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#familyhealth — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #familyhealth, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Southbridge Dentistry has been serving Littleton families since 1982 with comprehensive dental care—from preventive cleanings to implants and cosmetic services. #DentalCare #FamilyHealth

  2. Southbridge Dentistry has been serving Littleton families since 1982 with comprehensive dental care—from preventive cleanings to implants and cosmetic services. #DentalCare #FamilyHealth

  3. Southbridge Dentistry has been serving Littleton families since 1982 with comprehensive dental care—from preventive cleanings to implants and cosmetic services. #DentalCare #FamilyHealth

  4. Healthy, aligned teeth matter at every age. Okuda Orthodontics serves Henderson families with comprehensive care from children to adults. Early evaluations recommended at age 7. #Orthodontics #FamilyHealth

  5. Healthy, aligned teeth matter at every age. Okuda Orthodontics serves Henderson families with comprehensive care from children to adults. Early evaluations recommended at age 7. #Orthodontics #FamilyHealth

  6. Healthy, aligned teeth matter at every age. Okuda Orthodontics serves Henderson families with comprehensive care from children to adults. Early evaluations recommended at age 7. #Orthodontics #FamilyHealth

  7. Derek's Echo: A Legacy Forged in Loss, Now a Lifeline

    After Derek's death at 20, genetic tests revealed a hereditary condition, saving his twin, mother, and grandmother. Learn how his loss became a lifeline.

    #GeneticTesting, #FamilyHealth, #HereditaryCondition, #LifeSaving, #Derek'sLegacy

    newsletter.tf/derek-death-fami

  8. A family's genetic discovery after a tragic loss has led to life-saving interventions for multiple relatives. This is a powerful example of how knowledge gained from one life can protect others.

    #GeneticTesting, #FamilyHealth, #HereditaryCondition, #LifeSaving, #Derek'sLegacy
    newsletter.tf/derek-death-fami

  9. It’s easy to overlook the basics until they matter most 💛
    Handwashing, clean surfaces and safe food prep play a powerful role in protecting your family.

    👉 Discover why everyday hygiene matters:zurl.co/rNgDY

    #WorldHygieneDay #HealthyFamilies #ParentingSA #MomLifeSA #BabyYumYum #FamilyHealth

  10. 💉 Hepatitis can affect your liver without obvious symptoms.
    Knowing the early signs helps protect you and your family.

    Find out the risks and simple steps to stay healthy here:zurl.co/oGvUi

    #HealthTips #HepatitisAwareness #FamilyHealth #BYY #BabyYumYum #WellnessTips

  11. Most people underestimate tetanus 🩹.
    From rusty nails to garden scratches, it can strike quietly.
    Find the warning signs, risks and lifesaving tips here before it’s too late 👀!

    👉 Read more here:zurl.co/Q79m7

    #BabyYumYum #BYY #TetanusAwareness #HealthSafety #FamilyHealth #ParentingTips #ProtectYourFamily

  12. When names of diseases sound similar, confusion spreads fast.
    Foot and mouth disease and hand, foot and mouth disease are often mixed up, but they affect very different groups. Understanding the difference helps parents stay informed, calm and confident when headlines make the rounds.

    Read more here:zurl.co/YreWU

    #BabyYumYum #ParentingSA #HealthFacts #ParentingEducation #KidsHealth #FamilyHealth #StayInformed #ParentLife #SAParents #HealthAwareness

  13. 2026 – The Beginning

    Related Posts:

    First of all, Happy New Year! I hope you have had a great start to this year and if you have any New Year’s Resolutions planned, I hope that you will be able to stick throughout the year.

    I did not have any New Year’s Resolutions planned as I usually did the previous years. Mainly because I have just moved to a new place, settling in with things still pending in Kuching, trying to adapt to my working environment as well as picking up on new skills.

    Thus, New Year’s Resolution? It’ll come as the year progresses.

    My New Year’s Eve was spent at work and mainly in the ambulance with a dear friend as well as work colleague, however, that is a separate post for another time.

    As usual, since I’ve started working as a doctor in 2023, I’ve always made it a point to work on New Year’s Day, a habit which I’ve adapted from my dad ever since he has started working at the age of 18.

    However, New Year’s Day is a public holiday here in Sarawak. Thus, I was allocated as the oncall medical officer on the 1st of January as well as on the 2nd of January. Per oncall shift is from 8am on that day till 8am the following day (which means, mine ended at 8am on the 3rd of January).

    My first case began with a case of wound breakdown over the right wrist, which the patient chose not to seek hospital treatment followed by another case of upper gastrointestinal bleed which was sent to hospital. This was then followed by another case of possible acute appendicitis which the patient and family decided to “discharge against medical advice” because they wanted to seek treatment in their hometown considering they were travelling and happened to be in the same area.

    Upon returning home, I was called back for a case of breakthrough seizure likely secondary to under-dosage of medications. The patient had three episodes of seizure that day followed by a regular 1-2 monthly episodes. Hence, referred and sent to hospital.

    Finally, I can return home. Time to get some rest since I would be working the next day. Shortly after, I was called back, a patient sustained laceration wound over the medial aspect of his antecubital fossa. Mechanism of injury? Unknown and he was in an extremely drunken state.

    Otherwise, he was stable. Sadly, my medical assistant at that time could not be contacted to escort the patient to hospital and the family members did not have their own transportation.

    If only, he was fully awake, I would have triaged him to green zone. However, transportation issues… Thankfully, the patient’s family has an uncle who was willing to send. The only thing was he needed some time to arrive due to the heavy rain and slippery roads.

    I didn’t feel good leaving the patient behind although he was stable. Thus, I stayed till 4am until his uncle came and the patient himself had woken up.

    After that, I went back home and straight away gotten ready for work since it’s a working day and I am still oncall.

    The following day on the 2nd of January, went by smoothly during office hours with referrals here and there but it was manageable.

    In the afternoon, another patient came in for symptomatic anaemia secondary to abnormal uterine bleeding with newly diagnosed cervical carcinoma. Her haemoglobin level was 5, who again, refused hospital referral claiming she visited the clinic for fever and not for her anaemic symptoms. After much convincing and discussion with my specialist, the patient still opted to “discharge against medical advice”.

    Which makes me wonder… Why in the world?…

    This was followed by dinner with my friend. I remembered thinking to myself that evening that maybe… just maybe… I would have a cold night. Enough of referrals.

    However, at 11:30pm on the 2nd of January 2026, I received a call from my medical assistant that a patient presented to the clinic breathless with an SpO2 of 50% under room air, started on high flow mask and at best, it is only 90%.

    Sounds like an impending intubation and CPR case.

    I called up my friend immediately as I rushed to the car as she lives closer to the clinic. I needed all the help I could get for this patient. The roads were slippery and it was a rainy night. Yet, I sped. Thankfully, my friend had already arrived before me.

    The patient?

    I remembered seeing this patient on the 23rd of December 2025. At that time, his lungs already had crepitations with reduced air entry over the right side and yet he chose to “discharge against medical advice”. I remembered telling him that he would collapse if he didn’t go and true enough, here he was… sitting up, gasping for air.

    His vitals? Blood pressure was sky high, lungs filled with crepitations but no pedal oedema, lines were set, no ECG done but we didn’t have time to waste…

    I called up the Emergency Physician in the nearest hospital (which is an hour away), presented shortly and informed that we had to proceed with intubation because he was too tachypnoeic.

    We prepared for intubation, informed the family members as well as explained the risk of CPR and death. The family understood and agreed.

    Intubation… This was a difficult intubation for the guy was a very large guy with hardly any neck visible.

    But before we could start, his GCS dropped and so did his heart rate, I started CPR while my friend attempted to crash intubate. We attempted to crash intubate and both times, it failed… I called up the Emergency Physician again and told her that we were 30 minutes into the CPR, she told me to call off after the current cycle.

    My first death at a new workplace and on the third day of the year at 0027H, 3rd of January 2026.

    Then, I proceeded to complete my notes for the family members to bring to the police station to lodge a police report and broke the news to the family. I was calm and so were the patients’ family. After that, I called up the Emergency Physician to thank her and then, I broke down.

    I broke down because had he gone on the 23rd itself, he wouldn’t have to gone through this.. He lives alone and his so-called family members aren’t even his biological family members but neighbours and friends… I broke down because I also felt defeated… We tried our best with such limited resources and manpower…

    Yet, I couldn’t save him…

    If you have YET to come up with a New Year’s Resolution… At least consider this, adhere to your regular check-ups if you have any… Stay compliant to your medications, diet restrictions or any fluid restrictions if you do have…

    And if something is off or not right, please RUSH to the nearest clinic or better, the hospital… Because there is only so much that we can do with such limited resources in a community clinic.

    Otherwise, I wish that you have a Blessed 2026 filled with love, beautiful memories and wonderful opportunities.

    Remember to have fun and do enjoy it but please do so, responsibly.

    Related Posts:

    YouTube | Instagram | Pinterest | Facebook | Spotify

    About Me | Privacy Policy | Contact Me

    #Articles #bintulu #Blog #blogging #communityClinic #cpr #dailyprompt #dailyprompt1804 #dailyprompt1812 #dailyprompt1829 #dailyprompt1933 #dailyprompt1940 #dailyprompt1941 #dailyprompt1944 #dailyprompt1945 #dailyprompt1946 #dailyprompt1947 #dailyprompt1949 #dailyprompt1952 #dailyprompt1963 #dailyprompt1968 #doctor #doctorLife #emergency #emergencyDepartment #familyHealth #familyMedicine #housemanship #intubation #klinikKesihatan #Malaysia #medical #medicalOfficer #Medicine #newYear #sarawak #tatau #writing

  14. 2026 – The Beginning

    Related Posts:

    First of all, Happy New Year! I hope you have had a great start to this year and if you have any New Year’s Resolutions planned, I hope that you will be able to stick throughout the year.

    I did not have any New Year’s Resolutions planned as I usually did the previous years. Mainly because I have just moved to a new place, settling in with things still pending in Kuching, trying to adapt to my working environment as well as picking up on new skills.

    Thus, New Year’s Resolution? It’ll come as the year progresses.

    My New Year’s Eve was spent at work and mainly in the ambulance with a dear friend as well as work colleague, however, that is a separate post for another time.

    As usual, since I’ve started working as a doctor in 2023, I’ve always made it a point to work on New Year’s Day, a habit which I’ve adapted from my dad ever since he has started working at the age of 18.

    However, New Year’s Day is a public holiday here in Sarawak. Thus, I was allocated as the oncall medical officer on the 1st of January as well as on the 2nd of January. Per oncall shift is from 8am on that day till 8am the following day (which means, mine ended at 8am on the 3rd of January).

    My first case began with a case of wound breakdown over the right wrist, which the patient chose not to seek hospital treatment followed by another case of upper gastrointestinal bleed which was sent to hospital. This was then followed by another case of possible acute appendicitis which the patient and family decided to “discharge against medical advice” because they wanted to seek treatment in their hometown considering they were travelling and happened to be in the same area.

    Upon returning home, I was called back for a case of breakthrough seizure likely secondary to under-dosage of medications. The patient had three episodes of seizure that day followed by a regular 1-2 monthly episodes. Hence, referred and sent to hospital.

    Finally, I can return home. Time to get some rest since I would be working the next day. Shortly after, I was called back, a patient sustained laceration wound over the medial aspect of his antecubital fossa. Mechanism of injury? Unknown and he was in an extremely drunken state.

    Otherwise, he was stable. Sadly, my medical assistant at that time could not be contacted to escort the patient to hospital and the family members did not have their own transportation.

    If only, he was fully awake, I would have triaged him to green zone. However, transportation issues… Thankfully, the patient’s family has an uncle who was willing to send. The only thing was he needed some time to arrive due to the heavy rain and slippery roads.

    I didn’t feel good leaving the patient behind although he was stable. Thus, I stayed till 4am until his uncle came and the patient himself had woken up.

    After that, I went back home and straight away gotten ready for work since it’s a working day and I am still oncall.

    The following day on the 2nd of January, went by smoothly during office hours with referrals here and there but it was manageable.

    In the afternoon, another patient came in for symptomatic anaemia secondary to abnormal uterine bleeding with newly diagnosed cervical carcinoma. Her haemoglobin level was 5, who again, refused hospital referral claiming she visited the clinic for fever and not for her anaemic symptoms. After much convincing and discussion with my specialist, the patient still opted to “discharge against medical advice”.

    Which makes me wonder… Why in the world?…

    This was followed by dinner with my friend. I remembered thinking to myself that evening that maybe… just maybe… I would have a cold night. Enough of referrals.

    However, at 11:30pm on the 2nd of January 2026, I received a call from my medical assistant that a patient presented to the clinic breathless with an SpO2 of 50% under room air, started on high flow mask and at best, it is only 90%.

    Sounds like an impending intubation and CPR case.

    I called up my friend immediately as I rushed to the car as she lives closer to the clinic. I needed all the help I could get for this patient. The roads were slippery and it was a rainy night. Yet, I sped. Thankfully, my friend had already arrived before me.

    The patient?

    I remembered seeing this patient on the 23rd of December 2025. At that time, his lungs already had crepitations with reduced air entry over the right side and yet he chose to “discharge against medical advice”. I remembered telling him that he would collapse if he didn’t go and true enough, here he was… sitting up, gasping for air.

    His vitals? Blood pressure was sky high, lungs filled with crepitations but no pedal oedema, lines were set, no ECG done but we didn’t have time to waste…

    I called up the Emergency Physician in the nearest hospital (which is an hour away), presented shortly and informed that we had to proceed with intubation because he was too tachypnoeic.

    We prepared for intubation, informed the family members as well as explained the risk of CPR and death. The family understood and agreed.

    Intubation… This was a difficult intubation for the guy was a very large guy with hardly any neck visible.

    But before we could start, his GCS dropped and so did his heart rate, I started CPR while my friend attempted to crash intubate. We attempted to crash intubate and both times, it failed… I called up the Emergency Physician again and told her that we were 30 minutes into the CPR, she told me to call off after the current cycle.

    My first death at a new workplace and on the third day of the year at 0027H, 3rd of January 2026.

    Then, I proceeded to complete my notes for the family members to bring to the police station to lodge a police report and broke the news to the family. I was calm and so were the patients’ family. After that, I called up the Emergency Physician to thank her and then, I broke down.

    I broke down because had he gone on the 23rd itself, he wouldn’t have to gone through this.. He lives alone and his so-called family members aren’t even his biological family members but neighbours and friends… I broke down because I also felt defeated… We tried our best with such limited resources and manpower…

    Yet, I couldn’t save him…

    If you have YET to come up with a New Year’s Resolution… At least consider this, adhere to your regular check-ups if you have any… Stay compliant to your medications, diet restrictions or any fluid restrictions if you do have…

    And if something is off or not right, please RUSH to the nearest clinic or better, the hospital… Because there is only so much that we can do with such limited resources in a community clinic.

    Otherwise, I wish that you have a Blessed 2026 filled with love, beautiful memories and wonderful opportunities.

    Remember to have fun and do enjoy it but please do so, responsibly.

    Related Posts:

    YouTube | Instagram | Pinterest | Facebook | Spotify

    About Me | Privacy Policy | Contact Me

    #Articles #bintulu #Blog #blogging #communityClinic #cpr #dailyprompt #dailyprompt1804 #dailyprompt1812 #dailyprompt1829 #dailyprompt1933 #dailyprompt1940 #dailyprompt1941 #dailyprompt1944 #dailyprompt1945 #dailyprompt1946 #dailyprompt1947 #dailyprompt1949 #dailyprompt1952 #dailyprompt1963 #dailyprompt1968 #doctor #doctorLife #emergency #emergencyDepartment #familyHealth #familyMedicine #housemanship #intubation #klinikKesihatan #Malaysia #medical #medicalOfficer #Medicine #newYear #sarawak #tatau #writing

  15. 2026 – The Beginning

    Related Posts:

    First of all, Happy New Year! I hope you have had a great start to this year and if you have any New Year’s Resolutions planned, I hope that you will be able to stick throughout the year.

    I did not have any New Year’s Resolutions planned as I usually did the previous years. Mainly because I have just moved to a new place, settling in with things still pending in Kuching, trying to adapt to my working environment as well as picking up on new skills.

    Thus, New Year’s Resolution? It’ll come as the year progresses.

    My New Year’s Eve was spent at work and mainly in the ambulance with a dear friend as well as work colleague, however, that is a separate post for another time.

    As usual, since I’ve started working as a doctor in 2023, I’ve always made it a point to work on New Year’s Day, a habit which I’ve adapted from my dad ever since he has started working at the age of 18.

    However, New Year’s Day is a public holiday here in Sarawak. Thus, I was allocated as the oncall medical officer on the 1st of January as well as on the 2nd of January. Per oncall shift is from 8am on that day till 8am the following day (which means, mine ended at 8am on the 3rd of January).

    My first case began with a case of wound breakdown over the right wrist, which the patient chose not to seek hospital treatment followed by another case of upper gastrointestinal bleed which was sent to hospital. This was then followed by another case of possible acute appendicitis which the patient and family decided to “discharge against medical advice” because they wanted to seek treatment in their hometown considering they were travelling and happened to be in the same area.

    Upon returning home, I was called back for a case of breakthrough seizure likely secondary to under-dosage of medications. The patient had three episodes of seizure that day followed by a regular 1-2 monthly episodes. Hence, referred and sent to hospital.

    Finally, I can return home. Time to get some rest since I would be working the next day. Shortly after, I was called back, a patient sustained laceration wound over the medial aspect of his antecubital fossa. Mechanism of injury? Unknown and he was in an extremely drunken state.

    Otherwise, he was stable. Sadly, my medical assistant at that time could not be contacted to escort the patient to hospital and the family members did not have their own transportation.

    If only, he was fully awake, I would have triaged him to green zone. However, transportation issues… Thankfully, the patient’s family has an uncle who was willing to send. The only thing was he needed some time to arrive due to the heavy rain and slippery roads.

    I didn’t feel good leaving the patient behind although he was stable. Thus, I stayed till 4am until his uncle came and the patient himself had woken up.

    After that, I went back home and straight away gotten ready for work since it’s a working day and I am still oncall.

    The following day on the 2nd of January, went by smoothly during office hours with referrals here and there but it was manageable.

    In the afternoon, another patient came in for symptomatic anaemia secondary to abnormal uterine bleeding with newly diagnosed cervical carcinoma. Her haemoglobin level was 5, who again, refused hospital referral claiming she visited the clinic for fever and not for her anaemic symptoms. After much convincing and discussion with my specialist, the patient still opted to “discharge against medical advice”.

    Which makes me wonder… Why in the world?…

    This was followed by dinner with my friend. I remembered thinking to myself that evening that maybe… just maybe… I would have a cold night. Enough of referrals.

    However, at 11:30pm on the 2nd of January 2026, I received a call from my medical assistant that a patient presented to the clinic breathless with an SpO2 of 50% under room air, started on high flow mask and at best, it is only 90%.

    Sounds like an impending intubation and CPR case.

    I called up my friend immediately as I rushed to the car as she lives closer to the clinic. I needed all the help I could get for this patient. The roads were slippery and it was a rainy night. Yet, I sped. Thankfully, my friend had already arrived before me.

    The patient?

    I remembered seeing this patient on the 23rd of December 2025. At that time, his lungs already had crepitations with reduced air entry over the right side and yet he chose to “discharge against medical advice”. I remembered telling him that he would collapse if he didn’t go and true enough, here he was… sitting up, gasping for air.

    His vitals? Blood pressure was sky high, lungs filled with crepitations but no pedal oedema, lines were set, no ECG done but we didn’t have time to waste…

    I called up the Emergency Physician in the nearest hospital (which is an hour away), presented shortly and informed that we had to proceed with intubation because he was too tachypnoeic.

    We prepared for intubation, informed the family members as well as explained the risk of CPR and death. The family understood and agreed.

    Intubation… This was a difficult intubation for the guy was a very large guy with hardly any neck visible.

    But before we could start, his GCS dropped and so did his heart rate, I started CPR while my friend attempted to crash intubate. We attempted to crash intubate and both times, it failed… I called up the Emergency Physician again and told her that we were 30 minutes into the CPR, she told me to call off after the current cycle.

    My first death at a new workplace and on the third day of the year at 0027H, 3rd of January 2026.

    Then, I proceeded to complete my notes for the family members to bring to the police station to lodge a police report and broke the news to the family. I was calm and so were the patients’ family. After that, I called up the Emergency Physician to thank her and then, I broke down.

    I broke down because had he gone on the 23rd itself, he wouldn’t have to gone through this.. He lives alone and his so-called family members aren’t even his biological family members but neighbours and friends… I broke down because I also felt defeated… We tried our best with such limited resources and manpower…

    Yet, I couldn’t save him…

    If you have YET to come up with a New Year’s Resolution… At least consider this, adhere to your regular check-ups if you have any… Stay compliant to your medications, diet restrictions or any fluid restrictions if you do have…

    And if something is off or not right, please RUSH to the nearest clinic or better, the hospital… Because there is only so much that we can do with such limited resources in a community clinic.

    Otherwise, I wish that you have a Blessed 2026 filled with love, beautiful memories and wonderful opportunities.

    Remember to have fun and do enjoy it but please do so, responsibly.

    Related Posts:

    YouTube | Instagram | Pinterest | Facebook | Spotify

    About Me | Privacy Policy | Contact Me

    #Articles #bintulu #Blog #blogging #communityClinic #cpr #dailyprompt #dailyprompt1804 #dailyprompt1812 #dailyprompt1829 #dailyprompt1933 #dailyprompt1940 #dailyprompt1941 #dailyprompt1944 #dailyprompt1945 #dailyprompt1946 #dailyprompt1947 #dailyprompt1949 #dailyprompt1952 #dailyprompt1963 #dailyprompt1968 #doctor #doctorLife #emergency #emergencyDepartment #familyHealth #familyMedicine #housemanship #intubation #klinikKesihatan #Malaysia #medical #medicalOfficer #Medicine #newYear #sarawak #tatau #writing

  16. 2026 – The Beginning

    Related Posts:

    First of all, Happy New Year! I hope you have had a great start to this year and if you have any New Year’s Resolutions planned, I hope that you will be able to stick throughout the year.

    I did not have any New Year’s Resolutions planned as I usually did the previous years. Mainly because I have just moved to a new place, settling in with things still pending in Kuching, trying to adapt to my working environment as well as picking up on new skills.

    Thus, New Year’s Resolution? It’ll come as the year progresses.

    My New Year’s Eve was spent at work and mainly in the ambulance with a dear friend as well as work colleague, however, that is a separate post for another time.

    As usual, since I’ve started working as a doctor in 2023, I’ve always made it a point to work on New Year’s Day, a habit which I’ve adapted from my dad ever since he has started working at the age of 18.

    However, New Year’s Day is a public holiday here in Sarawak. Thus, I was allocated as the oncall medical officer on the 1st of January as well as on the 2nd of January. Per oncall shift is from 8am on that day till 8am the following day (which means, mine ended at 8am on the 3rd of January).

    My first case began with a case of wound breakdown over the right wrist, which the patient chose not to seek hospital treatment followed by another case of upper gastrointestinal bleed which was sent to hospital. This was then followed by another case of possible acute appendicitis which the patient and family decided to “discharge against medical advice” because they wanted to seek treatment in their hometown considering they were travelling and happened to be in the same area.

    Upon returning home, I was called back for a case of breakthrough seizure likely secondary to under-dosage of medications. The patient had three episodes of seizure that day followed by a regular 1-2 monthly episodes. Hence, referred and sent to hospital.

    Finally, I can return home. Time to get some rest since I would be working the next day. Shortly after, I was called back, a patient sustained laceration wound over the medial aspect of his antecubital fossa. Mechanism of injury? Unknown and he was in an extremely drunken state.

    Otherwise, he was stable. Sadly, my medical assistant at that time could not be contacted to escort the patient to hospital and the family members did not have their own transportation.

    If only, he was fully awake, I would have triaged him to green zone. However, transportation issues… Thankfully, the patient’s family has an uncle who was willing to send. The only thing was he needed some time to arrive due to the heavy rain and slippery roads.

    I didn’t feel good leaving the patient behind although he was stable. Thus, I stayed till 4am until his uncle came and the patient himself had woken up.

    After that, I went back home and straight away gotten ready for work since it’s a working day and I am still oncall.

    The following day on the 2nd of January, went by smoothly during office hours with referrals here and there but it was manageable.

    In the afternoon, another patient came in for symptomatic anaemia secondary to abnormal uterine bleeding with newly diagnosed cervical carcinoma. Her haemoglobin level was 5, who again, refused hospital referral claiming she visited the clinic for fever and not for her anaemic symptoms. After much convincing and discussion with my specialist, the patient still opted to “discharge against medical advice”.

    Which makes me wonder… Why in the world?…

    This was followed by dinner with my friend. I remembered thinking to myself that evening that maybe… just maybe… I would have a cold night. Enough of referrals.

    However, at 11:30pm on the 2nd of January 2026, I received a call from my medical assistant that a patient presented to the clinic breathless with an SpO2 of 50% under room air, started on high flow mask and at best, it is only 90%.

    Sounds like an impending intubation and CPR case.

    I called up my friend immediately as I rushed to the car as she lives closer to the clinic. I needed all the help I could get for this patient. The roads were slippery and it was a rainy night. Yet, I sped. Thankfully, my friend had already arrived before me.

    The patient?

    I remembered seeing this patient on the 23rd of December 2025. At that time, his lungs already had crepitations with reduced air entry over the right side and yet he chose to “discharge against medical advice”. I remembered telling him that he would collapse if he didn’t go and true enough, here he was… sitting up, gasping for air.

    His vitals? Blood pressure was sky high, lungs filled with crepitations but no pedal oedema, lines were set, no ECG done but we didn’t have time to waste…

    I called up the Emergency Physician in the nearest hospital (which is an hour away), presented shortly and informed that we had to proceed with intubation because he was too tachypnoeic.

    We prepared for intubation, informed the family members as well as explained the risk of CPR and death. The family understood and agreed.

    Intubation… This was a difficult intubation for the guy was a very large guy with hardly any neck visible.

    But before we could start, his GCS dropped and so did his heart rate, I started CPR while my friend attempted to crash intubate. We attempted to crash intubate and both times, it failed… I called up the Emergency Physician again and told her that we were 30 minutes into the CPR, she told me to call off after the current cycle.

    My first death at a new workplace and on the third day of the year at 0027H, 3rd of January 2026.

    Then, I proceeded to complete my notes for the family members to bring to the police station to lodge a police report and broke the news to the family. I was calm and so were the patients’ family. After that, I called up the Emergency Physician to thank her and then, I broke down.

    I broke down because had he gone on the 23rd itself, he wouldn’t have to gone through this.. He lives alone and his so-called family members aren’t even his biological family members but neighbours and friends… I broke down because I also felt defeated… We tried our best with such limited resources and manpower…

    Yet, I couldn’t save him…

    If you have YET to come up with a New Year’s Resolution… At least consider this, adhere to your regular check-ups if you have any… Stay compliant to your medications, diet restrictions or any fluid restrictions if you do have…

    And if something is off or not right, please RUSH to the nearest clinic or better, the hospital… Because there is only so much that we can do with such limited resources in a community clinic.

    Otherwise, I wish that you have a Blessed 2026 filled with love, beautiful memories and wonderful opportunities.

    Remember to have fun and do enjoy it but please do so, responsibly.

    Related Posts:

    YouTube | Instagram | Pinterest | Facebook | Spotify

    About Me | Privacy Policy | Contact Me

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  17. New Year Resolution: Organize My Health Records 🎉
    We’ve got you, and your family.
    Scan, translate & share vaccine records with one click.
    👉 vaccinegenie.com/signup?src=MS
    #NewYearGoals #VaccineGenie #FamilyHealth #DigitalHealth #HealthTech

  18. They’re too small to see, yet microplastics are now being detected inside children’s bodies 🧠👶 From brain health to immune systems, the potential risks are too important for parents to ignore. Here’s what the latest research reveals and how you can take action now.💙

    👉 Read more: zurl.co/iS3WG

    #BabyYumYum #BYY #ChildDevelopment #ParentingTips #HealthyKids #Microplastics #FamilyHealth #ParentAwareness #WellnessMatters

  19. An app my team and I built just hit 800+ users in 15 days 🚀

    We made a call: FREE online consultations, zero booking fees until Dec 5. Stay home. Stay safe. Get medical help instantly via MediMan.

    MediMan connects you with 50+ verified doctors, supports family profiles (one account, multiple members), secure medical records, and 24/7 access with bank‑grade security.

    Try it: mediman.life/userapp.html

    #MediMan #Telemedicine #DigitalHealth #SriLanka #FOSS #Startup #FamilyHealth

  20. Worried about microplastics sneaking into your family’s food, water and air? 👶🌱
    The good news is that reducing exposure doesn’t require drastic changes. From safer storage choices to simple habit swaps, these small steps can make a big difference in your home.

    👉 Read more: zurl.co/Ibrky

    #BabyYumYum #BYY #FamilyHealth #ParentingTips #HealthyHome #Microplastics #SafeLiving #ParentLife #WellnessForKids

  21. Eye Care Awareness Month 2025 reminds us to protect the vision that shapes our lives. 👀✨ From regular eye exams to shielding our eyes from screens and sunlight, small steps can make a big difference. Let’s invest in better eye health for a clearer, brighter future!

    Read the full article here: zurl.co/u7NDB

    #BabyYumYum #BYY #EyeCareAwareness #EyeHealth #ProtectYourVision #HealthyEyes #EyeCareTips #VisionMatters #FamilyHealth #BetterVision

  22. Sudden fever, joint pain, and fatigue are just some of the symptoms caused by the Chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne illness that can easily be mistaken for other infections.
    From how it spreads to simple steps to protect your home, knowing the facts can help you recognise symptoms early and take action to keep your family safe.💙

    👉 Check out the full article here: zurl.co/WHrd7

    #BabyYumYum #BYY #Chikungunya #MosquitoBorneDiseases #FamilyHealth #StaySafe #Signsandsymptoms #Bealert

  23. 🌟 Discover how integrating paediatric and general care can transform family health management! 🌟

    Explore the benefits of combining these services for a seamless healthcare experience. From continuous monitoring to streamlined prescriptions and specialist referrals, this holistic approach ensures your family gets the best care from infancy through adulthood.

    Read more: chancerne.net/2024/08/integrat

    #FamilyHealth #PaediatricCare #GeneralPractice #IntegratedCare