International Nurses Day highlights contribution of modern Nightingales

Xinhua
Among the 42,600 medical workers dispatched to support virus-hit Hubei Province, about 28,600 are nurses, accounting for almost 70 percent of the total.
Xinhua

Whenever there is a public health scare, people often think of doctors. But the coronavirus pandemic has put the spotlight on an overlooked group in the health-care sector — nurses.

Tuesday, or May 12, is International Nurses Day, an annual celebration of the crucial work of nurses around the world. To Liu Hui, head nurse in the Department of Intensive Care Unit Center at Jiangsu Province Hospital, the novel coronavirus has left an indelible mark on her career.

On May 10, after more than 70 days of work at a hospital in Wuhan and a fortnight quarantine, Liu and six other colleagues — the last batch of intensive care specialists that stayed in Wuhan to treat severely ill COVID-19 patients from Jiangsu Province Hospital, were finally freed.

“I’m back, and you can rest easy,” the nurse told her mother.

Her colleague, Chu Minjuan, held back her tears as her husband kept saying: “It’s good to have you back. It’s good to have you back.”

Liu and her team arrived in Wuhan on the night of February 13 and they immediately threw themselves into their work. The next day, all the 61 beds at the hospital’s intensive care unit they took over were full.

“COVID-19 patients have to be isolated from their family members, so the nurses take complete charge. They perform a range of roles and have to know how to use ventilators, monitors, hemodialysis machines, ECMO, and other pieces of life-saving equipment,” Chu said.

According to Qiu Haibo, deputy Party secretary of Zhongda Hospital Southeast University in Jiangsu, many COVID-19 patients had symptoms called “silent hypoxemia” — their lips were not purple like in hypoxia, and their heart and respiratory rates not as fast, but their condition can worsen in the twinkle of an eye.

“They, therefore, require more close observation from us on the subtle changes of their conditions and we must timely communicate with doctors,” said Chu.

“Doctors and nurses are comrades in arms. Doctors prescribe the strategy of therapeutic solutions while nurses carry out the therapy, check patients’ condition, and communicate directly with the patients,” she said.

In China’s battle against the novel coronavirus, high-quality nursing service has made great contributions to reducing the death rate of the epidemic.

According to the National Health Commission, among the 42,600 medical workers dispatched to support virus-hit Hubei Province, about 28,600 are nurses, accounting for almost 70 percent of the total.

Nurses account for more than half of all the world’s health workers, providing vital services throughout the health system. Historically, as well as today, nurses are at the forefront of fighting epidemics and pandemics that threaten health across the globe, according to the State of the World’s Nursing Report 2020 released by the World Health Organization. The report also highlighted that about 90 percent of all nurses around the world are female and calls for continued efforts in optimizing the female-dominated domain.

China, too, has worked hard to attract more men to join the nursing ranks. Fan Leilei, a 23-year-old male nurse, graduated from a nursing school in 2018. In less than two years, he has built up experience in critical care and was dispatched to the frontline in Hubei.

Fan was among the third batch of Shanghai medics to travel to Hubei on January 28. He and his colleagues worked in pairs on four-hour shifts. Their work involved feeding the patients, helping them turn over, changing sheets and diapers for them.

“Both women and men have their advantages in nursing,” said Fan. “In the face of a situation like this, we have our own merits in terms of physical strength, energy and operation of various medical devices.”

The hospital Fan works at has set up a team consisting purely of male nurses. The team, named after Nightingale, who is known as the fundamental philosopher of modern nursing, is a move to help attract more males to join nursing in China.

The theme of this year’s International Nurses Day is “A voice to lead — Nursing the world to health,” illustrating how nurses can overcome a wide range of health issues.

Among the 42,600 medical staff sent to Hubei, almost 90 percent were born after 1980 and 40 percent were born after 1990. The total number of nurses in China reached 4.45 million by the end of 2019, 350,000 more than the previous year.


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