On June 10, with the midsummer breeze and drizzle, the buses carrying members of the Zhejiang and Jiangsu Provincial Aid Shanghai Intensive Medical Teams left their respective stations one after another.

So far, all Shanghai-aided medical teams in the current round of epidemic in Shanghai have completed their rescue missions and evacuated from Shanghai.

  As the Shanghai-aiding team that sticks to the end, the two medical teams always adhere to the concept of "people first, life first", and in the ICU ward where the treatment and nursing of patients are the most difficult, they fight with the devil and race against death.

  "Our mission is over. I am proud to be in such a team. The recovery of patients is our greatest expectation!" said Yu Li, a nurse in the emergency department of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine before leaving. .

  On April 19, the Zhejiang Provincial Aid Shanghai Critical Care Medical Team arrived in Shanghai, and then connected with the Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital Lingang Branch and the Pudong New Area Gongli Hospital's Department of Critical Care Medicine. The 130 team members were divided into two groups and quickly formed in the two hospitals. And each took over the 16-bed ICU ward.

  "Bring the heaviest patients to the Zhejiang team, and other wards that need help from the Zhejiang team, please bring it up at any time." Cai Hongliu, the leader of the Zhejiang Provincial Aid Shanghai Critical Care Medical Team and the secretary of the temporary party branch, said that on the front line of severe treatment, the Zhejiang team Always defy difficulties and charge ahead.

  On April 22, on the night that the intensive care unit of Gongli Hospital began to treat patients, Cai Hongliu and deputy team leader Wang Xiaorong led the team to treat 5 critically ill patients with new coronary pneumonia from 9:00 pm to 4:00 am the next day.

  "In the ICU, there is no distinction between day and night. The monitoring alarm that rings at any time not only witnesses the impermanence of life, but also witnesses the continuation of hope. I hope our perseverance can exchange for more 'together'." Yu Li said .

  "Xingguang doesn't ask the passers-by, time pays off." Looking back on more than 40 days of combat experience, Cheng Zhangjun, the leader of the Jiangsu Provincial Aid Shanghai Critical Care Medical Team and the secretary of the temporary party branch, was filled with emotion.

  On April 24, the Jiangsu Provincial Aid Shanghai Critical Care Medical Team rushed to Shanghai. The 130 team members were divided into two teams. The first team of 80 people took care of the two sub-severe wards of Shanghai Geriatrics Medical Center, G9 and G10, and the second team of 50 people. The People's Reorganization System took over the Department of Critical Care Medicine of the Eighth People's Hospital of Shanghai.

  From the initial face of imperfect equipment and technical conditions, the team members "renovated" the work area by themselves, to cooperate with the hospital to receive patients in an orderly manner, implement goal-oriented management strategies, strengthen the screening and identification of high-risk patients, and advance the treatment threshold Moving forward... Cheng Zhangjun led the team members to use wisdom and sweat to help the Eighth People's Hospital build an ICU team that "can't be taken away".

  Cheng Zhangjun said that because most of the critically ill patients in the ICU are the elderly and lack the ability to take care of themselves, the team members treat the patients as their relatives, feeding them, cutting their hair, cleaning their beards, etc. For patients whose conditions permit, help them get out of bed early and use wheelchairs. or walking exercise.

  "Only if we devote ourselves wholeheartedly, can the patient be reborn. The trust and affirmation of the patient's family is the best compliment for the critically ill medical staff. I firmly believe that Shanghai will have a better tomorrow!" Cheng Zhangjun said. 

  (Reporter Yuan Quan)