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Pakistani child receives gift from Indian doctors on Eid

Excellent work by the Indian team.

If I remember Indian doctors also treated a wounded Iraqi with severe injuries don’t know if he was a child or solider.

Btw I want to ask what syringe sizes do Indian doctors use and level of thickness of the needles?

I remember I hated pak needles (had no option but to use them ugly things ) because they were so fat they could have been mistaken for VET type needles in western countries instead of for human use.

peace
 
India should liberalise its visa regime to allow easy travel to India from all south asian nations. As India grows stronger, it also grows in confidence. This should translate to opening up borders to allow for more people to people contacts. We should start naturally start with our neighbours.

---------- Post added at 11:40 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:39 AM ----------

Excellent work by the Indian team.

If I remember Indian doctors also treated a wounded Iraqi with severe injuries don’t know if he was a child or solider.

Btw I want to ask what syringe sizes do Indian doctors use and level of thickness of the needles?

I remember I hated pak needles (had no option but to use them ugly things ) because they were so fat they could have been mistaken for VET type needles in western countries instead of for human use.

peace

From what I remember, there are different gauges available. I think it depends on where the medicine is expected to be injected.
 
Theres no doubt India doctors are some of the best in the World.

I also know some of British Indians and Pakistanis, who even travel to India for medical help, as the waiting time for surgeries are too long in England hospitals.
 
Excellent work by the Indian team.

If I remember Indian doctors also treated a wounded Iraqi with severe injuries don’t know if he was a child or solider.

Btw I want to ask what syringe sizes do Indian doctors use and level of thickness of the needles?

I remember I hated pak needles (had no option but to use them ugly things ) because they were so fat they could have been mistaken for VET type needles in western countries instead of for human use.

peace

It is true that many Iraqis get treatment in India. Check out this website office of the iraqis treatment in india, iraqis treatment india, Medical Tourism india, sjbsjbmf

Indian doctors nowdays use disposable syringes (mybe very few rural doctors still use those old-type reused syringes). Somewhat like:
ACY2T73N1syringe_all_size_0001.jpg


I remeber that horror of geting injection when young...those thick needles.
Are those thick needle syringes still common in Pakistan?
 
I must warn you im a big eater lolz.

Thanks brother. Lovely romantic mood on here. I hope this is contageous and some of the guys on this forum mellow out too! Thanks again guys

don't worry bro,
we've got endless food-back ups!

---------- Post added at 05:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:43 PM ----------

It is true that many Iraqis get treatment in India. Check out this website office of the iraqis treatment in india, iraqis treatment india, Medical Tourism india, sjbsjbmf

Indian doctors nowdays use disposable syringes (mybe very few rural doctors still use those syringes). Somewhat like:
ACY2T73N1syringe_all_size_0001.jpg


I remeber that horror of geting injection when young...those thick needles.
Are those thick needle syringes still common in Pakistan?

i haven't even heard of such thick needles.
from my childhood,i am seeing dispossible ones.
kindly post a pic of a thick needle if you have one.
 
‎3 Pakistani soldiers got killed after Indian forces opened fire in the LoC today.


Thank you for these Gifts on Eid !!
 
Gift? Did they do it for free?

indian doctors gave the kid the gift of life.


New Delhi, Aug 31 (ANI): Reflecting the current spirit of cooperation between two Asian neighbours, doctors at Gurgoan's Medanta Midicity Hospital successfully operated a nine-year-old Pakistani boy, suffering from a chronic liver disease, and discharged today on the joyous occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr.

Ali Shaheer Malik, who hails from Pakistan's Lahore city, was suffering from Familial Cholestasis and went into a state of semi-coma.

He was brought to the Medanta Medicity Hospital here in a critical condition.

The boy's uncle Kashif Malik decided to donate a part of his liver that led to a successful surgery a few weeks ago and the ailed was kept under observation during the post-operative period.

The occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr has brought double celebrations for the family, as doctors announced Ali could leave the hospital premises after successfully recuperating from the surgery.

Now, the hail and hearty boy would be heading to Lahore along with his mother and uncle in the next few daysn extremely delighted Ali's mother thanked the team of Indian doctors for gifting her child a new life.

"I feel like my son has got a new life here and he has been taken care of very well. When we came here he was quite sick and very critical and the doctors at the hospital did whatever they could. I am very thankful to both the doctors and Medanta Hospital for taking good care of my son," said Zanobia, Ali's mother.

"Now, he can sit and he can walk. I hope he can now have a good life," she added.

An elated Ali feels this to be his best Eid gift and now plans to undertake fun activities back home.

"I can stand now and I will also run very soon. I will climb the stairs of my home and do other things as well. This is my best Eid gift," said Ali.

Experts at the Delhi Hospital feel they had a huge responsibility with the boy, as doctors in Pakistan failed to detect causes of the disease.

"Ali has a birth defect, which is called Familial Cholestasis. It is a genetic defect. In Pakistan, the doctors could not point out the cause of it and here in India, we did not have enough time to cue the reason because the boy reached us in a state of coma," said Dr. Neelam Mohan, Director, Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Liver Transplantation, Medanta.

"Our first priority was to reverse the process and prepare the boy for surgery," she added.

The Indian High Commission had granted the visa within two days of the request and the family members were able to reach the hospital on time for further treatment.

This collaborative effort has brought forth more hope of enhanced relations between the two countries, which have fought three wars in the past. By Pooja Shali (ANI)
 
Gift? Did they do it for free?

Some people are never satisfied in life. The kid would of never survived for 5-10 years in Pakistan, the Indian doctors gave him a normal life. The best gift ever.

Please ignore the troll, they are unhappy, that the Pak Child went to India to get surgery and not in they homeland.
 

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