Posted on 04/24/2003 8:22:07 PM PDT by zook
I am currently in Taipei, where my sister-in-law is a nurse at Hoping Municipal Hospital. This is the place where 7 SARS cases were discovered three days ago. Yesterday afternoon, after earlier claiming that the hospital would remain open and that the situation was under control, Taipei officials suddenly quarantined the entire hospital forbidding any staff, patients, or even visitors from leaving.
News reports showed people shouting and throwing messages from windows demanding to be set free. One man shouted, "I have no symptoms, I haven't been around anyone with symptoms, I have children coming home from school soon. Who is going to take care of them?"
Many visitors and staff jumped to freedom from first storey windows. This included my sister-in-law. For several hours last night, we sat with her and urged her not to report back to this potential "hell hole." On the phone with co-workers who were still trapped inside, she discovered that conditions were horrible inside. The AC had been turned off and there was not enough water, sanitary facilities, or beds to maintain a reasonably healthy environment for the over 1000 people inside.
Finally, my sister-in-law received a call from the hospital personnel officer--return tonight or lose your job and be fined $2000 (US equiv.). At that point, she packed her bag and returned, thinking that at least she might be performing some civic duty in helping the sick.
That turned out not to be the case. Today, this entire affair looks more and more like a political ploy designed to demonstrate a "tough attitude" from Chen Shuei-Bian's government and to embarrass Taipei's KMT party Mayor Ma (who will run against Chen next year). Specifically, it turns out that all but a handful of patients were transferred out of Hoping Municipal and there is no need for hundreds of non-infected nurses to remain there.
Moreover--and this is the truly revealing part -- nurses and other staff who were either on vacation or who had already tested negative for any illness were required to report back to the hospital, apparently to simply sit there in a show of government "determination."
This morning, a group of nurses painted banners and attempted to tell their story to news media outside the hospital doors. After a few minutes they were forced back inside the hospital by police and other officials. My sister-in-law is in contact with us via cell phone. She says that hospital officials have now shut down their access to television.
Her superiors inside the hospital have told her that they have no idea when they will be released. It could be two weeks, it could be longer.
Everyone understands the seriousness of SARS. But this action by Taiwan's health ministry seems clearly to be based either on panic or on the need to score political points with a frightened population. There was no reason not to allow healthy people to return home, and there was certainly no reason to force healthy people to report back to a place where they might contract the disease.
Two weeks ago my family and I elluded the virus after our trip to Beijing. Now we are on the run again, and I mean that literally, for the government is insisting that family members of hospital staff go into quarantine. Of course, we are healthy and have no intention of doing so.
Keep posting, please.
I trust freepers waaaay more than journalists...
Wow. Quite a situation
A lesson to be learned here though; When we start quarantining hospitals and buildings here we need to surround them with armed guards, National Guard or such maybe, to protect the community from people breaking quarantiine and infecting or killing the whole community.
What, and shoot them dead if they try to escape?
You've got to be kidding.
Do they have central air conditioning? I hope that's why they turned off the AC. I hope it's not too uncomfortable, or other people will be afraid to mention their contact with SARS patients for fear of being quarantined in unsanitary conditions.
She says that hospital officials have now shut down their access to television.
If the people are stuck in there for two weeks, at least they need some entertainment, even if it's just the TV.
Stay healthy, and thanks for the report.
No. Not kidding. Enforcing emergency rules vital to the survival of the community. We wouldn't quarantine a hsopital or builidng unless it was absolutely vital for public saftey in this country.
What would you do? Let irresponsible people just ignore a quarantine and run wild through your city spreading something like Ebola and maybe killing millions?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.