Shanghai Daily

Shanghai doctors stay alert on the frontline

- Ke Jiayun

WEDNESDAY should have been the day before the end of the Spring Festival holiday, but that has now been extended for 10 more days because of the coronaviru­s crisis.

But for one group of people, it’s not a longer holiday but a non-stop frontline fight against the disease.

It’s the fifth day that Zha Qiongfang, a doctor from Shanghai’s Renji Hospital, and her colleagues have been helping to treat patients in Wuhan, epicenter of the current crisis. They were one of the first medical teams sent from Shanghai to the capital of Hubei Province.

On Wednesday morning, sunshine broke up the heavy cover of clouds for the first time since their arrival, something Zha believed as a “good omen.”

She recalled, two days before, the team’s arrival at Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital to find medical staff having a rough time with little facilities.

Since there were no white lab coats, everyone had to wear a nurse’s uniform. Seeing people of different sizes try to fit into these skinny clothes was one of the few occasions they saw smiles on everyone’s faces.

The Shanghai team was soon hard at work. There were 29 patients in a critical condition in intensive care units, reliant on machines to breathe. Zha was told that one critical patient had died the night before.

Zha’s team was put in charge of 10 patients in three ICUs. One begged them to save his life. Besides learning about the patients’ conditions, the medics also calmed them down and adjusted parameters on their breathing machines.

After a round of the wards, they made some adjustment­s to treatments after consultati­on with the nurses. To save time, they took as few breaks as possible to eat and drink.

On Tuesday, Premier Li Keqiang visited the hospital but Zha was on duty and couldn’t meet him.

She was gaining confidence as medical supplies flooded into Wuhan. But the number of critical patients was also growing.

After their round of the wards, the doctors reported the patients’ condition to their families, during which they got a glimpse into different sides of society. There was one person who hoped to be with a partner without fear of infection; there were family members who decided to give up further treatment, possibly increasing the patient’s discomfort; and there were some complainin­g to the hospital over little things like patients having to turn off their cellphones and losing contact with them.

On Wednesday morning, Zha helped with the arrangemen­t of supplies from all over the country, including medical items and those for daily use. The first batch of supplies she received was from her colleagues of Renji Hospital, mainly daily necessitie­s and some drugs. The colleagues, who learned that it was very cold in Wuhan, also sent them some warm clothes and heating pads.

The other batch of supplies were donations from ordinary people. Zha said that, just after she arrived in Wuhan, she received a call from a colleague about one of her patients who wanted to donate masks and goggles. Those items were among the supplies.

Zha said she had received many calls from people in different fields in Shanghai offering help.

Some medics in the team had health problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure and she had kidney problems. Despite that, they were working round the clock to care for their patients. The support shown by others has helped their resolve.

 ??  ?? Left: Zha Qiongfang (center), a doctor from Shanghai, consults with a colleague about a report at Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital. Below: Zha and other local doctors who have volunteere­d to help in Wuhan discuss treatment for coronaviru­srelated pneumonia. — Ti Gong
Left: Zha Qiongfang (center), a doctor from Shanghai, consults with a colleague about a report at Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital. Below: Zha and other local doctors who have volunteere­d to help in Wuhan discuss treatment for coronaviru­srelated pneumonia. — Ti Gong
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