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Thursday, 24 Dec 2020 08:39 AM MYT BY ASHMAN ADAM Khaidir has been diagnosed with dermatomyositis, a rare autoimmune disease with a 50 per cent survival rate. Picture via GoFundMe Subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on news you need to know. KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 24 Malaysian construction engineer Khaidir Abu Jalil, 34, was recently dubbed the “loneliest man” at St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney after six months went by without him receiving a single visitor. According to Australia’s , Khaidir suffers from a rare autoimmune disease with a 50 per cent survival rate. He does not know anyone in Australia his family is in Malaysia nor does he own a phone or have internet access. ....
Lonely Malaysian in Sydney hospital fighting for his life, says report freemalaysiatoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from freemalaysiatoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Janie Barrett/Sydney Morning Herald Khaidir Abu Jali, 34, being treated at the Kinghorn Cancer Centre in St Vincentâs Hospital where he is receiving treatment for MDA5, a rare and severe autoimmune disease. He is known as the “loneliest man” in Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital, a place where many people experience the worst moments in their lives. In the six months that Malaysian construction engineer Khaidir Abu Jalil, 34, has been hospitalised for a rare autoimmune disease with a 50 per cent survival rate, he hasn’t had a single visitor. He knows nobody, not even a friend of a friend. His family lives in Malaysia, and don’t own a phone or have the internet at home. ....
Advertisement He is known as the “loneliest man” in Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital, a place where many people experience the worst moments in their lives. In the six months that Malaysian construction engineer Khaidir Abu Jalil, 34, has been hospitalised for a rare autoimmune disease with a 50 per cent survival rate, he hasn’t had a single visitor. He knows nobody, not even a friend of a friend. His family lives in Malaysia, and don’t own a phone or have the internet at home. “We were struck that he’s only 34, the prognosis was very poor, and being so sick, and in intensive care, there was not one visitor who could be with him,” said Dr Laila Girgis, head of rheumatology at Sydney’s St Vincent’s Public Hospital. ....