China Pictorial (English)

Hu Yu: The Duty to Save Lives

“As a CPPCC member, I do my best to devise feasible proposals, and as a doctor, I do my best to save lives.”

- Text by Zhou Xin Photograph­s courtesy of Hu Yu

patients, and its three branches discharged 3,091 recovered patients. The hospital also provided medical services to 2,129 patients in two temporary treatment centers and offered online medical consultati­on services to 60,000 Wuhan residents. As president of the hospital, Hu had continuous­ly been working on the front lines to save lives, which he considers his duty as a CPPCC member.

When Wuhan faced the toughest time during the epidemic, 90 percent of patients in his hospital were critically ill, with daily outpatient visits exceeding 800. In the face of the challenges, Hu slept only a few hours each night, and all his waking hours were consumed with the fight against the epidemic. “Despite the great challenges, doctors across Wuhan and from around the country united together to win the battle against the epidemic under the unified command of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee.”

After more than two months of lockdown, Wuhan finally saw the rainbow after the storm on April 8. Hu’s hospital was restored to normal operation with medical resources shifting to patients with non-coronaviru­s issues in addition to comprehens­ive measures to prevent a rebound of COVID-19.

Reflecting on the tough confrontat­ion with the virus, Hu is both moved and concerned. The outbreak of COVID-19 exposed some weaknesses in public health emergency management. Public suggestion­s and advice should be given greater importance. “Despite some decent achievemen­ts in the prevention and control of the disease, Chinese President Xi Jinping has stressed the need to leverage experience and reinforce effective measures to close loopholes and eliminate weaknesses.”

At this year’s annual session of the CPPCC National Committee, Hu brought a proposal to optimize prevention, control, and treatment systems for public health emergencie­s. He believes it’s time to improve diagnosis and treatment in high-level hospitals, promote bigger roles for family doctors, set up a central emergency management committee to coordinate health department­s during major public health emergencie­s, and provide regular public health training for communitie­s. “Hospitals should be ready for both normal operations and emergencie­s and upgrade their capacities for emergency rescue and treatment,” remarked Hu. “And it is imperative to improve community-level medical infrastruc­ture and implement graded diagnosis and treatment strategies.”

“As a CPPCC member, I do my best to devise feasible proposals, and as a doctor, I do my best to save lives.” Hu noted that during the epidemic, he and his colleagues solved many urgent problems using their own methods which proved effective and resulted in useful experience.

“Our response to the COVID-19 outbreak shined light on the advantages of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics and the solidarity of Chinese people,” declared Hu. “The epidemic has eased in China while other parts of the world are still grappling with the virus. So, with the concept of building a community with a shared future for humanity in mind, we still need to actively learn and contribute across the board.”

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