Beijing Review

LEADING BY EXAMPLE

Infectious disease expert saves lives, kills rumors and inspires others

- By Li Fangfang Copyedited by Sudeshna Sarkar Comments to ffli@bjreview.com

A21-hour work schedule is the new normal for Zhang Wenhong, a leading infectious disease expert in Shanghai who has been in the forefront of many medical battles, including the severe acute respirator­y syndrome (SARS) epidemic in 2003.

On January 28, a typical day in the life of the director of the Infectious Disease Department of Huashan Hospital, Zhang monitored the novel coronaviru­s situation in Henan Province in central China, where he had been sent by the national health authoritie­s, during the day. At midnight, he took a flight back to Shanghai, then updated the situation on his department’s Wechat social media account with his analysis. It was 3 a.m. when he went to sleep, but by 6 a.m. he was up to get back to his hospital where patients were waiting for him.

After that day’s work, Zhang attended a press conference on the prevention and control of the outbreak, where he warned that people have to prepare for a prolonged battle.

The first novel coronaviru­s case in Shanghai was reported on January 15. At that time, little was known about the dangers involved. “The first batch of medical staff dared to expose themselves to the virus without knowing anything about the risk, transmissi­bility and pathogenic­ity of the disease,” Zhang said.

He set up the medical observatio­n criteria for his younger colleagues, explaining which patients should be kept under observatio­n and which ones should be discharged. As he sees it, infectious disease doctors’ responsibi­lity goes beyond treatment to making reasonable decisions, precise assessment­s and suggestion­s for control policies.

Zhang credits his métier to his mentor, 82-year-old Wen Xinhua, who led Shanghai’s SARS defense in 2003. No health workers were infected in Shanghai then and there were no cases of group transmissi­ons, a feat acknowledg­ed by the World Health Organizati­on. Zhang, who worked with Wen, edited a book on SARS in China.

Zhang’s medical team is also running an informatio­n campaign on Wechat. His department’s account, Huashan Ganran, has become an opinion leader and must-check content for many people.

It provides updates on the situation almost everyday, along with prevention tips, scientific explanatio­ns and informatio­n on policies to ease people’s anxiety. It also has a song to encourage followers.

Zhang’s students, some of whom are also his colleagues, collect the informatio­n and he writes articles based on it at night. “People need to be informed of the facts. General consensus, particular­ly consensus on science, is key to the prevention and control work of infectious diseases,” he said.

Among the 10 articles on the novel coronaviru­s outbreak posted as of January 29, one had been viewed 10 million times.

On February 2, Zhang also posted a 10,000-character digital book on prevention and control of the epidemic. A week later, more content was added based on the progress in the work.

During the SARS epidemic, this trend of doctors posting articles online to answer the worried public’s questions and refute rumors was not so visible. With more profession­al medical informatio­n available on various platforms in a transparen­t way, people can discern between the truth and rumors more easily and get back to their work with less panic.

On January 18, when most Chinese people were getting nervous triggered by the unknown virus, Zhang delivered a public speech about infectious diseases that has been massively reposted.

This speech was planned half a year ago by Zhang together with Beijingbas­ed CC Talk, a non-profit opinionsha­ring platform for profession­als.

Zhang reviewed the 1918 virus that killed at least 50 million people and SARS, attributin­g the panic to the failure of tracing the virus and public health measures.

“When people enjoy the blue sky or the deep ocean, so do viruses. The risk of being infected is always there,” Zhang said.

However, the current progress of genetic science has offered a method of knowing a virus which tends to trigger panic.

He compared infectious disease doctors to virus hunters who are dedicated to looking for the solutions to possible virus outbreaks thanks to the mutation of viruses.

As for when viruses could be eradicated at all, Zhang said they can only hear the clock tick without knowing what time it is.

 ??  ?? Zhang Wenhong, Director of the Infectious Disease Department of Huashan Hospital in Shanghai, speaks at a news conference on January 29
Zhang Wenhong, Director of the Infectious Disease Department of Huashan Hospital in Shanghai, speaks at a news conference on January 29

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China