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Author Archive for: "cam"
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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus
Posted September 9, 2020

It Will Take More Than a Vaccine to Beat COVID-19

The first outbreak of polio in the United States struck Rutland County, Vermont, in the summer of 1894. The disease began with fever, sore throat, and fatigue; it sometimes went on to damage the [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus
Posted August 2, 2020

Fighting the Coronavirus, from New York to Utah

In late March, Scott Aberegg, a critical-care doctor at the University of Utah, was eating lunch in his hospital cafeteria. On his phone, he noticed an e-mail that was circulating among the [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Humanism
Posted July 7, 2020

The Emotional Evolution of Coronavirus for Doctors and Patients

Beth saw her first dead body of the day just as she was leaving the emergency department. Earlier, she’d admitted a patient with the coronavirus; now she was on her way to an upstairs doctor’s [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Health Care Quality
Posted June 29, 2020

The Coronavirus Pandemic’s Wider Health-Care Crisis

Even before the pandemic, American health care was in trouble. Although it is the most expensive system in the world, with a cost roughly equivalent to Germany’s G.D.P., it has delivered variable [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Health Disparities
Posted June 4, 2020

How the Protests Have Changed the Pandemic

Two weeks ago, the global coronavirus pandemic and America’s struggle with racist policing looked like separate crises. But there can be no doubt that the overlap between these two crises has [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Patient Care
Posted May 1, 2020

The Essential Workers Filling New York’s Coronavirus Wards

As this wave of the coronavirus starts to slow, I can’t help but notice that many of the people still getting infected are those who don’t have the luxury of distance—those who, by necessity or [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Patient Care
Posted April 23, 2020

The Challenges of Post-COVID-19 Care

Among the patients I care for at the hospital is a young woman recovering from covid-19. To keep her blood oxygenated, she needs a device called a non-rebreather mask. The mask is connected by a [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Patient Care
Posted April 15, 2020

“It’s Hard to Stay Afloat”: Hope and Exhaustion in the Coronavirus Fight

A woman and her husband are admitted to my ward; before the coronavirus, they were healthy, enjoying morning walks and evening cocktails. Now, while her breathing improves each day, his declines. [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Patient Care
Posted April 8, 2020

“A Disembodied Voice”: The Loneliness and Solidarity of Treating the Coronavirus in New York

Almost certainly, the density of New York City has played a major role in the spread of the coronavirus. While it circulated among us, millions of New Yorkers touched the same subway turnstiles [...]

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By Dhruv Khullar
In Coronavirus, Patient Care
Posted April 3, 2020

“Adrenaline, Duty, and Fear”: Inside a New York Hospital Taking on the Coronavirus

Right now, the most striking feature of the hospital might be the difference between the world outside and the world within. Outside, New York—America’s largest and densest city—is a ghost town. [...]

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Dhruv Khullar
Recent Posts
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Dhruv Khullar
575 Lexington Ave
New York, NY 10022

 

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