Kate Middleton had an emotional moment during a video conference from Sandringham, where she learned how a nurse comforted a dying man by singing a Bon Jovi song to him.

Speaking with the staff of the University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire, the Duchess of Cambridge could not help but feel so touched and moved by Vasu Lingappa's gesture. Kate listened to the nurse's story about how she held the dying patient's hand until his last breath because his wife couldn't visit his hospital bedside.

Kate also thanked Lingappa for "going the extra mile" for the patient. She said that this wasn't a part of their training as a nurse, but Lingappa showed kindness to the person she had to look after.

Despite the sad story, however, Kate managed to crack a smile because Lingappa had an amusing moment. The nurse said that it was the wife of the patient who requested the song from Bon Jovi, but Lingappa told Kate she almost declined because she had a thick accent and felt it wouldn't be appropriate to sing. Instead, the nurse said she used her phone to play a YouTube video of the particular song so she could sing along to it while the patient breathed his last.

Before Kate ended the call, she asked the other nurses how they were doing. The Duchess of Cambridge said that the tough times are not yet over, but she wants to make sure that the frontliners are getting through it better.

Meanwhile, Kate is currently staying in Norfolk with her kids, and Prince William as the United Kingdom is still on its third nationwide lockdown. The Cambridge family won't return to Kensington Palace in London until the government has new advice or protocol to curb the spread of the virus.

While Kate is back to doing video conferences calls, she's also facilitating Prince George and Princess Charlotte's homeschooling. The Cambridge children had to go back to online learning since schools are closed in the city until the middle of February.

Sources close to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge said that they love staying in Norfolk because there's plenty of space for outdoor activities. At their country home in Anmer Hall, Kate encourages her children to play in the pond or get dirty on the ground. The Duchess of Cambridge believes that outdoor play can make a huge difference in a child's physical and mental wellness.