Nepal’s COVID-19 Crisis: A Global Call to Arms

Nepal’s COVID-19 Crisis: A Global Call to Arms

Authors

  • Upasana Maskey Larkin Community Hospital
  • Yub Raj Sedhai Virginia Commonwealth University
  • Alok Atreya Lumbini Medical College
  • Aasim Kidwai Nepaljung Medical College

Keywords:

COVID-19, Nepal

Abstract

Nepal's second wave of COVID-19 has become the worst the world has seen so far. For a population of 29 million people, Nepal currently has only 1127 ICU beds and 453 ventilators for the entire population. The fragile healthcare system is already overwhelmed with every emergency room full of patients. Due to the unavailability of ICU beds, ventilators, oxygen, and other vital resources, sick patients are forced to stay at home with home isolation and treatment. The situation is dire, and resources are saturated. Only humanitarian aid from foreign countries can help mitigate the unprecedented disaster.

 

Author Biographies

Upasana Maskey, Larkin Community Hospital

Department of Clinical and Translational Research

Yub Raj Sedhai, Virginia Commonwealth University

Department of Internal Medicine

Alok Atreya, Lumbini Medical College

Department of Forensic Medicine

Aasim Kidwai, Nepaljung Medical College

Department of Internal Medicine

References

COVID-19 Map - Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center [Internet]. Available from: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html [cited 6 June 2021].

Weissenbach B. COVID-19 spirals out of control in Nepal: ‘Every emergency room is full now’. Available from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/a-pandemic-surge-threatens-livelihoods-in-nepal [cited 6 June 2021].

Coronavirus (COVID-19) Vaccinations - Statistics and Research - Our World in Data. Available from: https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations [cited 6 June 2021].

Downloads

Published

03-11-2021

Issue

Section

CORRESPONDENCE - SPECIAL COVID19

How to Cite

1.
Maskey U, Sedhai YR, Atreya A, Kidwai A. Nepal’s COVID-19 Crisis: A Global Call to Arms . Acta Biomed. 2021;92(5):e2021421. doi:10.23750/abm.v92i5.12129