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Cai Weiping, a doctor in Guangzhou, capital
of south China's Guangdong Province, returned to work
earlier this month after recovering from atypical
pneumonia. "Atypical pneumonia is a severe disease, but
curable," Cai told Xinhua in an interview, "The
month I spent fighting it was a nightmare, but I finally
woke up." "We should not fear it," he said.
Medical workers are vulnerable to atypical
pneumonia since they have close contact with infected
patients. Cai came down with a fever at midnight on February
13 and was sent to the hospital two days later.
"I had been working hard and was totally
worn out during the period leading up to February
13," he said.
During the first six days,
he suffered from fever and a slight bowel disorder,
as if he had caught the flu, but he had no cough, Cai said.
On the sixth day, doctors diagnosed his illness as
atypical pneumonia after discovering the shadowy
image in his lung x-ray.
"On the tenth
day, the severe fever hit me again, and I began to have
difficulty breathing, " he said, "This is
what we usually call the 'peak'."
Assisted by an artificial respirator and
treated with antibiotics, hormones and nutrients, his
condition improved and his breathing difficulty was
gradually alleviated.
Cai left the hospital on
March 13, just a month after he was infected with the
disease.
"It was torturous to breathe
while I was ill," he said, "But I was cured of the
disease thanks to proper treatment."
Cai
stayed home for about 20 days before returning to work.
According to the public health administration
of Guangdong, 911 atypical pneumonia patients have been
cured thus far, accounting for 79 percent of the total 1,153
patients.
"I continue to tell my patients
to stand up to the disease instead of being
frightened and frustrated," Cai said.
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