China's last severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) patient
was discharged from the Beijing Ditan Hospital on Friday.
The female patient, a 49-year-old retired doctor surnamed Zhang,
left the ward at 7:40 in the evening on a wheeled bed. Wearing an
oxygen mask, Zhang gave a thumbs up to the people waiting
outside.
"Thanks to the doctors for giving me a second life," Zhang said
in a feeble voice. She was then put into an ambulance.
She was later transferred to the non-SARS Guangwai Hospital for
further medical treatment due to other illnesses she had before her
SARS infection.
Zhang's departure indicated the end of the medical efforts
against the disease in the country and all Beijing's seven SARS
patients lived through the epidemic, said Mao Yu, president of the
Ditan Hospital.
The epidemic that first broke out in China in spring 2003
appeared again on April 22 in the country and seven people were
confirmed as SARS patients. The first-found patient surnamed Li, a
20-year-old female, was a nurse in Beijing's Jiangong Hospital.
Zhang once shared the same ward with Li in the Jiangong Hospital
and was sent to the Ditan Hospital on April 22. She already
suffered seven other kinds of diseases and became the most serious
case among all the seven peoples.
The X-ray check indicated that the shadow on Zhang's lung has
basically disappeared and her body temperature stayed steadily at
37 Celsius degrees without use of man-made hormone, Mao said.
He said Zhang had met the conditions for being removed from SARS
isolation but needed further medical treatment for other
illnesses.
The disease was effectively controlled without any infection of
medical staff or other patients thanks to careful preparation and
prompt medical efforts, said the official, adding that the hospital
worked out detailed remedies for each patient to obtain the best
result.
"The medical resolution was personalized to fit each individual
case," and that might be the most different aspect from last year,
Mao said.
After the outbreak in 2003, the health authority at all levels
improved its mechanism to deal with emergency cases and the medical
staff have gained experience on how to handle such situations, he
said.
The Ditan Hospital also enhanced its equipment and management of
the SARS intensive care unit (ICU), which efficiently prohibited
cross infection, the official added.
The first SARS case was found in the Foshan City of south
China's Guangdong
Province in November 2002.
China was seriously hit by the outbreak of the epidemic in 2003.
Last year, a total of 5,327 SARS cases were reported on the Chinese
mainland, 4,959 patients were cured and discharged from
hospital.
The death toll from the disease in China stood at 349. Of the
total figure, 2,521 SARS cases and 193 deaths from the disease were
reported in Beijing.
The Ditan Hospital will resume normal operation in a week or so
as it implements thorough disinfecting measures on Saturday.
(Xinhua News Agency May 22, 2004)