| Superfast  hospital 
in  Wuhan ready  China (China Daily) -- A  1,000-bed hospital in Wuhan, Hubei province, will begin receiving highly  contagious pneumonia patients on Monday, less than 10 days after construction  began.The new facility will ease the shortage of beds in the  city resulting from an increasing number of patients infected with the novel  coronavirus.
 Medical personnel from the People’s Liberation Army  will take over the new Huoshenshan Hospital, with a total of 1,400 expected to  start receiving and treating patients on Monday.
 
                    
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                      | A  medical worker in a People’s Liberation Army unit gives a thumbs-up upon her  arrival at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport in Hubei province on Sunday. 
 |                      A second special hospital for the treatment of the  novel coronavirus - Leishenshan Hospital - is under construction in Wuhan. It  is expected to be completed on Wednesday and start receiving patients the  following day.The military assistance was approved by President Xi  Jinping, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central  Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission.
 Huoshenshan Hospital, with a floor area of 34,000  square meters, will deal primarily with patients who have confirmed coronavirus  infection. It is a copy of Beijing Xiaotangshan Hospital, which was built in  seven days in a Beijing suburb in April 2003 during the outbreak of severe  acute respiratory syndrome. Its purpose was exclusively to treat SARS patients,  and it played a key role in prevention and control of the deadly disease.
 Construction of Huoshenshan Hospital, in suburban  Wuhan, formally started on Jan 25 to cope with the rapidly increasing number of  people infected with the coronavirus. At the peak of the massive construction  project, more than 4,000 workers and about 1,000 construction machines and  trucks were on the site.
 The majority of the 1,400 medical personnel who will  treat patients in the hospital come from hospitals administered by the PLA  Joint Logistic Support Force, with others from PLA Ground Force Medical  University, PLA Navy Medical University and PLA Air Force Medical University.
 Fifteen experts from the PLA Centre for Disease  Control and Prevention and the PLA Academy of Military Science’s Military  Medical Institute will join them to offer professional consultation.
 Many personnel involved in this operation, the largest  mobilisation of the PLA’s medical forces since the devastating earthquake in  Sichuan province in May 2008, are experienced in handling infectious diseases  because they took part in fights against the 2003 SARS outbreak in China and  the Ebola epidemic in western Africa in 2014.
 Since the outbreak of the novel coronavirus in Wuhan  in December, infections have leaped across China. New cases have also been  reported in other countries.
 The number of confirmed cases rose to 14,380 on the  Chinese mainland on Saturday, including 304 deaths, according to the National  Health Commission. Hubei, the hardest-hit province in the outbreak, reported  9,074 confirmed cases as of Saturday, including 294 deaths, the provincial  health commission said on Sunday morning.
 In Wuhan, the number of confirmed cases reached 4,109  on Saturday, accounting for nearly 30 percent of all cases on the Chinese  mainland.
 Bai Xuejian, a publicity officer from China  Construction Third Engineering Bureau Co, a leading builder of the hospital,  said the company was given the task by the authorities in Wuhan on Jan 23, with  construction formally beginning two days later.
 To ensure timely completion, construction work was  done in shifts 24 hours a day. Strict disease control and prevention measures —  such as requiring workers to wear masks and sterilisation of the whole  construction site — were enforced, he said.
 Xu Ming, a project manager at Wuhan Construction  Group, said he has been on duty every day since the project began.
 “The workers are organised in two  or three shifts for 24 hours a day. And for me, I have to keep supervising and  coordinating to ensure the work is done according to requirements,” he said,  speaking through his mask on Sunday at the construction site. “Everything has  been in a rush, keeping everyone so busy that getting no sleep at night is  normal.”
 The construction process of both  new hospitals has been livestreamed online every day since the start of the  projects. The live streaming videos provide a bird’s-eye view of the  construction sites, with workers, excavating machines and trucks racing to make  the deadline.
 Although construction of  Huoshenshan Hospital was expected to be finished on Sunday, Xu and his  colleagues may continue working for the hospital for maintenance, he said.
 “We have to take care of the  workers and ensure they are not infected with the virus, such as giving them  masks for free and taking their body temperatures every day,” he said.
 Also on Sunday, the PLA Air Force  used eight of its large transport planes to ferry medical personnel and  supplies from the military to Wuhan to aid with disease prevention and control.
 The eight aircraft, from an  aviation division of the Air Force branch of the PLA Central Theater Command,  landed at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport in Hubei province with 795 medical  personnel from the armed forces and 58 metric tons of equipment and materials.  They came from Shenyang, Lanzhou, Guangzhou and Nanjing.
 It was the largest nonmilitary  operation of the Air Force’s transport fleet since April 2010, when many planes  were deployed for earthquake aid in Qinghai province, according to the Air  Force.
 Aircraft from the aviation  division also transported three medical support teams from the military on Jan  24, Chinese New Year’s Eve.
 Wu Peixin, an aviation observer in  Beijing, said Sunday’s operation showed the Air Force’s ability to mobilise a  large transport unit on short notice.
 “It showed that the crews are well  trained and prepared to respond to emergencies and difficult missions like  this,” he said.
 
 (Latest Update February 4, 2020
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