Medical teams aiding Hubei leave Wuhan with gratitude and respect from locals
By
Global Times
“Welcome
back, our heroes!”
The
same greetings could be heard on many charted planes as medical teams head home
from Wuhan and Hubei. Receiving widespread declarations of gratitude, the
medical teams expressed their sincere hope for Hubei to soon overcome the
pandemic.
Medical
teams aiding Hubei and its capital city Wuhan have begun leaving in batches
since Tuesday. Both goodbye and welcoming ceremonies have been seen across
Wuhan and the medical teams’ hometowns.
Together
with other 101 members from a second batch of medical teams that aided Wuhan
from Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Bahagul Tolheng took a
chartered flight from Wuhan to regional capital Urumqi at Tuesday night. Wuhan
is 3,200 kilometers away from Urumqi.
“We
met with a medical team from Yangzhou of Jiangsu Province at the Wuhan Tianhe
International Airport. They invited us to visit Yangzhou, and we answered by
saying how about you guys come to Xinjiang? Everyone is laughing and feels
relieved,” Bahagul told the Global Times.
Also
at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport, medical teams from East China’s Shandong
Province and Southwest China’s Sichuan Province greeted and waved at each
other. Thirty-nine days ago, The two medical teams met at the airport when they
first arrived in Wuhan. A video showing them cheer up each other went viral on
the internet.
The
hashtag “Shandong Sichuan medical teams meet again” was viewed more than 140
million times on social media as of press time.
Many
medical teams at the airport expressed similar joy as the number of newly
confirmed COVID-19 cases in Hubei has remained less than 10 in nine consecutive
days as of Thursday. On Thursday, no confirmed cases were reported from Hubei.
The
encouraging statistics showed the pandemic situation has greatly changed in
Hubei, allowing these medical teams return to their home cities and towns.
“It
is good to hear that the situation in Wuhan and Hubei is getting better and
better. As we have left Wuhan, there are still many medical personnel working
in hospitals and patients waiting to recover. We hope all patients get better
soon, and wish Wuhan and Hubei will get better soon,” Bahagul said.
From
January 24 to March 8, 346 teams, with 42,600 professional medical workers,
rushed to capital Wuhan and other parts of Hubei to help local residents and
medics in their fight against the outbreak of COVID-19.
Bahagul
and her colleagues were the second team sent to support Wuhan from Xinjiang a
month ago and they had worked in the two improvised hospitals set up in Donghua
and Xihu.
She
worked in the makeshift hospital in Donghu, where many patients with mild cases
were treated. To cheer these patients up as well as to shorten their emotional
distance from the medical staff, Bahagul led a patients’ dance in the hospital
in mid-February. Videos of the event went viral on Chinese social media with
many netizens commenting that they were deeply touched by medical workers’
cheerful spirit and optimism.
“The
patients were like our families and we chatted and danced together. When
reflecting my month-long stay in Wuhan, I could remember the moments of tears
and joys shared with them. When the [makeshift] hospital closed on March 8, we
had the sense of loss but also delight as the patients could finally go home
safe and sound.”
Bahagul
said that Hubei people praised medical teams as heroes, but “we are just doing
our jobs. The medical staff in Wuhan, Hubei and the residents here as well as
all Chinese people are the real heroes since everyone has made sacrifices to
prevent the virus.”
Wang
Jinquan, deputy head of the medical team sent by Anhui Provincial Hospital to
Wuhan, expressed the same sentiments with Bahagul.
The
atmosphere is warm and there is harmony in the hospitals between medical staff
and patients, which flies in the face of rumors of some Western media that
magnify the grumbles of some over the optimism of others in Wuhan, Wang told
the Global Times.
“As
we ended our assistance work and left Wuhan on Wednesday morning, a
neighborhood family waved the [Chinese] national flag and gave us a thumbs-up
from the balcony. They are grateful for everything we did here. People in Wuhan
are heroes defined by what they suffered and sacrificed for us,” said Wang.
Bahagul
said that as a girl from the Kazak ethnic group in Xinjiang, she was once again
impressed by the solidarity and spirit of the Chinese people. When there is an
emergency in one province, all the other provinces and municipalities come to
help, she said. “The cohesion of the whole country under the central government
helps us make progress in the prevention work.”
Wang
from Anhui said, “Only nine hours after we got a call to set up a medical aid
team, the 127-member team got ready for departure. Such concerted efforts and
mobilization efficiency is hard to achieve outside China.”
Wang’s
team, staffed with the most experienced infectious disease specialists and
medics from East China’s Anhui Province, treated critically ill patients with
novel coronavirus infections in a designated hospital in Wuhan.
More
than 1,000 medics signed up for the aid team, and 127 were finally chosen based
on criteria including expertise, psychological qualifications and family
status, according to Wang.
“We
medical workers expressed their determination in waves to go to the epicenter
to battle on the frontline. That underlines our system’s advantages, portraying
unique responses and capacities in an epidemic crisis,” said Wang.
“Upon
our arrival, the head nurse of a Wuhan hospital burst into tears after saying a
word of thanks when they finally got strong reinforcements,” he continued. “The
moment exemplified everyone’s determination to fight together against the virus
as warriors who rely on and trust their comrades.”
Wang
believes the outbreak has brought out solidarity and trust between doctors and
patients in fighting COVID-19, stressing that patients think of ways to protect
and warn each other, such as by helping medical workers avoid infection.
As
people in Hubei express their gratitude toward medical staff from across the
country who came to fight with them, many in their hometowns also staged warm
welcomes.
Some
medical team members reached by the Global Times said that the cabin crew of
their chartered planes specially sang songs for them during the flight. When
their buses were going to the quarantine hotels, police officers along the
streets gave them salute and citizens waved arms and said, “welcome back!”
According
to Fuzhou Daily, 204 members of the medical team from East China’s Fujian
Province that went to help Wuhan arrived home in capital Fuzhou on Wednesday.
Photos of medical staff and their names were broadcast on digital screens of
landmark buildings in the city on Wednesday night as a salute.
Topics
related to “triumphant withdrawal of the medical teams aiding Hubei” have been
trending on Chinese social media Tuesday.
“I
will forever be grateful to these heroic and adorable people: the medical
staff. They have risked their lives to change the situation and bring hope to
our people.” “So touching! The lovely medical team members could proudly say
that they have risked their lives for others. You are the pride of Chinese
people,” as Chinese netizens comments.
A
medical stuff from Huaian, Jiangsu province took off her masks as she finished
the aiding Hubei mission and returned home. Photo: Zhao Qirui, People’s Daily
Online
Medical teams aiding Hubei leave Wuhan with gratitude and respect from locals
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