70th anniversary of Hanoi's Liberation Day Vietnam - Asia 2023 Smart City Summit Hanoi celebrates 15 years of administrative boundary adjustment 12th Vietnam-France decentrialized cooperation conference 31st Sea Games - Vietnam 2021 Covid-19 Pandemic
Home / Health & Education / Health
Vietnam hospital prepares to send British Covid-19 patient home
Anh Kiet 19:15, 2020/06/21
Vietnam’s most severe Covid-19 patient has expressed his eagerness to return to his homeland in Scotland.

A 43-year-old Briton, who has been hospitalized for over three months in Ho Chi Minh City, is now well enough to board a flight to return home in Scotland soon, Tuoi Tre Online reported, citing Cho Ray Hospital where he is being treated.

The man is now breathing room air without supplemental oxygen for most of the time, according to the latest update by the treatment sub-committee under the National Steering Committee for Covid-19 Prevention and Control on June 20.

The patient has been unplugged of the ventilator for seven consecutive days, the sub-committee said, adding that he has completely weaned off oxygen support during the day and only needs it at night.

 The British patient shakes hands with Chairman of the HCMC People's Committee Nguyen Thanh Phong on June 17. Photo: Cho Ray Hospital

Cho Ray Hospital said that the man has been able to stand on his feet while holding on to support bars during physical therapy exercises.

The Briton is fully conscious and capable of coherent verbal communication, the hospital informed. Doctors have completely cut the patient off intravenous feeding as he can now eat normally.

Furthermore, his ability to move has improved. He can now get up and turn around in bed along with roughly four fifths of his leg muscles recovering after receiving physical therapy twice a day, doctors said.

Despite these positives, he still needs time in order to regain the use of his leg muscles and make a complete recovery.

The patient has expressed his eagerness to return to his home in Scotland. A medical consultation meeting is scheduled for next week to review the patient’s conditions before he can be released from hospital.

The man, who is identified as Vietnam’s Covid-19 patient No.91 following his coronavirus test on March 18, is a Vietnam Airlines pilot. He took the job at the Vietnamese national flag carrier in December last year.

When initially hospitalized, the patient was in a healthy state. His condition suddenly worsened with his lung capacity dropping rapidly, forcing him to require the aid of the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine (ECMO) from April 6.

He was initially admitted to the Ho Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical Diseases and transferred to Cho Ray Hospital on May 22 after having been cleared of the virus.

On May 8, it was announced that only 10% of his lungs were functional and that a lung transplant might be his only viable path toward recovery.

However, he has made a remarkable recovery over the past weeks, and doctors now say he will soon be well enough to be discharged without the need for a lung transplant.

The Briton remains Vietnam’s most critical Covid-19 patient and has spent the longest time receiving treatment at medical facilities for a combined total of 92 days.

As of June 21, Vietnam’s Ministry of Health has reported that the national tally of Covid-19 stood at 349. Among them, 326 patients have recovered while only 23 are under treatment, including four having tested negative twice.

RELATED NEWS
TAG: Vietnam hospital British Covid-19 patient
Other news
15:14, 2024/03/24
Hanoi accelerating efforts to reduce new tuberculosis cases
Hanoi has achieved the targets set in the National Strategy for TB Prevention and Control by 2020 with a vision of 2030, with 80% of TB cases detected and 92% of detected patients being cured of the disease.
13:44, 2024/03/10
Hanoi aims for 94.5% health insurance coverage this year.
Hanoi encourages enrollment in social and health ínsurance by increasing banking penetration to facilitate the payment of pensions or monthly social allowances.
18:36, 2024/03/06
Denmark helps Vietnam enhance primary health care
Cooperation between Vietnam and Denmark in the field of health is based on a common understanding that primary health care is crucial to ensure equitable access to health and to tackle the growing burden of noncommunicable diseases.
07:31, 2024/02/08
Hanoi hospitals to ensure quality healthcare during Tet
The move aims to ensure that emergency cases, road accident victims, and emergency births are given due care during the Tet holiday.
21:38, 2023/12/05
Vietnamese doctors master single-port endoscopy
Pediatric Surgery Ward at Hanoi-based Saint Paul General Hospital is one of two centers in the world to perform laparoscopic common bile duct surgery without complications.
16:03, 2023/11/19
EU Green Education: Significant to biodiversity protection in Vietnam
European member states hope that educational initiatives will raise students’ concerns about Vietnam’s rapidly disappearing biodiversity.