

The picture shows Changkai Guo, director of the Department of Otolaryngology at Wuhan Hanyang Hospital, who examines the patient.
Xinhuanet Wuhan, March 31 (Han Jun) "Finally!" On March 29, Changkai Guo, director of the Department of Otolaryngology, at Wuhan Hanyang Hospital, took a small fishbone from the throat of a 2-year-old kid. After the parents of the child who stood to wait anxiously heard the doctor, the stone in his heart finally fell.
At 11:45 in the morning, a young couple hurried to the emergency room of the Hanyang Hospital with a child in line to register. The child slumped on his father's shoulders, without a smile and looked uncomfortable had tears in the corners of his eyes.
The nurse who was in charge of measuring body temperature at the door saw this, and there were many patients in line in front of the registration, immediately contact the ENT department to explain the situation and let the nurse at the information desk pay for the registration fee on behalf of the patient. After arranging the work in hand, the nurse takes the green pass and takes the patient and family to the doctor.
The director of the department Changkai Guo asked the child's father to understand the situation and then started the inspection work. He asked frequently, " Are there any discomforts?" A small fishbone was taken from the child's throat.
Seeing the fishbone taken out, the young couple was relieved. The child's father said, "If the hospital did not open a green channel and the fishbone was not removed in time, we wouldn't know what to do."
Since the outbreak of the virus, Wuhan Hanyang Hospital has insisted on opening a normal consultation channel 24 hours a day to provide consultation services for patients. More than 80% of the medical staff in the Department of Otolaryngology of Hanyang Hospital adheres to the front line every day, risking infection, opening outpatient clinics, and taking over the consultation work of people in Wuhan and surrounding areas.