Silent
trips in the fight against COVID-19 pandemic
02:39
Since the coronavirus outbreak began in HCM City, every
day has been a busy one for health workers at Emergency Centre 115.
In addition
to transporting emergency patients to health facilities, they have been
assigned a new task: transporting COVID-19 cases and those suspected of
having coronavirus to health facilities and quarantine areas.
Medical
staff at the centre are working harder than ever despite rising temperatures
in the city.
They have
become the "silent transporters" in the fight against the disease.
Dr Do Ngoc
Chanh, the centre's deputy director, said since the end of December
2019, Emergency Centre 115 had been preparing plans to cope with the
pandemic after reports started filtering from across the world.
"We
were one of the first units in Vietnam to prepare a response plan because we
were aware that HCM City was at high risk. Everything had to be prepared
early," Chanh said.
On the 29th
day of the last lunar month of the Year of the Pig (2019), the first two
COVID-19 cases appeared in Vietnam and in HCM City.
Since then,
the entire centre has been put on "red alert".
Dr Dao Thi
Bich Hang, acting head of the centre's Administration Department, said on the
second day of the Lunar New Year, they received a phone call from a resident
reporting a tourist suspected of being infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus in
District 3.
A team from
Emergency Centre 115 fully prepared protective gear and rushed to the scene.
“To be
honest, at that time, we still had not received instructions on how to
investigate the virus, so when someone called to report suspected infections,
we prepared protective clothing before approaching patients," said
Dr Hang.
The team on
duty that day were concerned, and their fears were only allayed when doctors
at Hospital for Tropical Diseases reported that the tourist did not
have coronavirus, she said.
On January
31, the centre received a call from a hotel reporting that a man from the US
who had passed through Wuhan Airport was showing symptoms of the
disease.
He was
promptly treated and isolated to avoid spreading the disease, Dr Do Ngoc
Chanh said.
Since then,
the staff at the hospital have had many sleepless nights and unfinished
meals.
Vo Lam Khoi
Nguyen, a driver, said he was disinfecting his car after each trip,
and was always on call.
Even at
11pm, the phone was still ringing non-stop for the drivers to pick
up patients or suspected cases to health facilities, and sometimes they
were returning home at 5am.
Another new
day began after a sleepless night.
Hundreds of
such trips have taken place during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I have
experienced many pandemics but this is the most stressful, especially with people
coming from abroad. Sometimes we have to transport 7-8 COVID-19 patients and
suspected cases a day, not including daily emergency cases," said Pham
Quoc Viet, head of the team, who has worked at the centre for nearly 30
years.
It
takes 5-6 hours for each trip because the quarantine sites are far
from the city, he said.
“Drivers are
not allowed to rest along the way when they are transporting patients or
suspected cases to hospitals or quarantine zones. We have to leave our
personal needs behind," Viet said.
The protective
clothing, mask and gloves in cars without air conditioning makes it tougher.
"It's
like torture," Nguyen said with smile.
That's the
job. They all work hard to fight the pandemic.
The phone
rings and they're off again.
VNS
|
Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 4, 2020
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