Thanks to vaccinations, more and more hospitals that used to be at the forefront of the fight against coronavirus are now returning to business as usual. In the capital, for example, the city clinical hospital 52 is being redesigned. Filatovka was one of the first hospitals in the capital to fight the coronavirus, when no one knew anything about it and did not understand how to treat it. But the hospital doctors coped. For a whole year, they worked non-stop to save Muscovites. And only now, when the situation has stabilized, Hospital 52 withdraws from this race almost a year long. If the methods and treatment regimens for a new infection were patented, there would be more than a dozen of them. The professionalism of doctors was also appreciated at the international level: Hospital 52 is a participant in many large clinical trials. The hospital's advantage is its equipment. There are ten intensive care units and an ECMO center - here they treated the most severe patients. More than twenty thousand people have been cured of COVID-19 in the hospital. More than five thousand went through intensive care. The whole country knows many of those who were treated within these walls, including TV presenter Mikhail Shirvindt and People's Artist of Russia Yuri Nazarov. They thank the doctors who helped them cope with the disease. “During this period, absolutely all our doctors, regardless of specialization, provided assistance to patients. Despite the fact that many had to switch to a round-the-clock shift mode of work, we managed to maintain both the volume and the high level of quality of medical care,”said Maryana Lysenko, chief physician of the city clinical hospital 52. In addition, in April last year, the hospital's doctors became invite volunteers to help. Among the volunteers were engineers, educators, car mechanics, businessmen, auditors, IT specialists, photographers, designers, producers, couriers. For most of them, this was the first such experience. They worked in both the green and red zones. They plan to cooperate with volunteers after the end of the pandemic. Photo: pixabay.com
