Performance Services for COVID-19 with Private Medical College Hospitals

Chowdhury, Shahriar Hussain and Miah, Md. Rahimullah and Islam, Md. Nazmul and Uddin, Taher and Selim, M. Ahmed and Samdany, Alamgir Adil and Kashem, Joarder Iftekhar and Aziz, Md. Masud and Hannan, Mohammad Abdul and Hossain, Md. Sabbir and Nazrin, Mosammat Shuchana and Fahmida Malik, Syeda Umme and Ahmed, Guljar and Ahmed, M. Selim and Md Nazim, Abu Yousuf and Rashid, Md Mahbubur (2024) Performance Services for COVID-19 with Private Medical College Hospitals. Global Journal of Health Science, 16 (1). ISSN 1916-9736

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Abstract

Corona is a pandemic disease to spread in the human body as a wide-reaching in the history of unwanted world. Yet Medical higher authorities are facing the undesirable spreading causes of this disease as a vital global issue to the present and rationalized generations. Everyone worries of its augmentation around the world and someone suffers from this disease but none can invent effective measures till date as per recovery system. The study aims to assess the management performance services of COVID-19 at North East Medical College and Hospital (NEMCH), as a private medical institution in Sylhet, Bangladesh. Quantitative and qualitative patients' data were obtained from hospital health information centre and secondary data were collected from diverse sources. Key health information instruments of COVID-19 patients and their sustained living status challenges in risks with health rights are highlighted. The research focuses the 41-60 aged group is 42.2%, which is the highest admitted patients and the ratio of male and female is 2:1.13. The study represents the 69.26% of suspected, 30.74% positive and 16.79% death, out of 911 admitted patients from June to August 2020. These findings reflect the health security that the physicians provide. Scientific healthcare knowledge is essential for corona treatment with clinical supports and modern technology but such knowledge is below par. The research suggests future research trajectories of a new alternative treatment options to stimulate the management performance on the priority of National Health Policy and Sustainable Development Goals 2030.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: European Scholar > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2024 11:44
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2024 11:44
URI: http://article.publish4promo.com/id/eprint/3351

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