To protect her mother from "Corona" ... a British nurse isolates herself in a trailer for 9 months

A British nurse isolated herself for 9 months, during which she lived in a "caravan" trailer, in order to protect her elderly mother from the emerging corona virus.

And the British "BBC" website quoted the nurse as saying, after returning home, that the joy of returning to her home was like the joy of "winning the lottery."

Sarah Link and her husband Gary, who used to live in the same house with her mother, bought a caravan trailer in March to allow them to isolate themselves from her elderly mother.

"I cried with heartache while we were living in the caravan, and if it weren't for Gary, I wouldn't be able to get through it," Link said.

The couple went home for Christmas after her mother received the vaccine.

The caravan, which he bought for £ 600 and parked near the market in Cradley in the Black County area, allowed Mrs. Link to continue her work at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham and her husband to continue working at his fish business.

"I would do it again tomorrow and every time, and I would do anything to protect my mother," Link said.

"We thought it would take a month or three maximum, then summer came and went, and nine months later we were still there. It was unbelievable," said Link, who has been working as a nurse for 17 years. "I can't believe we did that."

The couple contracted the Coronavirus in December, but they continued to live in the trailer, to be able to isolate themselves and continue to protect Link's mother, who is 84 years old.

"I went back to work normally last week. I still feel easily tired and exhausted, but I'm fine and fine," Link added.

She continued: "Cases are on the rise, it is ridiculous ... and some people still wander around and do not believe that it (the epidemic) is real. If these people came to the hospital ward and saw what I saw, the matter would be different."

Link said she had not hugged her mother since before March because they (she and her husband) were still taking precautions to keep her safe.

She said that Christmas and the New Year were "magical," adding that it was the "best" of all the holidays ever after she was able to return to her home.

She added, "We all cried when we moved to the new year in the middle of the night, the year in which we suffered so much, it was like winning the lottery and waking up in a real bed." ".