#tizzy ent
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BLASPHEMY AGAINST THE LORD!
🤣
It appears the puriteens and puritypolice are oFfEnDEd by Deadpool and Wolverine,g and have decided that YOU shouldn't go see it.
But why are "christians" going to see an R rated film? 🤔
We're laughing AT you, fools.
#DeadpoolAndWolverine #MarvelJesus #MCU #christiansofinstagram #christians
#Deadpool and Wolverine#deadpool#wolverine#purity police#purity culture#“christians”#offended#marvel jesus#Tizzy Ent
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@fazbear-ent-official Naptime w/ the kitchen gang!
We have:
The big buff cocoa puff herself, Remy.
The smol yet chonkiest lass, Waffle.
Waffle's sleepy oven-watcher girlfriend, Maple.
The pasta-obsessed lonky gorl, Tizzy.
And of course, me! Rabbit!
(OOC: After being "hired", I couldn't resist the urge to draw the rat gang. Eyes are hard so everyone's just asleep 😅
Thanks for being an amazing blog and blogger!)
Edit: For the love of Fredbear, please click/tap for better quality!!
#RabbitDoesArt#tw rats#WorkingWithFazEnt#i know i'm not the resident artist at freddy's#but i wanted an excuse to draw after several weeks of not doing so#oh and fun fact: the reference I used to draw me (Rabbit) was an actual photo one of my friends took of me after I fell asleep on the floor!
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Have they said what illness Charlene has? A four hour surgery, that must be serious? I hope she recovers quickly.
It's an ENT infection. Charlene specifically said it was to do with her sinuses. She said that earlier this year she had a sinus lift and bone graft for something else. She was fine at first then when she went to South Africa she noticed she had difficulty equalising her ears after the flight and it was finally diagnosed as a serious sinus infection. Surgeries differ wildly. Some can be 15 mins, some 36 hours plus. The length of the surgery doesn't necessarily indicate seriousness of the illness, it could just be down to the complexity of the location or the difficulty of the procedure which is likely a factor for Charlene as this seems to be corrective surgery. We know it isn't great of course because she wouldn't be having surgery otherwise, but I don't want to contribute to the tendency the fandom has to get themselves in a tizzy about nothing.
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the last like. 35 minutes of two towers is so good. unparalleled cinema. youve got aragorn and theoden riding out to meet saruman’s army as a Final March only for Gandalf to appear on the horizon like Jesus at the light of first day with eomer riding up behind him with the mf ROHIRRIM. merry and pippin finally getting treebeard & ents to take back their HOMES!! and fight SARUMAN!! youve got nature vs industrialization right here baby with nature winning!!!! and that either gets me into a tizzy or i start crying bcuz WOWZA. & then sam and frodo at osgiliath? mercy me its one of my favorite scenes EVER!! bcuz. “they’re some good in this world. and its worth fighting for.” ty for my life miss fran walsh. oh and faramir being an absolute legend. absolute king. abslute muhahmuah but like. whats new
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"Oh. Wow. Now there are Ents too. That's pretty cool!" Artica spied the Treant from behind a boulder in curiosity. His face was really gently, like a grandfather's
“No no, you put the little flower things on the sides of your stalks, not the tops.”
Ivern was currently preoccupied with teaching a confused patch of christmas cactus how to grow. This year’s short fall had thrown them into a tizzy, and they may or may not have forgotten how to bloom. They were new plants anyways, you can’t blame them when things don’t go the way they need them to.
“I do agree it’s different from other plants, but that’s okay! Not all plants can bloom in winter, either. That’s what makes you special.”
He rested his hands on his hips, turning about to take a look at the area around him.
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From enforcing COVID-19 quarantine to managing alcohol withdrawal symptoms, health workers in rural Tamil Nadu have task cut out
Arivazhagan and Mr M* are two truckers from Sornavur Keezhpathy village. Both of them drive to different cities, as the occasion or work demands. In the last week of April, both of them made one trip each to Koyambedu Wholesale Market in Chennai. They were part of the hundreds of truckers and essential workers who ended up in institutional quarantine for weeks after, due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Koyembedu market. A cluster which sent administrators across northern Tamil Nadu into a tizzy. Koyembedu Market was eventually shut down, after major delays, on 5 May.
Arivazhagan returned from Koyembedu on 27 April and was shifted to a quarantine facility only 4 days after. He however tested negative. Mr M wasn’t as lucky. He tested positive and was shifted to a COVID-19 isolation ward immediately after, where he stayed put for 14 days. Arivazhagan spent 10 days in a quarantine facility. Both of them have now finished their home quarantine as well. Arivazhagan has resumed driving loads to other cities, whereas Mr M doesn’t want to do that in the near foreseeable future. Mr N* says the same to this reporter. Mr N tested positive after returning from Koyembedu and was isolated for 14 days. “My wife was pregnant when I tested positive. She was also tested soon after, and thankfully, she tested negative,” says Mr N. After he returned home, he hasn’t stepped out much. “I won’t go back to Chennai ever again, at least not now,” he tells me. Like most clusters, the one emanating from Koyembedu created a lot of fear among, and about truckers.
The Koyembedu cluster turned everything around for districts which were all doing well. From double digits, cases moved to triple digits within days. Cuddalore jumped from 26 to more than 200 in the first week of May. Similar was the case with adjoining districts. After weeks of stability, this blow caught many unawares. COVID Control Rooms started facing the heat, as this sudden escalation needed deeper, widespread tracing and mapping. Some from Koyembedu had returned without informing officials, others had skipped past checkposts. Panic was spreading in the villages about these ‘Koyembedu returns’. People were not presenting themselves voluntarily, because of this panic.
While those at the district headquarters can try and break their heads about how to keep track of every individual who returns, the ones who can actually do it are those at the village level.
One set are panchayat officials and the other, more important players are those working at Health Sub-Centres (HSC’s). This is because a HSC is the first institution from the primary health care system that anybody from the community would turn to, for all medical purposes. This would be the first institution a symptomatic person would approach. And the institution which will have to keep track of how you are doing, till the virus leaves you. For example, when Arivazhagan returned from institutional quarantine facility, the village nurses from Sornavur HSC kept track of his progress by regularly visiting him and supplying him with zinc and iron supplements from time to time.
Tamil Nadu has 8682 such HSC’s.
Why is the role of HSC’s crucial, especially in the middle of a pandemic?
Across the districts that this reporter visited, all administrators, be it from the Revenue Department or from the Health Department, reiterated the importance of an effective HSC. Effectiveness isn’t just a measure of facilities available at the HSC, it is also about the interpersonal relationships that healthcare workers from the HSC develop over the years in the areas that they are working in. These interpersonal relationships are crucial in taking the populace into confidence, while planning towards managing a pandemic. Tracking a pandemic is a major task, but that doesn’t mean that those with other ailments or medical needs can be neglected. This is also where a HSC plays a crucial role. The role of a HSC is to make healthcare accessible to everybody, under all circumstances.
To understand how an HSC operates, here are some of the key players, explaining their duties themselves.
S Velankanni, 51
Village Health Nurse
I have worked here for 31 years. This HSC caters to 3,476 people, spread across 3 villages. After the lockdown was announced, we first planned on how to keep track of antenatal and postnatal mothers. We needed to ensure that they got their supplements on time, and we also had to plan for deliveries in the middle of a lockdown. After two ares within my HSC limits turned into containment zones, we told them not to travel out for anything. Instead, we went there to meet them and provide them with the supplements they needed. It would have been risky for them to step out.
Follow LIVE updates on the coronavirus outbreak here
Regular immunisation drives were obviously hit, but we figured out a plan around it. We would do only 15 children at at time, while taking all precautions necessary. We took at least half an hour with each child.
As far as COVID-19 is concerned, I moved to the HSC after the onset of the pandemic. I have been here for more than two months now, and I have visited my family only on a few occasions. This is to ensure that I am here at all times and can keep track of any emergency. The work marked out for us is to coordinate with officials from the panchayat and mark the houses with people who are quarantined. After this, monitor everyday for symptoms. We keep the communication channels open always. We are constantly talking to them, and reassuring those who are positive or under quarantine that they will be fine.
I know these villages like the back of my hand. The people here have known me for decades as well. They respect me. Developing this rapport is crucial, as people listen to me only because of this. So if I tell them that quarantine is good for them, even the most adamant of people will listen to me. We have had cases where people tore out quarantine stickers and refused to cooperate. Eventually, locals from the village also help us to make people see reason.
Harikrishnan, 46, Senthil Kumar, 47, Shankar, 47 and Pichai Muthu, 47
Formerly Domestic Breeding Checkers, now COVID workers
(Harikrishnan, representing the four)
Earlier, we used to survey our areas to keep a check on dengue breeding grounds. Now, we have two roles. One is to coordinate with the health inspectors and ensure that all containment zones are sanitised everyday. The second is to track people who are returning back to the village from outside the district. Our networks are widespread across the villages we work in. On an everyday basis, while we are sanitising containment zones and areas around the village, we keep a check on people who have returned. Even before many of them return back, we receive calls about it. This helps us visit the place immediately and mark it, if there is an individual who has returned from a red zone. Panchayat officials provide us lists, but more importantly, we are directly connected with the people. Many are also scared, so they themselves come to us with information.
More importantly, we make sure that the HSC’s are fully sanitised as these are nodal points for all medical activities. Patients coming in need to be safe, as well as those who are working here. So, here at the HSC, sanitising activities are more intensive.
Dr Karthikeyan, 39
Medical Health Officer
While services at the primary healthcare level weren’t hit, one major problem has been that patients weren’t able to access tertiary services like they could before. Patients with non-communicable diseases (NCDs) travel for check ups or scans once every three to six months. This was affected during the lockdown.
Otherwise, our COVID-19 duties have been to carry out house-to-house surveys and check for ILI (influenza-like illness), particularly so in containment areas.
M Sankar, 55
Block Health Supervisor
I am regularly talking to those quarantined in institutional facilities from this block. Let me tell you, at times managing them is really difficult. Some of them would tell us to let them go as they were missing their wives and that their wives would take better care of them. One person even attempted to run away. At times they are soft, but they can get really frustrated and aggressive. We also lose our patience at times, but ultimately we have to communicate to them why they have been quarantined.
M Renuka, 56
Sector Health Nurse
Since our block is a Universal Health Coverage Block, we provide 12 services. These are antenatal and postnatal care, regular health monitoring of children under 5 and adolescents, family welfare services, treatment for minor ailments, mental health support, ENT and ophthalmology services, trauma care, geriatric care, tracking non-communicable diseases and palliative care. Catering to patients dependent on us for these services during the lockdown was a challenge, but we managed to pull through.
From March, we have been making regular announcements regarding COVID 19 across our HSC limits. Some are through recorded messages which we play across the village. We also travel across villages during surveys, and a lot of time during this is spent on answering queries related to COVID-19.
V Deepa, 27
Mid-level Health Provider
I keep track of all patients with non-communicable diseases. This includes those with heart disease, diabetes, cancer, autoimmune diseases and kidney conditions. During the COVID-19 lockdown, I had to ensure that all such patients received their medication. There are 156 such patients under me, and I’ve been tracking their progress and supplying them with the requisite drugs from time to time. We home deliver these medicines.
I also refer people who display mental health problems. What I noticed during the COVID-19 lockdown is, though many were affected due to loss of income, what really was an issue was alcohol withdrawal. Initially it was very bad. Since Pondicherry is also close by, access to alcohol is very easy. A sudden stop set a lot of people into a frenzy. People tried selling illicit liquor here too. We had to intervene and get the police involved to stop it. We tried to educate people about the various instances where illicit liquor killed people in surrounding districts. It is not like they didn’t know but this sudden unavailability seemed to have made people do all this. We told wives of many of these men to keep vigil. They have to or else they’ll only suffer, if their husband drinks illicit liquor and dies.
K Gunavati, 32
Women Health Volunteer
My usual duty is to keep track of anybody showing symptoms of non-communicable diseases in our area. I do this by regular blood samples collection and testing. I also help Deepa (quoted above) refer mental health patients. I conduct a survey where I ask questions based on their work, sleeping habits and behaviour. Based on their responses or mannerisms, we refer them to the psychiatrists who visit every week.
I also counselled people to not let the lack of alcohol worry them during the lockdown. But what I noticed is after a month, many told me they were feeling better after they stopped consumption of alcohol or tobacco. They told me that coronavirus has made them forget alcohol.
*Names withheld to protect the identities of COVID-19 patients
via Blogger https://ift.tt/2N4dQQZ
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So Here's What That B.Simone & DaBaby 'Manifestation' Was Really About
After rapper DaBaby and comedian B.Simone had the internet in a tizzy the other day when Simone posted a pic of them boo'd up together, everyone thought she had manifested her biggest crush finally becoming her boyfriend. But if you knew it just had to be a stunt instead, you would be right. What this was all REALLY about, inside.
DaBaby just made his first drop of 2020, and he enlisted his biggest fan - "Wilin Out" comedian and Instagram star B.Simone - to do it.
youtube
That pic of them being extra cozy she posted the other day is a shot from the rapper's newest video project where the twosome play a couple on-the-run, but for a good reason.
DaBaby's first single of 2020, “Find My Way,” was done with a DJ Kid-produced beat and comes with an accompanying 10-minute short, directed by Reel Goats. And it stars, you guessed it, both DaBaby and influencer turned rapper & actress, B.Simone.
I’m so talented ! I love B.Simone
— B.Simone (@TheBSimone) April 1, 2020
The movie follows the pair as they attempt to secure finances for the rapper’s ailing grandmother, by any means necessary. After posing the ominous question, “Have you ever seen somebody turn into a monster for a good cause?” the film then briefly transitions to music video form. We see DaBaby is trying to flex some acting skills these days. Check out the video above and the BTS below.
youtube
By the way, the once independent Charlotte, NC rapper has been taking everything in his path lately - His debut project, Baby on Baby, spent 55 weeks on Billboard’s Top 100 and peaked at #7, his single, “Suge,” went double platinum, and his first official album, KIRK, debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 before launching a duly-titled North American tour featuring Stunna 4 Vegas. The album also spurned “BOP” which has over 204 MM views on YouTube; making it DaBaby’s biggest video thus far and his third #1 on Urban Radio.
To date, DaBaby has exceeded 6.4 billion global streams since signing with Interscope Records. Looks like being the CEO of his own label (Billion Dollar Baby Ent.) is working out just fine.
Photo: Screenshot via Interscope
[Read More ...] source http://theybf.com/2020/04/02/so-heres-what-that-bsimone-dababy-manifestation-was-really-about
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instagram
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instagram
Project 2025
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instagram
When they tell you who they are ...
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What the hell is going on in Texas? What is wrong with those people?
Texas Man has outdone Florida Man this time.
Tizzy Ent on Twxtter
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Owning the Libs with the cancel culture.
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*Waffle and Remy have been in the breakroom with us, but Maple, the pups, and Tizzy are nowhere to be found. Probably hiding.*
(OOC: @fazbear-ent-official is gonna come back to this like, "What the FUCK happened while I was gone??" lmao)
(time for some wack rp cause I'm so ungodly bored with existence rn and need some serotonin which I get from this blog and rping in general-)
*The rat squad pads up to you, Maple and Waffle carrying thier adopted sons. All of them seem nervous and fidgety, execpt for the little lads, they're both asleep. Remy grabs your sleeve and tugs on it, pointing your hand in the general direction of the kitchen.*
(always glad to provide some free serotonin)
alright, alright i'll follow you (istg if that's another fire-)
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Arivazhagan and Mr M* are two truckers from Sornavur Keezhpathy village. Both of them drive to different cities, as the occasion or work demands. In the last week of April, both of them made one trip each to Koyambedu Wholesale Market in Chennai. They were part of the hundreds of truckers and essential workers who ended up in institutional quarantine for weeks after, due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Koyembedu market. A cluster which sent administrators across northern Tamil Nadu into a tizzy. Koyembedu Market was eventually shut down, after major delays, on 5 May. Arivazhagan returned from Koyembedu on 27 April and was shifted to a quarantine facility only 4 days after. He however tested negative. Mr M wasn’t as lucky. He tested positive and was shifted to a COVID-19 isolation ward immediately after, where he stayed put for 14 days. Arivazhagan spent 10 days in a quarantine facility. Both of them have now finished their home quarantine as well. Arivazhagan has resumed driving loads to other cities, whereas Mr M doesn’t want to do that in the near foreseeable future. Mr N* says the same to this reporter. Mr N tested positive after returning from Koyembedu and was isolated for 14 days. “My wife was pregnant when I tested positive. She was also tested soon after, and thankfully, she tested negative,” says Mr N. After he returned home, he hasn’t stepped out much. “I won’t go back to Chennai ever again, at least not now,” he tells me. Like most clusters, the one emanating from Koyembedu created a lot of fear among, and about truckers. The Koyembedu cluster turned everything around for districts which were all doing well. From double digits, cases moved to triple digits within days. Cuddalore jumped from 26 to more than 200 in the first week of May. Similar was the case with adjoining districts. After weeks of stability, this blow caught many unawares. COVID Control Rooms started facing the heat, as this sudden escalation needed deeper, widespread tracing and mapping. Some from Koyembedu had returned without informing officials, others had skipped past checkposts. Panic was spreading in the villages about these ‘Koyembedu returns’. People were not presenting themselves voluntarily, because of this panic. While those at the district headquarters can try and break their heads about how to keep track of every individual who returns, the ones who can actually do it are those at the village level. One set are panchayat officials and the other, more important players are those working at Health Sub-Centres (HSC’s). This is because a HSC is the first institution from the primary health care system that anybody from the community would turn to, for all medical purposes. This would be the first institution a symptomatic person would approach. And the institution which will have to keep track of how you are doing, till the virus leaves you. For example, when Arivazhagan returned from institutional quarantine facility, the village nurses from Sornavur HSC kept track of his progress by regularly visiting him and supplying him with zinc and iron supplements from time to time. Tamil Nadu has 8682 such HSC’s. Why is the role of HSC’s crucial, especially in the middle of a pandemic? Across the districts that this reporter visited, all administrators, be it from the Revenue Department or from the Health Department, reiterated the importance of an effective HSC. Effectiveness isn’t just a measure of facilities available at the HSC, it is also about the interpersonal relationships that healthcare workers from the HSC develop over the years in the areas that they are working in. These interpersonal relationships are crucial in taking the populace into confidence, while planning towards managing a pandemic. Tracking a pandemic is a major task, but that doesn’t mean that those with other ailments or medical needs can be neglected. This is also where a HSC plays a crucial role. The role of a HSC is to make healthcare accessible to everybody, under all circumstances. To understand how an HSC operates, here are some of the key players, explaining their duties themselves. S Velankanni, 51 Village Health Nurse I have worked here for 31 years. This HSC caters to 3,476 people, spread across 3 villages. After the lockdown was announced, we first planned on how to keep track of antenatal and postnatal mothers. We needed to ensure that they got their supplements on time, and we also had to plan for deliveries in the middle of a lockdown. After two ares within my HSC limits turned into containment zones, we told them not to travel out for anything. Instead, we went there to meet them and provide them with the supplements they needed. It would have been risky for them to step out. Follow LIVE updates on the coronavirus outbreak here Regular immunisation drives were obviously hit, but we figured out a plan around it. We would do only 15 children at at time, while taking all precautions necessary. We took at least half an hour with each child. As far as COVID-19 is concerned, I moved to the HSC after the onset of the pandemic. I have been here for more than two months now, and I have visited my family only on a few occasions. This is to ensure that I am here at all times and can keep track of any emergency. The work marked out for us is to coordinate with officials from the panchayat and mark the houses with people who are quarantined. After this, monitor everyday for symptoms. We keep the communication channels open always. We are constantly talking to them, and reassuring those who are positive or under quarantine that they will be fine. I know these villages like the back of my hand. The people here have known me for decades as well. They respect me. Developing this rapport is crucial, as people listen to me only because of this. So if I tell them that quarantine is good for them, even the most adamant of people will listen to me. We have had cases where people tore out quarantine stickers and refused to cooperate. Eventually, locals from the village also help us to make people see reason. Harikrishnan, 46, Senthil Kumar, 47, Shankar, 47 and Pichai Muthu, 47 Formerly Domestic Breeding Checkers, now COVID workers (Harikrishnan, representing the four) Earlier, we used to survey our areas to keep a check on dengue breeding grounds. Now, we have two roles. One is to coordinate with the health inspectors and ensure that all containment zones are sanitised everyday. The second is to track people who are returning back to the village from outside the district. Our networks are widespread across the villages we work in. On an everyday basis, while we are sanitising containment zones and areas around the village, we keep a check on people who have returned. Even before many of them return back, we receive calls about it. This helps us visit the place immediately and mark it, if there is an individual who has returned from a red zone. Panchayat officials provide us lists, but more importantly, we are directly connected with the people. Many are also scared, so they themselves come to us with information. More importantly, we make sure that the HSC’s are fully sanitised as these are nodal points for all medical activities. Patients coming in need to be safe, as well as those who are working here. So, here at the HSC, sanitising activities are more intensive. Dr Karthikeyan, 39 Medical Health Officer While services at the primary healthcare level weren’t hit, one major problem has been that patients weren’t able to access tertiary services like they could before. Patients with non-communicable diseases (NCDs) travel for check ups or scans once every three to six months. This was affected during the lockdown. Otherwise, our COVID-19 duties have been to carry out house-to-house surveys and check for ILI (influenza-like illness), particularly so in containment areas. M Sankar, 55 Block Health Supervisor I am regularly talking to those quarantined in institutional facilities from this block. Let me tell you, at times managing them is really difficult. Some of them would tell us to let them go as they were missing their wives and that their wives would take better care of them. One person even attempted to run away. At times they are soft, but they can get really frustrated and aggressive. We also lose our patience at times, but ultimately we have to communicate to them why they have been quarantined. M Renuka, 56 Sector Health Nurse Since our block is a Universal Health Coverage Block, we provide 12 services. These are antenatal and postnatal care, regular health monitoring of children under 5 and adolescents, family welfare services, treatment for minor ailments, mental health support, ENT and ophthalmology services, trauma care, geriatric care, tracking non-communicable diseases and palliative care. Catering to patients dependent on us for these services during the lockdown was a challenge, but we managed to pull through. From March, we have been making regular announcements regarding COVID 19 across our HSC limits. Some are through recorded messages which we play across the village. We also travel across villages during surveys, and a lot of time during this is spent on answering queries related to COVID-19. V Deepa, 27 Mid-level Health Provider I keep track of all patients with non-communicable diseases. This includes those with heart disease, diabetes, cancer, autoimmune diseases and kidney conditions. During the COVID-19 lockdown, I had to ensure that all such patients received their medication. There are 156 such patients under me, and I’ve been tracking their progress and supplying them with the requisite drugs from time to time. We home deliver these medicines. I also refer people who display mental health problems. What I noticed during the COVID-19 lockdown is, though many were affected due to loss of income, what really was an issue was alcohol withdrawal. Initially it was very bad. Since Pondicherry is also close by, access to alcohol is very easy. A sudden stop set a lot of people into a frenzy. People tried selling illicit liquor here too. We had to intervene and get the police involved to stop it. We tried to educate people about the various instances where illicit liquor killed people in surrounding districts. It is not like they didn’t know but this sudden unavailability seemed to have made people do all this. We told wives of many of these men to keep vigil. They have to or else they’ll only suffer, if their husband drinks illicit liquor and dies. K Gunavati, 32 Women Health Volunteer My usual duty is to keep track of anybody showing symptoms of non-communicable diseases in our area. I do this by regular blood samples collection and testing. I also help Deepa (quoted above) refer mental health patients. I conduct a survey where I ask questions based on their work, sleeping habits and behaviour. Based on their responses or mannerisms, we refer them to the psychiatrists who visit every week. I also counselled people to not let the lack of alcohol worry them during the lockdown. But what I noticed is after a month, many told me they were feeling better after they stopped consumption of alcohol or tobacco. They told me that coronavirus has made them forget alcohol. *Names withheld to protect the identities of COVID-19 patients
http://sansaartimes.blogspot.com/2020/06/from-enforcing-covid-19-quarantine-to.html
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