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Some still have to be buried, and others were cremated with no ceremony and no one to bid them goodbye,” the UP article read. “They died alone, with no relatives around to hold their hands as they breathed their last. UP also paid tribute to “eight UP alumni who fell in the frontlines of what has become a global war against the virus”. Dennis was a cancer specialist, Loreche said, adding that she handled his patients’ biopsies before treatment. Loreche said she knew personally the Tudtud couple, saying they worked together for the same hospital in Region 10.ĭr. Helen Evangelista Tudtud, a pathologist at the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center (VSMMC), expired after fighting the virus for 11 days,” an article published at the University of the Philippines’ (UP) website on Apsaid. Tudtud, a prominent Cebu City oncologist, succumb to the virus on March 31, four days after his wife, Dr. Dennis Ramon Tudtud, one of the eight University of the Philippines alumni who fought and died in the frontlines of the war against the vicious viral adversary. “It was doubly tragic for the family of Dr. In Cebu, a couple who are both well-known physicians here also succumbed to Covid-19. “I don’t personally know her (Senen) but when she was readmitted the second time and they needed blood and convalescent plasma, I responded and sent to the University of the Philippines-PGH but sadly she didn’t make it,” Loreche said. Senen was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) after contracting Covid-19 while treating other coronavirus-positive patients in Manila. Karen Senen, pediatrician-neonatologist of Philippine General Hospital (PGH) in Manila when the latter was admitted for the second time due to coronavirus. Loreche, who also is the Covid-19 spokesperson in the region, said she remembered sending blood and convalescent plasma for Dr. Mary Jean Loreche told the Philippine News Agency (PNA) in an interview Friday. I wished they were still alive and they would have been part of this momentous moment,” DOH-7 chief pathologist Dr. “I want to offer this vaccination that I had yesterday (to my colleagues who died because of Covid-19). (PNA photo by John Rey Saavedra)ĬEBU CITY – The chief pathologist of the Department of Health (DOH) in Central Visayas has remembered the “fallen heroes” who died while fighting the coronavirus disease (2019) pandemic last year, as she stepped up as among the first healthcare workers who took the China-made CoronaVac jabs in Cebu. The DOH-7 chief pathologist and Covid-19 spokesperson offered her vaccine jab to her colleagues who have died while responding to the pandemic without the benefit of getting a dose of the vaccine for protection.
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Mary Jean Loreche shows her arm after being injected with the CoronaVac vaccine on Thursday (March 4, 2021) in a ceremony at the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center.