Jaipur:When his mother died, nurse Ram Murti Meena was at work at SMS Hospital's coronavirus isolation ward. He saw the last rites being performed on a video call on his mobile phone.
"Certainly, it was a painful thing for me to skip the funeral of my mother, who died at the age of 93 in our village in Karaul district," he says.
"I was on duty as the nursing in-charge of the isolation ward on March 30 when she passed away. I saw my mother's face for the last time on the video call," Meena remembers.
My father and three elder brothers performed the last rites and I attended through the video call. At this time of the pandemic, attending to patients is the most important thing, he says.
He remained busy with his work till April 3, when he was sent into quarantine. The government hospital in Jaipur switches isolation ward staff, placing those who have put in some time there into quarantine as a precautionary measure.
Meena says being in isolation is not easy and the staff has to take care of the patients' emotional well-being as well.
The patients have to be reassured that nothing will happen to them, that they will be cured. And we give the examples of those who have turned coronavirus negative from positive, he says.
They also have to make their own families believe this.
"My wife, son and daughter keep on calling me on the mobile regularly to inquire if I am fine. I have to take care of their emotions as well. When that part is done, I have to battle with my own emotions.