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Beijing Review Exclusive Home> Web> Special> Aftermath of the Quake> Beijing Review Exclusive
UPDATED: May-31-2008 NO. 23 JUN.
The Good Neighbor
Chongqing has given all-out support to neighboring Sichuan as it struggles to cope in the aftermath of a massive earthquake
By LI LI

 YOU MADE IT: Premier Wen Jiabao visits seven-year-old Wang Jiaqi in hospital, who was comforted by Wen when she was rescued from debris of collapsed building on May 13

Despite a six-hour operation for a pelvic fracture and the prospect of three months on his back, Zhong Yi is in good spirits. Injured when his workplace collapsed during the Wenchuan earthquake, he is now cared for in a hospital in neighboring Chongqing, a municipality that has led the way in helping victims of the disaster.

Looking back on the events of May 12, when the quake hit, Zhong joked that it could have been punishment from God for his childhood naivety, when a much smaller quake hit the region.

In 1976, people in Zhong's township, Hanwang in Mianzhu City, were warned of an imminent quake following an earthquake that flattened Tangshan in north China and killed 242,000 residents. Worried about the possibility of a deadly earthquake, Zhong's parents started to stock bread. Zhong, who was then only four years old and considered bread a delicacy, asked his mother each day, "Why hasn't the earthquake come? Only then can I eat bread, right?"

An earthquake did come to Zhong's township later in the year, but according to Zhong's mother, it was a weak one and no house in the neighborhood collapsed.

An earthquake of the magnitude Zhong imagined as a child did eventually come to his hometown on May 12 this year, almost killing him. Buried in the debris of the collapsed buildings of his company for 10 hours, he was finally dug out by a rescue team using their bare hands. Zhong, a salesman of a mining company, had survived, but his apartment and possessions were destroyed.

What gives him optimism now about his near-death experience is both the resilient nature of Sichuan people and the quality of medical care he has received.

SMILE AGAIN: Eight-month-old Zhao Shuirong, who was injured on her left leg by collapsed buildings during the earthquake, plays with one of her many toys given by visiting volunteers in Children’s Hospital of Chongqing Medical University

After a check-up at a hospital in Deyang, one of the worst-hit cities during the earthquake, he was assured that he had no life-threatening injuries. As the hospital in Deyang was flooded with patients from the earthquake and focusing all its medical resources on saving lives, Zhong was transferred to Southwest Hospital under No.3 Military Medical University, a military hospital and one of the best hospitals in Sichuan's neighboring Chongqing Municipality. Arriving in Chongqing with another 61 injured people after a five-hour ambulance trip on May 16, they were the first government organized transfer of patients out of Sichuan Province.

"I felt happy when told that they wanted to transfer me to a military hospital. Soldiers from the air force saved my life and I was sure a military hospital would also treat me well," Zhong told Beijing Review.

Zhong is satisfied with the medical treatment he has received so far and is particularly happy that his elder sister and his mother, who are helping to take care of him, have been given free accommodation at a hotel near the hospital compound. The hospital has also arranged for the children of patients to attend the hospital kindergarten. To help a small number of injured people who lost contact with their families in Sichuan, the hospital published the personal information of new patients on its website and in some local newspapers every day.

Zhong's wife, who works as a nurse at a hospital in his hometown, is busy disinfecting earthquake debris and taking care of mildly injured people. She has visited her husband once since he was hospitalized in Deyang.

"We immediately asked her to leave and to go back to work," said Zhong. "I will be taken care of and I have great faith in our government."

All-out medical support

By May 26, Southwest Hospital had received more than 160 injured people from the earthquake zone, from five to 96 years old, the majority of whom had injury complications and urgently needed operations. Xu Jianzhong, Director of the Department of Orthopedics that accommodated most of the injured people, said while two thirds of surgeons in his department had joined the hospital's rescue teams stationed in the earthquake zone, the remaining four surgeons at the hospital were conducting operations on the injured from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. almost every day.

The hospital sent out its first medical team to Sichuan less than nine hours after the earthquake, becoming the first medical team from Chongqing to Sichuan. The hospital's second medical team of 35 people had to climb mountains for several miles with medical equipment on their shoulders to reach Yingxiu Town, amid landslides caused by aftershocks on May 14. They were the first medical team to arrive in the devastated town.

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