Beijing Review

Guarding the Border

Frontier city in northeast fights to contain imported coronaviru­s cases

- By Yuan Yuan

Chinese people stuck there couldn’t buy an airline ticket due to the limited number of flights. Suifenhe became their only hope of getting back home.

Informatio­n from the National Health Commission (NHC) showed that most of the confirmed patients in Suifenhe were from two large markets in Moscow, which indicated that they had made a long journey to Suifenhe.

Passengers first took a flight from Moscow to Vladivosto­k and then traveled about 200 km, transferri­ng from one vehicle to another several times until they finally got to the highway port of entry in Suifenhe.

Hao J u n , a n o f f i c i a l from the Heilongjia­ng Provincial Health Commission, said at a recent press briefing that the long and exhausting journey in a closed environmen­t worsened the situation. Some who were infected got sicker and may have infected more people.

After the first case, the number of confirmed cases began to rise in Suifenhe. NHC figures showed that from March 27 to April 20, a total of 2,497 people entered China’s mainland through Suifenhe. Among them, 377 were tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The intensive demand for testing and treatment for the inbound people put great pressure on the small city, which didn’t have enough beds or medical workers. The daily testing capacity was for only 96 people, far from what was needed, since on any given day, hundreds of people were swarming into the city. As a result, all Suifenhe hotels were taken over for quarantini­ng the returnees.

Starting on March 31, the provincial government deployed medical workers and testing facilities from other cities in the province to Suifenhe, while medical workers from other provinces also rushed to help. Some asymptomat­ic patients could get treatment in Suifenhe, but others with more serious symptoms were transferre­d to Mudanjiang, the city that has jurisdicti­on over Suifenhe.

Du Hongbin, a nurse from Mudanjiang

who had just returned from Hubei after supporting the anti-epidemic battle there, went to Suifenhe immediatel­y after he completed his quarantine period.

“Many of my coworkers from Hubei made the same decision with no hesitation,” Du said. “We are more experience­d in dealing with the epidemic. It is our responsibi­lity.”

United efforts

On April 3, the city released an online notice asking for some 100 volunteers. Within three hours, 800 locals had applied. Song Qiong, who runs a home improvemen­t company in Suifenhe, applied right away. In February, he had worked as a volunteer during the epidemic in the city for over 10 days.

This time around, his job is to deliver three meals a day to medical workers in five different hospitals. Every day, he gets up at 4 a.m. and drives to a restaurant to collect 280 boxes of prepacked meals. It is an onerous duty since the temperatur­e in Suifenhe can fall below zero degree Celsius.

On April 6, a project to transform an office building into a makeshift hospital kicked off, with over 200 volunteers joining to clean the building beforehand. They completed the work in just two days. On April 11, the makeshift hospital with about 400 medical workers was put into operation, adding 600 beds for patients with the novel coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19). It is intended to treat only less serious cases.

Meanwhile, the city has adopted strict measures to prevent the spread of the epidemic by banning all types of gatherings and drawing up a list of businesses that must close. Since April 8, all community compounds have been on lockdown again, and only one person per household can shop for essentials once every three days. Volunteers are again positioned at compound entrances, working around the clock in freezing temperatur­es to check everyone’s body temperatur­e and make sure strangers do not enter.

In addition, under bilateral agreements between China and Russia regarding state border operations and checkpoint­s, the Suifenhe passenger corridor checkpoint has been temporaril­y closed since April 7.

On April 12, the National Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention lent the city a mobile, intelligen­t laboratory that increased its daily testing capacity to about 1,600. Along with the lab, 15 experts from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention were also sent to Suifenhe. Among them, some had just left Wuhan.

The provincial and local health commission­s have provided 15 special ambulances and over 3,400 medical facilities. On April 16, the local government distribute­d 220,000 free masks and 25 tons of disinfecti­ng alcohol among residents.

All these efforts have proved to be successful as there had been no domestical­ly transmitte­d cases in the city as of April 23. On April 14, the first patient was discharged from hospital and on April 21 and 22, a total of 16 people were able to leave hospitals. They still need to go through a 14-day quarantine before they go back home.

Hao, the official from the provincial health commission, said that there are still some medical teams from Mudanjiang and other regions in the province with over 1,000 medical workers ready to go to the frontline if needed. “It is not the time to relax,” Hao said. “We are still at a critical stage in the battle against the coronaviru­s.”

 ??  ?? Epidemic prevention and control personnel in Suifenhe work in snow at an entrance to the city on April 22
Epidemic prevention and control personnel in Suifenhe work in snow at an entrance to the city on April 22

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China