Trump, 70, who has encouraged a wave of anti-Muslim sentiment in the US - from a complete ban of Muslims to "extreme vetting" - would be formally nominated as the party's presidential candidate at the convention.
Thousands of Trump's supporters from across the US have started arriving in the city along with the party delegates. Several thousand protesters along with the anti-Trump movement have also come to the city to hold protest rallies every day.
"But even as his most ardent supporters arrive for the Convention to cheer on his nomination, the city's Muslim doctors stand ready to provide them with medical help," The Daily Beast reported.
While 'Land is known for its high-quality hospitals, what's less well-known is that Muslims make up a substantial proportion of the city's medical professionals, it said.
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In response to anti-Muslim rhetoric, Dr. Bryan Hambley helped found a Cleveland protest organisation of doctors, nurses, and medical professionals called Stand Together Against Trump, or STAT-which is a medical term from the Latin word "statim," meaning immediately or right away, it said.
"There's this running stereotype amongst Muslims that your parents expect you to either become a doctor or engineer. That's the way we see it," said Dr. Fatima Fadlalla, a resident physician in internal medicine who grew up in Cleveland and then returned for her residency.
She estimates that there are thousands of Muslim doctors in Cleveland, and that among her Muslim friends, around 90 per cent are physicians or in the medical field.
"I would just treat them like anybody else, if (a Trump supporter) needs my help. I would help without hesitation. It's no problem to have disagreement on issues," she was quoted as saying by the Daily Beast.
The protests, marches, and demonstrations planned for this week in Cleveland have the potential for a toxic mix: extremists from white supremacists to the New Black Panther Party have indicated that they will be attending.