On May 31, Shanghai has entered summer.

At the entrance of the New Jin Jiang Hotel, nearly 500 aid workers from Hubei Medical Team wore uniform red uniforms and were immersed in laughter and laughter.

During the epidemic in Shanghai, the entire Hubei medical team sent more than 1,500 people to support Shanghai, and the two-month mission was successfully completed.

And they were also the medical team that stuck to the last retreat, stationed in Shanghai for 58 days.

  In the crowd, a burly middle-aged man looked at the smiling faces of young medical nurses, thoughtful and exhausted.

The first financial reporter recognized him at a glance - Dr. Xia Jiaan, director of Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital.

  When the epidemic in Wuhan was the worst two years ago, Xia Jiaan charged into the front line of the temporary treatment ward, and forged a deep friendship with Zhong Ming, director of the intensive care unit of Zhongshan Hospital of the Shanghai Aid to Hubei Medical Team who rushed to Wuhan at that time.

As soon as the Shanghai epidemic alert sounded, on April 3, Xia Jiaan led the medical team of Jinyintan Hospital to support Shanghai.

  Looking at the jubilation in front of him, and looking back at the hardships of the past two months, Xia Jiaan stroked his hair.

"My hair has turned white for two months, and I still had black hair when I came here." He smiled and told the First Financial Reporter, "The pressure is too great."

  This kind of pressure is different from the epidemic in Wuhan two years ago. At that time, life and death were contested every day. The pressure of this Shanghai epidemic came from the test of maintaining "zero deaths" in Fangcang shelter hospitals.

  For the past two months, Xia Jiaan has not been able to sleep soundly every day.

"You don't dare to turn off your mobile phone, for fear that there will be an emergency at night, you have to conduct remote guidance, and you may even have to rush to the cabin in the middle of the night." He told the first financial reporter, "Fortunately, such a thing did not happen, we are sick. The district's record of 'zero deaths' also remained until the end."

  Xia Jia'an supported the fourth ward of the W1 cabin of the Xinguobo Fangcai Hospital. The W1 cabin was completed on April 21, and the treatment of mild patients and asymptomatic infections was changed from the treatment of ordinary patients with new coronary pneumonia with underlying diseases. That is, it has become a sub-designated hospital.

  This change has made Xia Jiaan's task a hundred times heavier. Although the number of beds has decreased, the situation that medical staff need to deal with is more complicated and the work intensity is greater.

In the ward in charge of Xia Jiaan, there are more than 20 patients over 80 years old with underlying diseases, among which the oldest is 102 years old, and there are some disabled elderly people.

This is completely different from the cabin situation in Xia Jiaan's impression.

  For the past month, Xia Jiaan got up at 5 o'clock every day, and learned professional knowledge of other disciplines online at 6 o'clock to better treat patients. Drenched all over.

  On the morning of May 28, Xia Jiaan officially completed the shift work of the new National Expo cabin, and finally breathed a sigh of relief.

"The Shanghai medical team took over our work. To be honest, I still feel a little reluctant to let go of those patients." He told a reporter from China Business News.

  Behind Xia Jiaan's "tough guy" image, he is actually "soft-hearted".

During the epidemic in Wuhan, he continued to work hard because he couldn't bear to see the front-line nurses who were fighting the epidemic. He burst into tears in an interview with CCTV.

  The day he left the cabin was also Xia Jia'an's 47th birthday. This birthday spent in Shanghai during a special period was unforgettable for him.

On the same day, Xia Jiaan received a text message from her daughter who was far away in Wuhan: "Happy birthday to Dad." A plain birthday wish moved Xia Jiaan for a long time.

"Two months is a bit long, and I really miss my family and my daughter very much." He told a reporter from China Business News.

  Xia Jiaan originally expected that the Hubei medical team might evacuate later, but he also felt obliged to stick to the end.

"Wuhan and Shanghai have many similarities. When I walk on Nanjing Road in Shanghai, I feel exactly the same as walking on Nanjing Road in Wuhan. There is a magnetic field of mutual sympathy between the two cities." Xia Jiaan express.

  The two months in Shanghai also brought Xia Jiaan closer to his colleagues.

"Originally, my colleagues in other departments thought I was a serious person. After getting along with each other for the past two months, they felt that I was very friendly. Everyone has become familiar with each other from being unfamiliar with each other. Thanks to Shanghai." He told the first financial reporter express.

  When parting, Xia Jiaan sent a video to a teammate who had fought together in Wuhan, Professor Zhong Ming from Zhongshan Hospital. At this moment, Zhong Ming was still wearing a "handwashing suit", fighting the front line of the new crown treatment in Pudong.

  "All the medical workers who have experienced the Wuhan epidemic, including me and Zhong Ming, actually have psychological difficulties." Xia Jiaan told China Business News reporter, "The impact at that time was too strong, and it didn't slow down until the past two years. Come slowly, and now I have experienced the epidemic in Shanghai, I hope it will be the last time."

  Author: Qian Tongxin