… Continue reading Tuberculosis: A wasting illness

Selfless service in faraway lands: humanism in healthcare

Index Home Humanism: What does it entail ? Healthcare is often equated with self-less service. Healthcare providers are trained to be non-discriminatory, to view every sufferer as a human, regardless of race, religion, creed, social or economic status. This humanism is often a tough ideal to uphold, especially when conflicted with self-preservation, and financial well-being. Humanism… Continue reading Selfless service in faraway lands: humanism in healthcare

Medical Imaging: Invisible rays make us see

Index Home It just happened one day Scientists were beginning to discover existence of invisible rays towards the end of 19th century. Physicists of the day, Humphry Davy, Micheal Faraday, Hemholtz and Lenard were all experimenting on properties of cathode rays. Nikola Tesla had also noted in 1894 that invisible rays affect photographic plates. On 8th… Continue reading Medical Imaging: Invisible rays make us see