Wuhan follow-up Nangong closed city serious patients seeking medical treatment no door

A number of neighborhoods were closed in Nangong City, Xingtai, Hebei Province, including Tianyi and Yard. (Video screenshot)

Nangong City, Hebei Province has been closed for more than 40 days and is still closed. Local citizens’ lives are under great pressure, seriously ill patients have no way to seek medical treatment, no channel to seek help, and government communication channels are closed.

Mr. Zhao, a villager from Weijiazhuang village, disclosed his Family‘s plight to the Epoch Times. His mother, who suffers from a stomach tumor, was supposed to have the third phase of chemotherapy in late January, but the local government hospital delayed and delayed, disguised as a refusal to admit him.

No news for several days after contacting ambulance

Mr. Zhao said he called the 120 emergency number to contact Nangong Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine to make an appointment for an ambulance, and the other party told him to wait in line, but he did not hear anything for several days. After he called several times, the answer is still “waiting in line”, more than half a month has been so.

“Not to mention half a month, a month can not be arranged.” He said he had recently heard that other patients had also been rejected by Nangong Hospital.

The nurse who answered the phone said she was “new to the hospital and didn’t understand the situation” and asked the reporter to ask someone from the chemotherapy department, saying it depended on whether the drugs needed for chemotherapy could come in.

Although the Communist Party has officially downgraded Nangong to a low- to medium-risk area, the city is still closed. Mr. Zhao said he was very confused, “If the ambulances were pulling those kinds of patients at the end of January, but they’re not pulling them lately either, yeah.”

On Feb. 16, Mr. Zhao contacted a private hospital, the Jinnan Great Wall Hospital, which promised to send ambulances in the next two days. The Epoch Times reporter asked an emergency doctor at the Great Wall Hospital in Ji’nan, the doctor said that the first batch of about 20 patients were accepted after the hospital was unblocked, and were divided into wards after three days of negative nucleic acid testing, and then another batch was accepted.

Government communication channels are blocked, the people have no way to feedback

Mr. Zhao had called the mayor’s hotline on Jan. 22, and he found that none of the local village and city governments’ communication channels for the people were open.

“We do need to go to the doctor, point us to a channel is good.” Mr. Zhao said.

He said his mother is a seriously ill patient and needs to be kept alive, but during government controls and city closures, there is absolutely no access to treatment for seriously ill patients.

“We have the examination documents in the provincial and municipal hospitals, but also the actual disease, whether it is directly contact the hospital or reported from our village layers, these two ends always have to pass a head ah.” He said, “It can be reported from our village, or we can call the hospital and the hospital will line us up and let the ambulance come, but neither of these two ends will work.”

After no recourse to government agencies, Mr. Zhao had to ask a volunteer to help buy some chemotherapy oral medication, which his mother can only take at Home to maintain at the moment.

He said the side effects of chemotherapy drugs are so great that his mother has to endure the pain because she cannot be hospitalized, “Chemotherapy will hurt and vomit. In the hospital, there may be the kind of pain and vomiting kind of drugs, at home, there is no kind of pain or vomiting, only chemotherapy drugs.”

The Communist Party closes the city to frequent tragedies

Mr. Zhao’s mother’s situation is not an isolated case. Over the past year or so, the Communist Party has continued to respond to the Epidemic in a violent, “one-size-fits-all” manner by sealing off cities, neighborhoods and households, and similar tragedies have occurred frequently.

In mid-January, an elderly man with a fever of 38 degrees and asthma in Zizuka Township, Nangong City, died during a phone call that was not coordinated by the department or village cadres.

A resident of Shijiazhuang could not return home because of the segregation policy, and his father was paralyzed and unattended at home in Nangong City.

A video shows a woman’s mother seeking medical attention, she was forced to go to the local party committee for help, but no one paid attention; another people’s mother-in-law had a high fever for four or five days and could not be admitted to the hospital, the community was empty and the staff avoided the patient.