While Delhi doctor battles COVID her autistic sons pine

  • | Friday | 5th March, 2021

New Delhi March 5An already challenging life combining full-time work as a doctor with mothering two autistic sons was turned upside down for Meenakshi Mourya when the pandemic hit India. At home her sons sat at the window pining for her she said. The lockdown meant their special education classes were halted too putting extra pressure on their female carer. With more than 11 million recorded cases of COVID-19 and more than 150000 deaths India has seen cases rising again since early February. In Delhi though the virus is now under far better control allowing Mourya more time with her kids.

New Delhi March 5 An already challenging life combining full-time work as a doctor with mothering two autistic sons was turned upside down for Meenakshi Mourya when the pandemic hit India. The country has the worlds second-highest recorded caseload of COVID-19 in the world after the United States and a shortage of healthcare workers puts a heavy burden on those there are. For almost a month as cases spiked last year Mourya said she could not spend time with her children as she worked long and gruelling hours treating a flood of patients. “I was so emotionally down at that time...patients were dying in front of me” she said visibly emotional as she spoke to Reuters in the home she shares with her husband also a doctor and their four and nine-year-olds who need help to eat and find it hard to communicate. “I did not want them to see me because when they see me they will cry.” An anaesthesia specialist at Delhis biggest public hospital Safdarjung Mouryas job was critical during last years peak when the Indian capital was recording around 7000-8000 new cases every day. At home her sons sat at the window pining for her she said. The lockdown meant their special education classes were halted too putting extra pressure on their female carer. “They were restless uncomfortable crying all the time and waiting for me sitting at the window ... sometimes in a very confused state not eating well” Mourya said. With more than 11 million recorded cases of COVID-19 and more than 150000 deaths India has seen cases rising again since early February. In Delhi though the virus is now under far better control allowing Mourya more time with her kids. They still cry when she leaves for work often clinging to the window for hours but when she comes home she says she is now able to enjoy giving them the intensive care they need. And there has been a bright spot in the familys ordeal: while the older son finds speech difficult the younger one has begun using words among them Papa.

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