Ye Xin, a model hero in the fight against SARS, gave her precious life on the battlefield against SARS. Ye Xin was named one of the 100 people who touched China since the founding of New China. Below is the touching story of Ye Xin that I share with you. Everyone is welcome to read and learn.
Ye Xin’s touching story 1
Face the disease when it hits
Ye Xin knew the dangers of fighting SARS this time. Two weeks before she fell ill, we even canceled our weekend dinner party with the elderly.
Ye Xin’s lover is always calm and calm, calm and calm. He believed that danger and death would never really come into his bright-eyed wife; he believed that his wife would never leave him and his son who was still in college. However, Ye Xin fell on the battlefield fighting SARS day and night. In the past, he didn't even know how much his family's water and electricity bills were, but now he has to rely on his father and son to take care of himself and his son, starting from cooking and washing. He endured his grief and took Ye Xin's beloved work clothes and swallowtail hat from the department where she worked, so that she could say her final goodbyes. Because, "She likes work clothes, no matter how old or shabby they are, she likes them." With tears in his eyes, he told the reporter who went to interview: "Actually, Ye Xin knew the danger of fighting SARS this time. Two weeks before she fell ill, we even canceled the weekend dinner party with the elderly. When the disease became serious, When the attack came, Ye Xin faced it. She did not desert, and we are proud of her."
Taking the lead and working overtime
When she was busy, Ye Xin even refused to answer her family. Call to inquire. I just said to the girl who answered the phone, "Tell him, I'm in class. It's okay."
In February of this year, the Ersha Emergency Department of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine began to discover cases of SARS and suspected SARS. The number of patients peaked at 5 per day. Faced with a doubled workload, head nurse Ye Xin made careful plans and arranged intensive classes. In order to prevent the disease from infecting her colleagues, the first thing she did when she went to work every day was to fetch boiled water and preventive medicine, and watch them take them with her own eyes. She earnestly reminded everyone to take various isolation measures, and everyone from doctors to nursing staff took care of them. The rigorous and serious inspections were almost to the point of being picky.
As the number of SARS patients increased dramatically, the work intensity of the department continued to increase. Ye Xin took the lead and started working overtime on February 8. When he was busy, he even refused to answer calls from family members. He just said to the girl who answered the phone, "Tell him, I'm in class. It's okay."
"I have checked this patient's temperature, listened to his lungs, and suctioned sputum, so don't go in." , to minimize the chance of infection." In the days of fighting against SARS, Ye Xin's words made many young nurses cry.
Mr. Liang, a patient with existing coronary heart disease who had undergone heart bypass surgery, came to the emergency department due to fever and cough. His condition deteriorated sharply in a short period of time, with difficulty breathing, irritability, cyanosis, heart failure, and respiratory failure. . Nurse Ye Xin rushed over quickly, skillfully raised the hospital bed so that the patient was in a semi-sitting and recumbent position, used a mask to inhale oxygen, connected the bedside electrocardiogram, blood pressure and oxygen saturation monitor, and injected intravenous cardiotonic drugs, vasoactive drugs, Respiratory stimulants, monitoring heart rate, blood pressure, and respiration? Two hours later, the patient was finally out of danger. Nurse Ye couldn't care less about rest, and dragged her exhausted body back to rescuing another patient. Because there are still critically ill patients on ventilators, including Xian Bo in bed 7 and Gao Bo in bed 9, waiting for her to check? In this way, high-risk, high-intensity, and high-efficiency work has always been with Ye Xin.
"It's dangerous here, let me do it!" Ye Xin and Zhang Zhongde, director of the Ersha Emergency Department, silently made a sincere choice without regrets. Ye Xin tried his best to take over the examination and rescue of critical SARS patients. , treatment, and nursing work, and sometimes even shut out colleagues, with harsh words and no possibility of negotiation. However, misfortune soon occurred.
February 24th was a tense but ordinary day for Ye Xin. When I was working the night shift the night before yesterday, I felt sore all over my body and very tired. Since the emergence of SARS patients in the emergency department, she no longer has the concept of holidays or weekends. In recent times, she has obviously felt low in energy, especially cervical spondylosis, lumbar spondylosis and knee joint disease, which seem to be coming at once, but there are too many things that require her in the emergency department, and she can't let go.
In the morning, an acute abdomen patient with suspected intestinal obstruction came to the emergency department. At the same time, some of the patient's symptoms attracted the great attention of medical staff. The suspicion was finally confirmed: it was SARS again! The patient's condition took a turn for the worse, and all serious symptoms appeared. This was a severely "toxic" patient! Nurse Ye and members of the expert team quickly launched rescue work. The patient was finally brought back from the brink of death. But it was at this time that SARS broke into Ye Xin, who had been fighting on the front line for many days.
"Don't come close to me, you will be infected."
Facing the doctor who came to treat her, she suddenly and eagerly motioned to the nurse to hand her a paper and pen, and wrote tremblingly: "Don't come close to me, it will be contagious." The nurse tearfully handed the paper to these colleagues.
In the early morning of March 4, Ye Xin came to the department as early as usual. She had been tired all morning. She didn’t drink a sip of water or eat a sip of food. She only felt pain all over her body and had to crawl into bed with great effort. rest.
Just after noon, the extremely tired head nurse Ye began to have fever symptoms and had to go to the ward for isolation and observation. The body temperature is rising and rehydration is dripping, but Nurse Ye is still worried about several critically ill patients in the department. Through the call device, colleagues in the emergency department heard her weak but kind voice again: "How much urine is produced every 2 hours in bed 7? Critically ill patients should turn over on time and take good care of their skin and oral cavity!"
The disease finally did not let her go. It was diagnosed that Ye Xin contracted SARS, and she had to be admitted to the headquarters of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, where she had worked for 27 years. In the first few days, whenever medical staff came for examination and treatment, she always repeatedly told them to wear an extra set of isolation gowns and multiple layers of masks. She even proposed to take care of herself: "I am an old head nurse, what can't I do?" When the hospital leaders came to visit, the first thing she talked about was not her illness, but reviewing her own shortcomings, blaming herself for accidentally contracting the disease, and giving the hospital and the The leader caused trouble. On the fourth day of the illness, she had difficulty breathing and was sent to the intensive care unit (ICU) with the director of the emergency department. According to Ye Xin's colleagues, everyone wore oxygen masks and could only rely on sending text messages and writing notes. Encourage each other. One day, facing the doctor who came to treat her, she suddenly and urgently motioned to the nurse to hand her a paper and pen, and wrote with difficulty: "Don't come close to me, it will be contagious." The nurse handed the paper to these colleagues with tears in her eyes. When the dean and other colleagues came to visit, she wrote: "It's hard for me, but I can bear it. Thank you for your concern, but don't come to see me in the future. I don't want to infect everyone."
March On the 11th, Director Zhang of the emergency department, who also suffered from SARS, received the last note from Nurse Ye: "I really can't stand it anymore and I need to be put on a ventilator." After she was intubated and put on the ventilator, she was put on the ventilator. The patient was injected with sedative drugs to enter a "hibernation" state to prevent the ventilator from being detached due to agitation.
Experts tried their best to save her but failed
Guangdong Provincial Party Committee Secretary Zhang Dejiang entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan also attended the meeting with Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government Huang Yebin and the Provincial Health Department Accompanied by Director Huang Qingdao, he went to the hospital in person to understand the treatment situation.
In order to treat Ye Xin, the hospital set up a treatment team in the shortest possible time and sought support from across the country. During an expert consultation, President Lu Yubo heard that an expert in Tianjin had unique experience in treating multiple organ failure. He called the expert in Tianjin that night. The expert was moved by President Lu's eagerness and sincerity. I took the first flight to Guangzhou the next morning.
However, as time went by, Ye Xin's condition never improved. I don’t know how many people are praying for Ye Xin. I don’t know how many people ask with concern as soon as they go to work, "How is the head nurse Ye? Is it getting better?" Ye Xin's condition affects almost everyone's hearts. Zhang Dejiang, Secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan, accompanied by Huang Yebin, Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government, and Huang Qingdao, Director of the Provincial Department of Health, personally visited the hospital to understand the treatment situation. Leaders from the Provincial Department of Health, the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Guangzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine also provided technical, material, and equipment support to rescue Ye Xin.
No matter how many people’s efforts and calls, they could not stop Ye Xin from leaving in a hurry! Not long after the patient she rescued who was also the one who infected her with SARS was discharged from the hospital in good health. One week later, at 1:30 a.m. on March 25, Ye Xin left her beloved position, comrades, and relatives forever!
On the afternoon of March 29, Qingsong Hall of Guangzhou Funeral Home, Guangzhou Central All the hospital staff are here to give her a final farewell. The wreaths are like a sea and the tears are like rain. In her portrait, what is left to people is her eternal smile.
Ye Xin’s touching deeds 2
Ye Xin was born on July 9, 1956, into a medical family in Xuwen, Guangdong. In 1974, he was recruited into the health training team of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine. When I graduated in 1976, I was asked to work in the hospital because I ranked among the best in the nursing ability test. In 1983, she was promoted to head nurse of the emergency department of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, making her the youngest head nurse in the hospital.
The emergency department is the largest nursing unit of the Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine. It consists of six departments: 120, rehydration room, blood drawing room, injection room, observation room, and treatment room. The "fast, timely and effective" nature of work, complex and changeable illnesses, and shocking situations require head nurses not only to have superb nursing expertise, but also to have leadership skills and calm and quick thinking skills that are fearless and decisive in the face of danger. At the moment of life and death, in a working environment with an atmosphere of pain, wailing, and helplessness, every medical staff must have a strong body and good psychological quality. For women, this is a huge physical and mental challenge. Ye Xin has been working in the emergency department for decades. Whenever patients with infectious diseases come to the emergency department, Ye Xin always takes the lead, charging ahead and trying not to let the young nurses get involved. Every time she always said: You are still young, this disease is dangerous! She treats this kind of patients with extra patience and meticulous care, without any dislike. For patients from poor families, she even took the initiative to spend money to buy things for them. She often said to the nurses: "It is unfortunate enough for patients to contract infectious diseases, but the psychological harm caused by social discrimination may be more painful than the pain! As nurses, on the one hand, we must solve their physical pain, and more importantly, we must provide them with The power of love, the power of life. "Once, a nurse who had just started working caused dissatisfaction with a patient when she served a patient. Ye Xin took the initiative to visit the patient's home to apologize and criticize herself.
When the Ersha Branch of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine was first established, Ye Xin took the initiative and offered to serve as the head nurse in the Ersha Emergency Department, responsible for the heavy nursing work.
In 2001, a critically ill patient from a mountainous area in Fujian went to the emergency department for treatment. As soon as his condition stabilized, he hurriedly asked to go home. Ye Xin tried her best to persuade her, but the patient refused to listen, so the department decided to send the patient home in an ambulance. Ye Xin took the initiative to apply for care along the way. After 22 hours of bumpy and nursing care, the patient got home safely, but she was too tired to straighten her back. In order to get back to work as soon as possible, Ye Xin took a flight back to Guangzhou at her own expense the next morning.
Around the Spring Festival of 2003, a type of atypical pneumonia of unknown cause began to spread in some areas of Guangzhou. Just after early February, the Ersha Emergency Department of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine began to treat patients diagnosed or suspected of SARS, with a maximum of five patients a day. Faced with a doubling of her workload, Ye Xin carefully planned and calmly deployed, and when she readjusted her classes, she arranged intensive classes. With the sharp increase in SARS patients, the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine made an immediate decision and urgently transferred some nurses from the emergency department of Ersha Branch to reinforce the hospital headquarters in the city center. There is an obvious shortage of nurses in Ersha's emergency department. Ye Xin took the lead and started working overtime on February 8.
At noon on March 4, Ye Xin, who was extremely tired, began to have fever symptoms and was later diagnosed with SARS. In order to treat Ye Xin, the hospital set up a treatment team in the shortest possible time. Ye Xin's condition affects almost everyone's heart. Zhang Dejiang, Secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, entrusted Secretary-General Cai Dongshi to express condolences to her and her family; Vice Governor Lei Yulan, accompanied by Huang Yebin, Deputy Secretary-General of the Provincial Government, and Huang Qingdao, Director of the Provincial Department of Health, personally visited the hospital to understand the treatment situation. Leaders from the Provincial Department of Health, the Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Guangzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine also provided technical, material, and equipment support to rescue Ye Xin.
At 1:30 a.m. on March 25, 2003, less than a week after the patient Ye Xin rescued and the one who infected her with SARS was discharged from hospital in good health, Ye Xin passed away forever. She lost her beloved position, comrades and relatives at the age of 47.
During her tenure as head nurse, Ye Xin always regarded cultivating nursing talents as an important task in the undergraduate department. She often uses her lunch break to give professional lessons to the nurses, and lets the girls who have just entered the emergency department practice acupuncture on her.
During her tenure as head nurse, Ye Xin never gave up studying new knowledge, and she always mastered the latest technology as soon as possible. In 1995, the paper "Application Research on the Treatment and Nursing Care of Bedsores with Ayurveolar Fluid" won the third prize of Science and Technology Progress Award of Guangdong Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, achieving a breakthrough in scientific and technological innovation of the hospital's nursing topic. Until his death, *** published 13 papers.
Ye Xin is a person with a calm personality. She does not seek fame, but only dedication. As a leader, her tolerance, peace, integrity, tolerance, showmanship and fairness deeply impressed her colleagues and friends. A young nurse in the department once said poetically: Nurse Ye is simply the embodiment of sunshine and smile, so transparent and bright. It is common for her to work overtime and cover shifts, especially during holidays, she will take the initiative to schedule work for herself. After Ye Xin passed away, her lover said movingly: "Ye Xin and I have been married for 22 years, but we only spent the Spring Festival at home together during the year of our marriage. She spent the rest in the hospital."
On April 16, 2003, "Health News" published the newsletter "Forever White Warrior? Remembering Ye Xin, the head nurse of Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine", telling the touching story of head nurse Ye Xin's tenacious fight against SARS regardless of personal safety.
Posthumous anecdotes
In the early morning of March 25, 2003, Ye Xin left her fighting post forever. According to Ye Xin's wish, her husband Zhang Shen asked the hospital to put Ye Xin into a nurse uniform and send her on her last journey of life.
In that year, the 88-year-old famous cartoonist Brother Liao Bing was moved by Ye Xin's bravery and mobilized the whole society to establish the "Ye Xin Head Nurse Fund" to reward those who have made contributions in the fight against SARS. Nurses who contribute. Regardless of his advanced age, Brother Liao Bing personally wrote "Sincerity as a Great Physician" on the statue of Ye Xin. "Great doctor is sincere" is the portrayal of Ye Xin's life. "Excellent" in his profession and "sincere" in his moral character.
The Nightingale Medal, awarded every two years, is the highest honor and praise for nurses in the international medical community. Although the application deadline had already passed, Ye Xin's outstanding contribution and her inspiring role in the fight against SARS made the International Committee of the Red Cross accept it as an exception. On May 12, 2003, the International Committee of the Red Cross awarded Ye Xin the Nightingale Award. Ye Xin used her life to fulfill Nightingale’s famous saying: “In the terrible illness and death, I saw the sublimation of the divine heroism of human nature.
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