Heroism well explained by Chinese medical workers returning to work after recovering from infection
By People’s Daily
During the battle against the novel coronavirus
(COVID-19), some frontline medical workers, who exposed to great danger of the
disease, unfortunately get infected. Doctors became patients, fighting on their
personal battle against the disease.
However, as they recovered from it, some of them
volunteered to go back again to the front line. After taking off the hospital
gown as a patient, they put on the protective suit as a doctor again. They are
heroes of our time.
After giving a 90-minute first aid to a patient, associate
chief physician Zhou Ning of the cardiology department at the Wuhan-based
Tongji Hospital affiliated to the Huazhong University of Science and Technology
walked out of an operating room, saving another life after he recovered from
the COVID-19 pneumonia and returned to work on Feb. 10.
“As a doctor, I must try my best to save the patients in
severe and critical conditions, as many as possible,” Zhou explained to
People’s Daily why he returned to the front line.
The doctor wasn’t expecting himself to fall down so
quickly. According to him, he became symptomatic four days after receiving a
patient suspected of infection on Jan. 17 and put himself into quarantine at
home.By taking medicines and getting enough rest at home, Zhou gradually
recovered. Besides, he made self-treatment tips out of his own experiences, and
the tips soon went viral on social media.
“I believe that we will definitely defeat the virus as
long as we unite as one and fight the epidemic in solidarity,” he wrote in the
tips.
After quarantine, Zhou returned to work without any
hesitation. “The hospital was concerned about my health, but we were short-handed
as a designated hospital for receiving severely ill and critical patients,” he
said, adding that saving lives comes above everything for doctors.
Yuan Haitao, director of the ICU department at the
People’s Hospital of Dongxihu District, Wuhan, is another hero who has walked
in harm’s way. On Feb. 21, the doctor who had been recovered from COVID-19 ended
quarantine and went straight to his department from the quarantine wards on the
19th floor of the hospital. “I just wanted to apply my experiences to treating
other patients,” he said. Yuan, 44, has been a doctor for nearly 20 years.
On Jan. 14, Yuan’s hospital received a novel coronavirus
pneumonia patient who was critically ill and had to receive a trachea cannula before
being transferred to an intensive care unit (ICU), which meant the viruses
could easily come out of the patient’s airway and infect the operating doctors.
“I must take the odds,” Yuan reacted.
Unfortunately, his body temperature soared to 39 degrees
Celsius the next day and he was hospitalized 3 days later. After half a month,
the doctor was transferred to the ICU of Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital as his
conditions worsened, where his wife signed a notice of critical status,
dolefully.
Hu Ming, a close friend of Yuan and also the director of
the ICU department of the Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital burst into tears after
learning Yuan’s condition, and the scene was captured by the media and
circulated online, which saddened many.
The good news is Yuan’s temperature gradually subsided,
which got him bustling around again. Through phone calls and messages, he asked
for check-up reports from his colleges, studied the conditions of the patient
who he last treated before getting infected.
“I was still worrying about him,” Yuan noted. During the
hospitalized days, he was always considering how he could improve the treatment
plans for the patient based on how he recovered.
To Yuan’s comfort, the patient was later able to breathe
without respirator. Yuan even celebrated the patient’s birthday with the
latter’s family through a video call.
Zou Jinjing, chief physician from the respiratory and
intensive care medicine department of Renmin Hospital of Wuhan
University, is now working again at the hospital after recovery from
the COVID-19 pneumonia. The energy she shows in the wards barely indicates her previous
infection.
Zou developed a fever and started coughing on Jan. 17,
and was hospitalized after her infection was confirmed, which sadden her mother
very much. Zou kept her infection a secret for her 10-year-old daughter until
her condition alleviated in order not to make the child worry.
Over half a month later, Zou was tested negative for the
novel coronavirus, and her CT image also suggested gradual recovery. After
observation and quarantine, she immediately applied to her hospital for
permission to work. On Feb. 24, the doctor finally restored her daily work
routine – seeing the patients in the morning and joining telemedicine sessions
in the afternoon.
Zou doesn’t consider her decision as heroic, as she
believes it’s natural for people to rest when getting sick and resume work
after recovery. Now she’s in higher morale, saying it’s her that needs the
work, rather than the other way around.
Zhou Ning (first on left), Yuan Haitao (center), and Zou Jinjing (first on right)
Heroism well explained by Chinese medical workers returning to work after recovering from infection
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