Is there any touching story behind the doctor?

Ye Xin Ye Xin was born in a medical family in Xuwen, Guangdong on July 9, 1956. In 1974, he was recruited into the health training team of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine. When I graduated in 1976, I was asked to work in the hospital because I ranked among the best in the nursing ability test. In 1983, she was promoted to head nurse of the emergency department of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, making her the youngest head nurse in the hospital.

The emergency department is the largest nursing unit of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, consisting of six departments: 120, rehydration room, blood drawing room, injection room, observation room, and treatment room. The "fast, timely and effective" nature of work, complex and changeable illnesses, and shocking situations require head nurses not only to have superb nursing expertise, but also to have leadership skills and calm and quick thinking skills that are fearless and decisive in the face of danger. At the moment of life and death, in a working environment with an atmosphere of pain, wailing, and helplessness, every medical staff must have a strong body and good psychological quality. For women, this is a huge physical and mental challenge. Ye Xin has been working in the emergency department for decades. Whenever patients with infectious diseases come to the emergency department, Ye Xin always takes the lead, charging ahead and trying not to let the young nurses get involved. Every time she always says: You are still young, this disease is dangerous! She treats this kind of patients with extra patience and meticulous care, without showing any disdain. For patients from poor families, she even took the initiative to spend money to buy things for them. She often said to the nurses: "It is unfortunate enough for patients to contract infectious diseases, but the psychological damage caused by social discrimination may be more painful than the pain! As nurses, we must not only solve their physical pain, but also give them The power of love, the power of life. "Once, a nurse who had just started working caused dissatisfaction with a patient when she served a patient. Ye Xin took the initiative to visit the patient's home to apologize and make self-criticism. When the Ersha Branch of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine was first established, Ye Xin took the initiative and offered to serve as the head nurse in the Ersha Emergency Department, responsible for the heavy nursing work.

In 2001, a critically ill patient from a mountainous area in Fujian went to the emergency department for treatment. As soon as his condition stabilized, he hurriedly asked to go home. Ye Xin tried her best to persuade her, but the patient refused to listen, so the department decided to send the patient home in an ambulance. Ye Xin took the initiative to apply for care along the way. After 22 hours of bumpy and nursing care, the patient got home safely, but she was too tired to straighten her back. In order to get back to work as soon as possible, Ye Xin took a flight back to Guangzhou at her own expense the next morning.

Around the Spring Festival in 2003, a type of atypical pneumonia of unknown cause began to spread in some areas of Guangzhou. Just after early February, the Ersha Emergency Department of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine began to treat patients diagnosed or suspected of SARS, with a maximum of five patients a day. Faced with a doubling of her workload, Ye Xin carefully planned and calmly deployed, and when she readjusted her classes, she arranged intensive classes. With the sharp increase in SARS patients, the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine made an immediate decision and urgently transferred some nurses from the emergency department of Ersha Branch to reinforce the hospital headquarters in the city center. There is an obvious shortage of nurses in Ersha's emergency department. Ye Xin took the lead and started working overtime on February 8.

At noon on March 4, the extremely tired Ye Xin began to have fever symptoms and was later diagnosed with SARS. In order to treat Ye Xin, the hospital set up a treatment team in the shortest possible time. Ye Xin's condition affects almost everyone's heart. Zhang Dejiang, Secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan, accompanied by Huang Yebin, Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government, and Huang Qingdao, Director of the Provincial Department of Health, personally went to the hospital to understand the treatment situation. Leaders from the Provincial Department of Health, the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Guangzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine also provided technical, material, and equipment support to rescue Ye Xin.

At 1:30 a.m. on March 25, 2003, less than a week after the patient Ye Xin rescued and the one who infected her with SARS was discharged from the hospital in good health, Ye Xin left forever. She lost her beloved position, comrades and relatives at the age of 47.

When Ye Xin served as head nurse, she always regarded cultivating nursing talents as an important task in the undergraduate department. She often uses her lunch break to give professional lessons to the nurses, and lets the girls who have just entered the emergency department practice acupuncture on her.

When Ye Xin served as head nurse, she never gave up studying new knowledge. She always mastered the latest technology as soon as possible. In 1995, the paper "Application Research on the Treatment and Nursing Care of Bedsores with Ayurveolar Fluid" won the third prize of Science and Technology Progress Award of Guangdong Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, achieving a breakthrough in scientific and technological innovation of the hospital's nursing topic. Until his death, *** published 13 papers.

Ye Xin is a person with a calm personality. She does not seek to be well-known, but only values ??dedication. As a leader, her tolerance, peace, integrity, tolerance, showmanship and fairness deeply impressed her colleagues and friends. A young nurse in the department once said poetically: Nurse Ye is simply the embodiment of sunshine and smile, so transparent and bright. It is common for her to work overtime and cover shifts, especially during holidays, she will take the initiative to arrange work for herself. After Ye Xin passed away, her lover said movingly: "Ye Xin and I have been married for 22 years, but we only spent the Spring Festival at home together during the year of our marriage. She spent the rest in the hospital."

On April 16, 2003, "Health News" published the newsletter "Forever White Warrior - Remembering Ye Xin, the head nurse of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine", telling the touching story of head nurse Ye Xin's tenacious fight against SARS regardless of personal safety. .

Ye Xin was born on July 9, 1956, in a medical family in Xuwen County, Guangdong Province.

In 1974, he was recruited to study in the health training team of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine.

Graduated in 1976 and was admitted to work in the hospital because he ranked among the best in the nursing proficiency test.

In 1983, he was promoted to head nurse of the emergency department of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, making him the youngest head nurse in the hospital. When the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine established its Ersha branch, Ye Xin took the initiative to serve as the head nurse in the Ersha Emergency Department, responsible for the heavy nursing work. I have been working as a head nurse in the emergency department for twenty consecutive years.

In 1995, the paper "Application Research on the Treatment and Nursing Care of Bedsores with A Yellow Membrane Solution" won the third prize of Science and Technology Progress Award of Guangdong Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, achieving a breakthrough in scientific and technological innovation in the hospital's nursing topics. . Until his death, *** had published *** 13 papers.

In 2001, a critically ill patient from a mountainous area in Fujian went to the emergency department for treatment. As soon as his condition stabilized, he hurriedly asked to go home. Ye Xin tried her best to persuade her, but the patient refused to listen, so the department decided to send the patient home in an ambulance. Ye Xin took the initiative to apply for care along the way. After 22 hours of bumpy and nursing care, the patient got home safely, but she was too tired to straighten her back. In order to get back to work as soon as possible, Ye Xin took a flight back to Guangzhou at her own expense the next morning.

Around the Spring Festival in 2003, a type of atypical pneumonia of unknown cause began to spread in some areas of Guangzhou. Just after early February, the Ersha Emergency Department of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine began to treat patients diagnosed or suspected of SARS, with a maximum of five patients a day. Faced with a doubling of her workload, Ye Xin carefully planned and calmly deployed, and when she readjusted her classes, she arranged intensive classes. With the sharp increase in SARS patients, the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine made an immediate decision and urgently transferred some nurses from the emergency department of Ersha Branch to reinforce the hospital headquarters in the city center. There is an obvious shortage of nurses in Ersha's emergency department. Ye Xin took the lead and started working overtime on February 8.

At noon on March 4, Ye Xin began to have fever symptoms and was later diagnosed with SARS. In order to treat Ye Xin, the hospital set up a treatment team in the shortest possible time. Ye Xin's condition affects almost everyone's heart. Zhang Dejiang, Secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan, accompanied by Huang Yebin, Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government, and Huang Qingdao, Director of the Provincial Department of Health, personally went to the hospital to understand the treatment situation. Leaders from the Provincial Department of Health, the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Guangzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine also provided technical, material, and equipment support to rescue Ye Xin.

At 1:30 in the morning on March 25, 2003, less than a week after the patient Ye Xin rescued and the one who infected her with SARS was discharged from the hospital in good health, Ye Xin passed away forever. She lost her beloved position, comrades and relatives at the age of 47.

On the afternoon of March 29, the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine held a farewell ceremony for Ye Xin’s body in the Qingsong Hall of the Guangzhou Funeral Home. All staff gave her a final farewell.

The wreaths are like a sea and the tears are like rain.

On April 16, 2003, "Health News" published the newsletter "Forever White Warrior - Remembering Ye Xin, the head nurse of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine", telling the story of head nurse Ye Xin's tenacious fight regardless of her personal safety. The touching story of SARS.

Her hearty laughter still seems to be echoing in the department, and patients still seem to remember her always busy figure and her spring breeze-like concern and comfort. However, in March when everything is recovering, 47-year-old Ye Xin, the head nurse of the emergency department of Ersha Branch of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, passed away forever. She fell on the battlefield fighting SARS day and night.

The lover who is the CEO of the company does not believe that his wife, who always takes it calmly and calmly, and that danger and death never seem to really enter her bright eyes, will leave him and his wife who is still in college forever. son. In the past, he didn't even know how much his family's water and electricity bills were, but now he has to rely on his father and son to take care of himself, starting from cooking and washing. He endured his grief and took Ye Xin's beloved work clothes and swallow-tailed hat from the department where she worked, so that she could say her final goodbyes. Because, "She likes work clothes, no matter how old or worn out she is." With tears in his eyes, he told the reporter who went to interview: "Actually, Ye Xin knew the dangers of fighting SARS this time. Two weeks before she fell ill, we even canceled the weekend dinner party with the elderly. When the disease became serious, When it hit, Ye Xin faced it. She didn’t become a deserter. We are proud of her! “It’s dangerous here, let me come.”

Around the Spring Festival this year, an atypical disease with unknown cause occurred. Pneumonia began to spread in some areas of Guangzhou. Just after early February, the Ersha Emergency Department of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine began to treat patients diagnosed or suspected of SARS, with a maximum of five patients a day. Faced with a doubling of her workload, Ye Xin carefully planned and calmly deployed, and when she readjusted her classes, she arranged intensive classes. Invisible diseases are invisible and intangible. Even if you are fully armed, sometimes you cannot prevent them. Overloaded and stressful work often leaves people no time to take care of loose masks; severe physical overdraft allows diseases to take advantage of the situation. Some nurses fell ill, and Ye Xin was worried. Every day when she went to work, the first thing she did was to fetch boiled water and preventive medicine, and watch everyone take them. She earnestly reminded everyone to implement various isolation measures. From doctors to caregivers, no one should be left behind. The rigor and conscientiousness of his inspections are almost to the point of being picky.

With the sharp increase in SARS patients, Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine made an immediate decision and urgently transferred some nurses from the emergency department of Ersha Branch to reinforce the hospital headquarters in the city center. There is an obvious shortage of nurses in Ersha's emergency department. Ye Xin took the lead and started working overtime on February 8. When she was busy, she even refused to answer calls from her family.

This is a difficult blocking battle.

During the treatment of SARS patients, head nurse Ye noticed that many critically ill patients often suffered from other serious diseases at the same time. The originally weak body is obviously no match for the new disease, and multiple organ failure may occur at any time. At this moment, saving lives requires not only a high sense of responsibility, but also superb technology and full collaboration among medical staff. Mr. Liang, a patient with existing coronary heart disease and undergoing cardiac bypass surgery, came to the emergency department due to fever and cough. His condition deteriorated sharply in a short period of time, with difficulty breathing, irritability, cyanosis, heart failure, and respiratory failure. Nurse Ye Xin rushed over quickly and skillfully raised the hospital bed so that the patient was in a semi-sitting and recumbent position. At the same time, he administered oxygen through a mask, connected the bedside electrocardiogram, blood pressure and oxygen saturation monitors, and intravenously injected cardiotonic drugs and vasoactive drugs. Drugs, respiratory stimulants, monitoring heart rate, blood pressure, respiration... Two hours later, the patient was finally out of danger. Nurse Ye ignored the rest and dragged her exhausted body back to rescuing another patient. Because there are still nursing tasks for Xian Bo in bed 7 and Gao Bo in bed 9 who are on ventilators, waiting for her to check... In this way, high-risk, high-intensity, and high-efficiency work has always been with Ye Xin. She was like a never-tiring machine running at full speed, snatching one patient after another from the hands of death. But who would have thought that at this moment, Ye Xin was enduring the torment of her own illness to complete rescue and care operations again and again.

However, as time went by, Nurse Ye's condition never improved.

I don’t know how many people are thinking about Nurse Ye. I don’t know how many people ask with concern as soon as they go to work, "How is Nurse Ye, is it getting better?" Ye Xin's condition affects almost everyone. heart. Zhang Dejiang, Secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan, accompanied by Huang Yebin, Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government, and Huang Qingdao, Director of the Provincial Department of Health, personally went to the hospital to understand the treatment situation. Leaders from the Provincial Department of Health, the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Guangzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine also provided technical, material, and equipment support to rescue Ye Xin. Not long after Ye Xin was transferred to the ICU ward, it was no longer convenient for her to speak because she was wearing a mask. One day, facing the doctor who came to treat her, she suddenly and urgently motioned to the nurse to hand her a paper and pen, and wrote tremblingly: "Don't come close to me, you will be infected." The nurse handed the paper to her colleague in tears, but Everyone is still not afraid of danger and actively rescues people. Dean Lu Yubo recalled: "When Ye Xin was first admitted to the hospital, I went to see her. She was afraid that I would get close, so she said from a distance, 'I can withstand 39 degrees Celsius!'" Director Zhang Zhongde, who has now recovered, choked with sobs. Ye Xin and I were both infected at the time and were living in the ICU ward together. We often wrote notes to encourage each other.”

No matter how many people’s efforts and calls, they could not keep Ye Xin from leaving in a hurry. footsteps! Less than a week after the last patient she rescued, who also infected her with SARS, was discharged from the hospital in good health, at 1:30 a.m. on March 25, Ye Xin left her beloved position, comrades, and relatives forever. ! On the afternoon of March 29, all the staff of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine paid her final farewell in the Qingsong Hall of the Guangzhou Funeral Home. The wreaths are like a sea and the tears are like rain. In the portrait, what is left to people is an eternal smile. "Ye Xin is a book, every page is burning with the passion of life"

A medical expert who is familiar with Ye Xin said: "Ye Xin is a book, every page is burning with the passion of life" Passion and passionate pursuit.”

Ye Xin was born in Xuwen, Guangdong in 1956 into a medical family. In 1974, he was recruited into the health training team of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine. Soon, young Ye Xin stood out from the nursing class students at the same time. When she graduated in 1976, she ranked among the best in the nursing ability test. Ye Xin stayed in the hospital to work. Time flies. In 1983, due to her outstanding work performance, Ye Xin was promoted to the head nurse of the emergency department of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine. She was the youngest head nurse in the hospital. The emergency department is the largest nursing unit of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine and consists of six departments: 120, rehydration room, blood drawing room, injection room, observation room, and treatment room. The "fast, timely and effective" nature of work, complex and changeable illnesses, and shocking situations require head nurses not only to have superb nursing expertise, but also to have leadership skills and calm and quick thinking skills that are fearless and decisive in the face of danger. At the moment of life and death, in a working environment with an atmosphere of pain, wailing, and helplessness, every medical staff must have a strong body and good psychological quality. For women, this is a huge physical and mental challenge. Ye Xin has been working in the emergency department for twenty years. Colleagues will never forget that whenever patients with infectious diseases came to the emergency department, Ye Xin always took the lead and charged forward, trying not to let the young nurses get involved. Every time she always says: You are still young, this disease is dangerous! She treats this kind of patients with extra patience and meticulous care, without showing any disdain. For patients from poor families, she even took the initiative to spend money to buy things for them. She often said to the nurses: "It is unfortunate enough for patients to contract infectious diseases, but the psychological damage caused by social discrimination may be more painful than the pain! As nurses, we must not only solve their physical pain, but also give them The power of love, the power of life. "

In 2001, a critically ill patient from a mountainous area in Fujian went to the emergency department for treatment. As soon as his condition stabilized, he urgently asked to go home. Ye Xin tried her best to persuade her, but the patient refused to listen, so the department decided to send the patient home in an ambulance. Ye Xin took the initiative to apply for care along the way. After 22 hours of bumpy and nursing care, the patient got home safely, but she was too tired to straighten her back. In order to get back to work as soon as possible, Ye Xin took a flight back to Guangzhou at her own expense the next morning.

During Ye Xin’s nursing career, her warm care touched countless desperate patients. Saving lives and healing the wounded has become a part of her humanity, and nursing work is almost an instinctive devotion to Ye Xin! Dean Lu Yubo could not forget that Ye Xin joined the health training team of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine at the same time as him after returning to the city as an educated youth. After he became the dean, Ye Xin only had two interviews with him on the phone. Once, when the Ersha branch was just established, she took the initiative to serve as the head nurse in the Ersha Emergency Department, responsible for the heavy nursing work; another time, when a nurse who had just started working served patients caused dissatisfaction among the patients, Ye Xin took the initiative. Go to the patient's home to apologize, and then call him to criticize yourself.

With the rapid development of emergency technology and the rapid updating of emergency treatment equipment, Ye Xin has never given up on studying new knowledge. She is always the first to grasp the latest technology, even those little nurses who think highly of themselves feel ashamed. In 1995, Ye Xin won the third prize of the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine's Scientific and Technological Progress Award for her "Application Research on the Treatment and Nursing Care of Bedsores with A Yellow Membrane Liquid", achieving a breakthrough in scientific and technological innovation in the hospital's nursing subjects. Until her death, she published 13 papers.

When Ye Xin served as head nurse, she always regarded cultivating nursing talents as an important task in the undergraduate department. She often uses her lunch break to give professional lessons to the nurses, and lets the girls who have just entered the emergency department practice acupuncture on her. Hospital leaders joked: The emergency department is the window for the hospital to train and transport talents. Ye Xin is a person with a calm personality. She does not seek to be well-known, but only values ??dedication. As a leader, her tolerance, peace, integrity, tolerance, showmanship and fairness deeply impressed her colleagues and friends. A young nurse in the department once said poetically: Nurse Ye is simply the embodiment of sunshine and smile, so transparent and bright. It is common for her to work overtime and cover shifts, especially during holidays, she will take the initiative to arrange work for herself. After Ye Xin passed away, her lover said movingly: "Ye Xin and I have been married for 22 years, but we only spent the Spring Festival at home together during the year of our marriage. She spent the rest in the hospital."

On Ye Xin's desk, there was a thick work record written on the back of a discarded laboratory test sheet. Bit by bit, her footsteps of fighting in this smokeless battle are recorded, embodying her lifelong love and pursuit of the nursing profession.

"Write Sincerity with Life"

On the battlefield against SARS, the vast number of medical workers held high the banner of Bethune's spirit, were selfless and fearless, charged forward, and wrote with their lives A magnificent chapter of saving lives and helping the wounded.

In the season when the magnolia flowers were blooming, Ye Xin, the head nurse of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, passed away forever. She died on the battlefield against SARS. Before her death, she left an unforgettable sentence: This place is dangerous, let me come.

Leaving risks to yourself and leaving safety to patients is the lofty spiritual state of countless medical workers. It was thanks to the tenacious fight of a large number of soldiers in white that the spread of SARS was curbed. Only then can the people enjoy a peaceful life.

——"People's Daily" commentary on April 18: "People's health is more important than Mount Tai"

"Every great doctor must have no desires and desires when treating diseases, and vow to provide universal salvation." The suffering of the soul. Don't look forward or backward, worry about good or bad luck, protect your body and life, and go to rescue with all your heart, whether it's cold or hot, hungry, thirsty, or tired." The first of the masterpieces of traditional Chinese medicine, "Essential Prescriptions for Emergencies," advocates that doctors must carry forward the humanitarian spirit of saving lives and healing the wounded, and be "proficient" in their profession and "sincere" in their moral character. Only in this way can they be "great doctors" with both ability and political integrity.

This article "The Sincerity of Great Doctors" is exactly what Ye Xin, the head nurse of the Ersha Emergency Department of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, was admitted to the "Health Training Team" of the hospital in 1974 and officially entered the medical school. A lesson.

Having been the head nurse of the emergency department at the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine for 23 years, whether it was on-site first aid to a critically ill migrant worker who jumped from a building, taking the lead in caring for AIDS drug addicts, or risking his life to rescue SARS patients, Ye Xin always There is no "looking forward and backward, worrying about good or bad luck". She used her own life to write the "sincerity" of Chinese great medicine.

In the early morning of March 24, 2003, Ye Xin, who unfortunately fell ill while rescuing SARS patients, died in the line of duty at the age of 46.

In the past few days, reporters have visited Ye Xin’s family, friends, colleagues, patients and attending doctors (responsible for her pre-death rescue work) to pursue the immortal spirit of this angel in white.

Distribute medicine and soup to everyone every day

Be sure to personally supervise everyone to take preventive medicine with boiled water, even the cleaners are no exception

Starting from February, The Ersha Branch of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine continues to receive cases of atypical pneumonia. Since front-line medical staff at the Dade Road General Hospital had been infected by infectious diseases before, Nurse Ye Xin was particularly cautious.

Every morning, she returns to the department half an hour early to prepare preventive medicines for everyone and distribute them to every doctor, nurse, and caregiver, including the cleaners. Some preventive drugs have strong side effects, and Ye Xin must personally supervise everyone to take them with boiled water.

Before entering the ward, Ye Xin repeatedly emphasized various preventive measures: change into work clothes, shoes, and socks; wear masks, hats, and goggles; change isolation gowns before entering the isolation ward; wash hands, gargle.

During the days when she was fighting against SARS, she only slept for a few hours every day, but she still never forgot to cook a pot of Laohuo soup before going to bed, sometimes with American ginseng and sometimes with Cordyceps sinensis. , she would take it back to the hospital the next day and give it to her colleagues to drink to improve their immunity.

Always keep the danger to yourself

When faced with critically ill patients with infectious diseases, she takes the lead, sometimes even behind closed doors to rescue them, not allowing too many people to intervene. No one can be sure. On which day and time did the nurse become infected with SARS? Every time a suspected or confirmed patient is sent to the department, she and the director of the emergency department take the lead, shouldering the heavy medical care work. Sometimes they even perform rescue operations behind closed doors to prevent too many colleagues from intervening.

"I have checked this patient's temperature, listened to his lungs, and suctioned sputum. Please don't go in and try to reduce the chance of infection." In the days of fighting against SARS, these words made people angry. Many young nurses were in tears.

"Mr. Ye may have been infected on February 24." Nurse Xiaorong recalled that night, a 40-year-old patient with acute abdominal intestinal obstruction discovered that after emergency surgery, She also had SARS symptoms such as high fever and lung shadows, so she was sent to the emergency room and hospitalized for observation. She soon developed respiratory failure. Chief Ye was on the front line, cooperating with doctors to perform tracheal intubation and put on a ventilator. The patient had a lot of secretions at that time, which may have been sprayed on the head nurse during the rescue...

"It may have been caused by the infection when the head nurse Ye was cleaning after Xiao Chen fell ill." Nurse Xiao Yu knew it I remember that after the first nurse infection occurred in the department at the end of February, Nurse Ye had been thinking hard, wondering which link was not done enough to allow the virus to take advantage of it. She personally disinfects every phone, cleans every door handle, and inspects and disinfects where work clothes are placed, where work shoes are changed, and where insoles are placed. Xiao Yu believed that Chief Ye had been exposed to so many suspicious poisonous substances during disinfection, so he might have been infected at that time.

"Maybe it was on the morning of March 1st that four of our medical staff fell ill after rescuing the patient." Zhang Zhongde, director of the emergency department who also fell ill, has an unforgettable memory of that rescue situation. Huai: Three days later, at 12 noon, 6 pm and 10 pm on March 4, Nurse Ye, Director Zhang and Dr. Jiang of the emergency department had fevers and were quarantined respectively. On the same day, the anesthesiologist also fell ill.

At 8:10 a.m. on March 1, the emergency department was changing shifts. The family member of an 87-year-old suspected SARS patient rushed into the doctor's office: The patient is not alive! Nurse Ye and others rushed to the patient's bed: they saw the patient's face and lips were purple, his breathing was weak, and the regular electrocardiogram turned into chaotic waves... Everyone immediately evacuated the other three patients and their family members in the ward, and then Emergency chest massage, artificial respiration, cardiac electric shock, establishment of intravenous access, repeated injection of first aid and cardiotonic drugs, intubation and ventilator... At 9:15 in the morning, the patient died after resuscitation failed. This was a highly dangerous patient. Everyone knew that they should put on an isolation gown before rescuing him, but during the more than an hour of rescuing, no one was willing to leave the patient even for a few minutes to protect themselves.

Lying in the hospital bed and still thinking about work

When the doctors and nurses approached her, she struggled to write on the paper "Don't come near me, it will be contagious"

Isolation treatment In the early days, Ye Xin could still make phone calls. She called back to the department every day, asking everyone to remember to take preventive medicine, asking colleagues who came into contact with her to pay attention to physical examinations, asking the nurse to record the urine output of the patients in bed 7, turn over and pat the back of the patients in bed 9...

On the fourth day of illness, she developed difficulty breathing and was sent to the intensive care unit ICU together with the director of the emergency department. Everyone put on oxygen masks and could only encourage each other by sending text messages and writing notes. Everyone jokingly said that the nurse and director of the emergency department were "spoken" in the ICU...

In order to reduce the number of colleagues, Exposing her to the chance of being infected, she gave herself rehydration fluids. When doctors and nurses came close to her to listen to her lungs and suction sputum, she struggled to write on the paper: "Don't come close to me, you will be infected." When the dean and other colleagues came to visit, she wrote: "I am very hard, but I endure it." You can live in it. Thank you for your concern, but don’t come to see me in the future. I don’t want to infect everyone.” On March 11, Director Zhang of the Emergency Department received the last note from Nurse Ye: “I am. I can’t stand it anymore and I need to be put on a ventilator.” Director Zhang, who was also having difficulty breathing, wrote tremblingly: “Nurse, you must hold on! All the doctors and nurses in the hospital are supporting us!”

Director Zhang never waited for Protector Ye’s reply. After she was intubated and put on a ventilator, she was injected with sedative drugs to enter a "hibernation" state to prevent her from falling off the ventilator due to agitation. When she passed away in the early morning of March 24, Ye Xin was very calm.

On the same day, a patient in the ICU recovered and was discharged. He was the patient with intestinal obstruction combined with atypical pneumonia that Ye Xin risked his life to rescue on the evening of February 24. In order not to leave a shadow on his future life, no one told him when he was discharged from the hospital: the nurse who rescued him is now sleeping in the hospital where she dedicated half her life. Concentrate experts to do their best to rescue