Global Times

Wuhan refines emergency response system

▶ Informatio­n release within 5 hrs, 20,000 beds for infectious diseases

- By Xu Keyue

Central China’s Wuhan, a city once hard- hit by COVID- 19 in early 2020, has recovered its dynamism. The city is summarizin­g lessons from its anti- epidemic efforts and improving its emergency response systems, including the release of informatio­n about emergencie­s within five hours and reserving 20,000 hospital beds for infectious diseases.

On Monday, the government of Wuhan reviewed the draft of an “overall emergency plan,” which stipulates that authoritie­s should release informatio­n within five hours and hold press conference­s within 24 hours after a major emergency.

The draft plan is divided into four categories: natural disasters, accidents, public health emergencie­s and social security events. It also advises local authoritie­s to hold emergency drills at least once every three years.

Wuhan’s current emergency plan was formulated in 2013, and some of it no longer meets the needs of emergency management. The city not only accumulate­d a large amount of solid experience, but also exposed shortcomin­gs and problems amid the battle against COVID- 19, so it’s necessary to sum up the experience and lessons learned to improve the plan, a local official explained.

Wuhan has vowed to build a first- class public health emergency management system by the end of 2022, according to the city’s 14th Five Year Plan ( 2021- 2025). By 2025, the city will have built a public emergency and medical rescue center as a modern internatio­nal metropolis and one that’s capable of participat­ing in internatio­nal affairs.

Wuhan will reserve 20,000 hospital beds for infectious diseases, as well as medical equipment such as ventilator­s and extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n.

Moreover, Wuhan plans to build several urban testing bases and national public testing platforms with a daily single testing volume of 10,000, so as to enhance cross- regional support capacity. The city has created four teams of more than 1,000 people each for epidemiolo­gical surveys, disinfecti­on, detection and control.

Wang Guangfa, a respirator­y expert at Peking University First Hospital, who went to Wuhan in the early stages of the outbreak, told the Global Times that China should train more high- level, applicatio­n- oriented experts in the public health sector with strong academic background­s, rich profession­al knowledge and practical ability.

Wang Hongwei, a professor at the School of Public Administra­tion and Policy, Renmin University of China, suggested that local and national authoritie­s and medical institutio­ns should enhance the capacity of their monitoring and early warning systems to detect and analyze such health emergencie­s in a timely manner.

Not only Wuhan but also the entire nation should introduce the “peacetime and wartime combinatio­n mode,” so as to balance national developmen­t and security, Wang said.

The public should be encouraged to report emergencie­s, Wang said, suggesting that China can build a public report channel based on big data.

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