Nurse picture goes around the world: I am afraid to go to work

An Italian nurse, Alessia Bonari, who works at a hospital in Milan, has shared a new picture on Instagram.

the Photo shows her face after yet another long guard, where she has treated patients who are infected with the coronavirus. In the face, she has multiple wounds and abrasions, after having had his face mask for many hours.

To the image, writes Alessia Bonari, that she is ‘afraid to go to work’ under the coronaudbruddet, but she does it anyway, because she is ‘proud’ and loves his job.

See also: Now sing karantæneramte Italian from the windows and balconies

Several media outlets, among other uk Independent, and australian news, has written about the nurse’s lookup, that has been ‘like’ of almost 900,000 in the social media, since it was laid out in the beginning of this week.

‘I’m afraid, because the mask may not sit well enough fixed to the face, or that I accidentally may have touched myself with the dirty gloves’, writes the Italian nurse, among others, in the text under the picture.

She recounts on about how physically tired she becomes, in the course of a long period, because the lab coat will get her to sweat, and that she because of infection must not ‘go on the toilet or drink anything for six hours’ when she first come in the clothes.

‘I’m mentally tired, and the same are all my colleagues, for whom this has been going on for weeks. But this will not deter us from doing our work, as we have always done it’, writes Alessia Bonari in the viral spread, how many in the comments salute her and her colleagues and call them ‘our heroes’.

See also: chief Physician: Drop cafébesøg, and go for a walk instead

In its lookup calls on she the italians not to ‘go against’ the doctors ‘and nurses’ efforts and follow the rules and guidelines they have received from the government by becoming at home.

Italy is right now in the national lockdown, and with over 21,000 people infected and 1441 deaths is the country in Europe that is definitely the hardest hit by the coronavirus.

Exit mobile version