China Daily

Proper treatment gives patient new life

- By WANG XIAODONG

Four years after undergoing a transplant to replace his lungs, which were destroyed by pneumoconi­osis, Zhang Haichao now lives a healthy and normal life.

“I feel fine. My lung functions are back to normal,” he said. “Before the surgery, I could barely walk 50 meters, but now I can even climb mountains.”

Zhang, 37, began displaying symptoms of pneumoconi­osis, such as harsh coughing, in 2007 while working at a dusty workshop producing fireproof materials in Xinmi, Henan province.

The condition is caused by the inhalation of dust.

He traveled to the provincial capital, Zhengzhou, for a checkup and was diagnosed with tuberculos­is by the Zhengzhou Occupation­al Disease Control and Prevention Institute.

However, after seeking a second opinion at the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, one of the city’s top hospitals, doctors ruled out TB and diagnosed pneumoconi­osis.

“I went to many hospitals after that, including in Beijing. All the hospitals agreed that I didn’t have TB,” he said.

Yet the feedback from those hospitals had no legal effect in allowing Zhang to claim compensati­on from his employer. Of all his local clinics, only the Zhengzhou institute is certified to diagnose occupation­al diseases such as pneumoconi­osis, yet Zhang said it has refused to confirm his diagnosis.

He underwent explorator­y chest surgery at the Zhengzhou University hospital in June 2009, and it showed without doubt he had the disease. But the institute still refused to back the results.

Eventually, Zhang’s story was picked up by local and national media, which prompted public outrage and applied pressure on the institute and local authoritie­s to accept the diagnosis.

He went on to receive 1.2 million yuan ($190,000) in compensati­on from his employer, and in mid-2013, he underwent a lung transplant at Wuxi People’s Hospital in Jiangsu province.

After two years of recov- ery, Zhang found work as a bus driver in Xinmi.

“I don’t really want to be a driver, as my doctor told me to stay away from crowds to prevent infection,” he said. “But I have to make a living. I get up at 5 am, even in temperatur­es as low as -13 C in winter. I’m really afraid of catching a cold.”

Zhang’s wife left him in 2012, and now he lives with his 13-year-old daughter, who studies at primary school.

“As a pneumoconi­osis patient, I know I’m very lucky because I got compensati­on that covered my treatment,” he said. “Most migrant workers with the disease I know can’t get compensati­on, either because their employers didn’t buy insurance for them or they didn’t sign an employment contract.”

Fortunatel­y, local government­s have attached more importance to the prevention and control of the disease, and are improving support for patients.

“Migrant workers in some places can even have their medical bills completely reimbursed,” Zhang added. “I hope those working in hazardous environmen­ts can learn to protect themselves and stay healthy.”

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Zhang Haichao (left), who recovered from pneumoconi­osis, talks with Chen Jingyu, the doctor who successful­ly operated on him to cure his lung disease, at a seminar in Beijing this month.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY Zhang Haichao (left), who recovered from pneumoconi­osis, talks with Chen Jingyu, the doctor who successful­ly operated on him to cure his lung disease, at a seminar in Beijing this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong