Shoaib ahmed shaikh biography of abraham
Articles
Otorhinolaryngology services during the COVID-19 pandemic in Tanzania
Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) remains to be a global pandemic and cause of significant morbidity and mortality. Since the mode of tr...
Authors: Zephania Saitabau Abraham
Citation:Tropical Medicine and Health 2021 49:27
Content type: Letter to the EditorPublished on: 25 March 2021
Dengue virus type 3 infection in a traveler returning from Costa Rica to Japan in 2023
The number of dengue cases has increased dramatically in recent years. In Latin America, the number of cases and deaths in 2023 was the highest ever recorded. We report on a patient who had been infected with ...
Authors: Tadahiro Sasaki, Ryo Morita, Ikuko Aoyama, Takashi Baba, Tetsushi Goto, Ritsuko Kubota-Koketsu, Yoshihiro Samune, Emi E. Nakayama, Tatsuo Shioda and Michinori Shirano
Citation:Tropical Medicine and Health 2024 52:50
Content type: Short ReportPublished on: 1 August 2024
A rare case of Curtobacterium flaccumfaciens infection in the eye: a case report
To report a rare case of microbial keratitis caused by Curtobacterium flaccumfaciens (C. flaccumfaciens) infection.
Authors: Pauline Mallick
Citation:Tropical Medicine and Health 2022 50:64
Content type: Case ReportPublished on: 5 September 2022
What lessons can African nations learn from the COVID-19 pandemic?
While the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic differed per country, the impact on African nations was comparable. Health, money, the economy, education, and inventions have all been criticised over the years, but ...
Authors: Olanrewaju Akinola, David Bamidele Olawade and Aanuoluwapo Clement David-Olawade
Citation:Tropical Medicine and Health 2022 50:89
Content type: Letter to the EditorPublished on: 28 November 2022
Including the voice of people living with viral hepatitis: lessons learned from Japan to accelerate progress toward We’re sorry, this site is currently experiencing technical difficulties.
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Dawood Ibrahim
Indian criminal and terrorist (born 1955)
Dawood Ibrahim (; born 26 December 1955) is an Indian mobboss, drug lord, and terrorist. He reportedly heads the Indian organised crime syndicate D-Company, which he founded in Mumbai in the 1970s. Ibrahim is wanted on charges including murder, extortion, targeted killing, drug trafficking, and terrorism.
He was designated a global terrorist by India and the United States in 2003, with a reward of US$25 million on his head for his suspected role in the 1993 Bombay bombings. In 2011, he was named number two on "The World's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives" by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and fourth on Forbes'. In 2020, the Pakistani government listed Dawood and 87 others in its sanction list in order to avoid FATF sanctions. He has been reported to live in Karachi, Pakistan, though the government of Pakistan denies it.
Early life
Dawood Ibrahim was born on 26 December 1955 to a Konkani family in Khed in Maharashtra, India. His father, Ibrahim Kaskar, worked as a head constable with the Mumbai Police and his mother, Amina Bi, was a homemaker. He lived in the area of Dongri, Mumbai and attended Ahmed Sailor High School, from which he dropped out.
Criminal career
Dawood started committing fraud, theft and robbery while still in his teens. Eventually, he joined the gang of local gangster and don Baashu Dada, part of the local organised crime syndicate. In the late 1970s, he later split from the gang, creating his own gang with his elder brother Shabir Ibrahim Kaskar. After Shabir was killed by the rival Pathan gang, he became the sole boss of his gang, known as the D-Company. He was then chiefly involved in gold smuggling, real estate, extortion and drug trafficking. He fled from Abstract
Basic life support (BLS) is a type of emergency care provided by healthcare workers and public safety professionals to individuals experiencing cardiac arrest, respiratory distress, or other cardiopulmonary emergencies. Despite having a high burden of cardiovascular disease and trauma from conflict in Afghanistan, little is known about the level of BLS knowledge Afghani healthcare workers have. A cross-sectional study was conducted in Kabul, Afghanistan, to assess healthcare workers’ training and knowledge of BLS. The study, which took place from March to June 2022 across multiple public and private hospitals, was approved by the institutional ethics committee of Ariana Medical Complex. The sample size was calculated using a nonprobability convenience sampling method, and the study population consisted of healthcare workers actively working in a health center who were willing to complete a questionnaire. The results of the study showed that most participants (71.3%) were in the 21–30-year-old age range, and a third (32.3%) were doctors. 95.3% of participants had poor knowledge of BLS, with a mean score of 4.47±1.58 out of 13. Additionally, it was evident from questionnaire responses that providers are not adequately performing BLS. These findings suggest that further work, including regular BLS courses, is necessary to improve the knowledge and practice of BLS by healthcare workers in Afghanistan.
Keywords: basic life support, knowledge, demographics, practice, Afghanistan
Highlights
Basic life support is a term used to describe the type of treatment that healthcare workers and public safety professionals provide to people who are experiencing cardiac arrest, respiratory distress, or any cardiopulmonary distress during a medical emergency.
The study population consisted of healthcare workers actively working in a health center regardless of age, sex, or clinical specialty, working as regular employees in their departments and willing to res

We’re sorry, this site is currently experiencing technical difficulties.
Please try again in a few moments.
Reference ID:
Dawood Ibrahim
Indian criminal and terrorist (born 1955)
Dawood Ibrahim (; born 26 December 1955) is an Indian mobboss, drug lord, and terrorist. He reportedly heads the Indian organised crime syndicate D-Company, which he founded in Mumbai in the 1970s. Ibrahim is wanted on charges including murder, extortion, targeted killing, drug trafficking, and terrorism.
He was designated a global terrorist by India and the United States in 2003, with a reward of US$25 million on his head for his suspected role in the 1993 Bombay bombings. In 2011, he was named number two on "The World's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives" by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and fourth on Forbes'. In 2020, the Pakistani government listed Dawood and 87 others in its sanction list in order to avoid FATF sanctions. He has been reported to live in Karachi, Pakistan, though the government of Pakistan denies it.
Early life
Dawood Ibrahim was born on 26 December 1955 to a Konkani family in Khed in Maharashtra, India. His father, Ibrahim Kaskar, worked as a head constable with the Mumbai Police and his mother, Amina Bi, was a homemaker. He lived in the area of Dongri, Mumbai and attended Ahmed Sailor High School, from which he dropped out.
Criminal career
Dawood started committing fraud, theft and robbery while still in his teens. Eventually, he joined the gang of local gangster and don Baashu Dada, part of the local organised crime syndicate. In the late 1970s, he later split from the gang, creating his own gang with his elder brother Shabir Ibrahim Kaskar. After Shabir was killed by the rival Pathan gang, he became the sole boss of his gang, known as the D-Company. He was then chiefly involved in gold smuggling, real estate, extortion and drug trafficking. He fled from Basic life support (BLS) is a type of emergency care provided by healthcare workers and public safety professionals to individuals experiencing cardiac arrest, respiratory distress, or other cardiopulmonary emergencies. Despite having a high burden of cardiovascular disease and trauma from conflict in Afghanistan, little is known about the level of BLS knowledge Afghani healthcare workers have. A cross-sectional study was conducted in Kabul, Afghanistan, to assess healthcare workers’ training and knowledge of BLS. The study, which took place from March to June 2022 across multiple public and private hospitals, was approved by the institutional ethics committee of Ariana Medical Complex. The sample size was calculated using a nonprobability convenience sampling method, and the study population consisted of healthcare workers actively working in a health center who were willing to complete a questionnaire. The results of the study showed that most participants (71.3%) were in the 21–30-year-old age range, and a third (32.3%) were doctors. 95.3% of participants had poor knowledge of BLS, with a mean score of 4.47±1.58 out of 13. Additionally, it was evident from questionnaire responses that providers are not adequately performing BLS. These findings suggest that further work, including regular BLS courses, is necessary to improve the knowledge and practice of BLS by healthcare workers in Afghanistan. Keywords: basic life support, knowledge, demographics, practice, Afghanistan Highlights Basic life support is a term used to describe the type of treatment that healthcare workers and public safety professionals provide to people who are experiencing cardiac arrest, respiratory distress, or any cardiopulmonary distress during a medical emergency. The study population consisted of healthcare workers actively working in a health center regardless of age, sex, or clinical specialty, working as regular employees in their departments and willing to res Abstract