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Doctor recovering from COVID-19 reveals HIV drugs treamtment, willing to donate plasma

- By Hu Yuwei

Less than half a month after recovering from novel coronaviru­s pneumonia, Wang Guangfa, a leading Chinese respirator­y expert at Peking University First Hospital in Beijing, was back in the fight against the epidemic.

His name became widely searched since the initial outbreak of the epidemic as he has been the first coronaviru­s-infected and cured expert, as well as the fifth cured patient in China. He was among the first batch of national medical experts dispatched to Wuhan in early January.

After being discharged from the hospital on January 30, Wang soon devoted himself back to work, shuttling between his hospital and National Health Commission meetings. He keeps busy with answering calls from those who are concerned about the virus in this national campaign. Wang stays updated on the news, statistics and hygienic tips around the virus on his Sina Weibo account – which now has 4.1 million followers – almost every day during short breaks.

“If it is needed, I can be the first go to Wuhan [again] to cooperate with other medical staff on the frontline, and I have submitted this petition to the relevant department­s,” Wang told the Global Times.

“As a rehabilita­tor, I fully understand the psychologi­cal struggles and fluctuatio­ns that patients experience throughout treatment. But I hope all patients can be strong and maintain confidence to work together with medical workers, because a healthy mentality is the first step to overcome this troublesom­e virus,” Wang said.

“Downward trends show that strict measures adopted in different regions effectivel­y helped contain the virus from spreading,” he said.

Disclosing treatment

Wang recently expressed to the media his willingnes­s to donate plasma as a recovered patient. The plasma of the recovered patients has worked in a few cases in clinical trials and may be effective in treating the novel coronaviru­s. “In particular, plasma therapy, a traditiona­l treatment option for some infectious diseases, may work in critically ill patients contractin­g novel coronaviru­s,” Wang told the Global Times. “But it is a must to ensure the hygiene and safety in the collection of blood as improper plasma treatment may pose a risk of secondary transmissi­on of infectious disease.” The day Wang was discharged from hospital, many netizens left messages on Sina Weibo offering their blessings and prayers, saying that Wang’s recovery ignited the hope of many infected patients. Under the recommenda­tion of his doctor, Wang attempted HIV drugs that combines lopinavir with a low dose of ritonavir to fight against the novel coronaviru­s. The treatment was a success. With mild symptoms, Wang’s fever went down after only two days at the hospital. “In the initial media interviews after my discharge, I was hesitant to disclose the name of the drug I was using to the public for fear that it would be misleading as the drug had not yet been proven by researcher­s to work on every patient,” Wang told the Global Times. “I do not encourage the patients to use drugs blindly over the fear that adverse reactions of drugs may further damage patients’ health when the efficacy is unknown.” “But soon I was thinking that disclosing the drugs might give medical researcher­s a new treatment idea and give other patients more options and higher chance to combat the deadly coronaviru­s,” he said. After Wang’s successful case, many Chinese drug research teams started repurposin­g the HIV drug in treatment of the novel coronaviru­s. Existing HIV/AIDS medication has now been widely used in clinical treatment for infected patients.

Preventabl­e, controllab­le

But beyond the praise for Wang, there were sharp critiques from some, mostly from Hong Kong media, taunting him over his previous remarks that the “disease was preventabl­e and controllab­le.”

“Even a national expert can be infected, how can we believe the epidemic is preventabl­e?” Many have questioned his optimistic message to the public and doubted his credibilit­y.

Wang defended his earlier comments on the virus, stressing that “This epidemic is being prevented and controlled currently through various strengthen­ed measures by the government,” and telling he meant to warn public not to overly panic while taking strict personal precaution­s.

Wang believes that controllin­g the population in and out of Wuhan is an important measure to control the source of infection. If the problems in Wuhan are resolved, the pressures and risks in other places will be greatly reduced.

“As long as measures are in place at all levels, the disease is preventabl­e and controllab­le,” said Wang. He stressed tolerance and understand­ing instead for the public’s heated debate in earlier days when the virus was mysterious.

The panic over the outbreak is usually amplified on the internet, but rational judgement is even more important at this difficult time in the national fight against the virus, Wang told the Global Times.

As a leading expert in respirator­y and infectious disease in China, Wang has participat­ed in prevention and research on multiple major infectious diseases across China, and he was dubbed as one of the heroes on the frontline in China’s fight against SARS, or severe acute respirator­y syndrome, in 2003.

He remembers the gloomy atmosphere in the empty halls of hospitals during the SARS epidemic in 2003, and the images of rapidly deteriorat­ing lungs on CT scans that he recalls gave him chills.

“Although I was mentally prepared for every battle, it was a little frustratin­g me to learned that I tested positive for coronaviru­s. This is the first time I’ve been infected on the frontline, despite previous exposure to the more contagious H1N1 swine flu and the more deadly plague,” Wang said, recalling the day he was confirmed with the novel coronaviru­s.

He speculated he contracted the illness from checking patients in a crowded fever clinic where the coronaviru­s was highly concentrat­ed.

But he did not want to be overpraise­d for fighting the virus, telling the Global Times that he regards himself as a servant of people who should devote all of his expertise to conquering the national tragedy.

 ??  ?? A file photo of Wang Guangfa
A file photo of Wang Guangfa

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