(Combating new crown pneumonia) Yichang, Hubei, a new crown pneumonia mother cured and discharged from hospital without infection

China News Network Yichang, March 1 (Zhou Hanfei, Shu Dexi, Han Yi) A neonatal pneumonia mother in Yichang, Hubei was cured and discharged from the Jiangnan District of Yichang Central People's Hospital on the afternoon of February 29. The newborn was not infected.

The mother's surname is Nie, 29 years old. When Ms. Nie was 38 weeks pregnant, five people in her family were diagnosed with new coronary pneumonia.

As the designated hospital for the treatment of pregnant women in Yichang, Yichang Central People's Hospital received the news. He Wencong, the vice director of obstetrics at the hospital and the person in charge of the obstetrics isolation ward at Jiangnan Hospital, contacted Ms. Nie as soon as possible and worked out a checkup plan.

On February 10, He Wencong drove Ms. Nie to the hospital in a private car and decided to perform a cesarean section operation that night. That night, Ms. Nie gave birth in a maternity isolation ward set up in the hospital and gave birth to a baby boy.

The mother was carefully cared for by the medical staff at the hospital. Photo by Xu Ninghong

He Wencong said that the operation was smooth and the mother and child were safe. After the mother and newborn were born, they were transferred to the isolation ward and the neonatal isolation ward for follow-up care and diagnosis and treatment. Six days after surgery, Ms. Nie was diagnosed with new coronary pneumonia.

Ms. Nie said that she and her son were carefully cared for by medical staff during the hospital stay. In the pediatric isolation ward, the attentive nurses also wrote a growth diary for the baby, and named the diary "Tianci's Baby".

Medical staff often used mobile phone videos to "meet" Ms. Nie and her son. "My baby was not infected with new coronary pneumonia, which strengthened my confidence in fighting the disease." Ms. Nie said that every time she and her son made a video, she learned that her son's health was good and she was very happy.

On the 29th, Ms. Nie showed negative results of the two new coronavirus nucleic acid tests, which met the discharge criteria. At the time of discharge, the Pediatric Isolation Ward gave this "God-Caught Baby" to both mother and son, hoping that they would be healthy and happy.

It is understood that after the mother and child are discharged from the hospital, they will continue to be observed for 14 days in accordance with the new coronary pneumonia diagnosis and treatment process. "Our family decided to donate blood plasma after recovery, to do a little to fight the epidemic." Ms. Nie said. (Finish)