Inside China's first dedicated coronavirus hospital: Pictures reveal 1,000-bed Wuhan unit that will be open to patients tomorrow after being built in just EIGHT DAYS
- Huoshenshan will be able to receive at-risk coronavirus patients from tomorrow and was built in eight days
- 269,000-square-foot building is one of two new emergency hospitals in China created for disease patients
- Some 1,400 military medics from the People's Liberation Army will be in charge of the new hospital
An emergency hospital that was constructed in eight days for the treatment of coronavirus patients in China has been completed.
Construction on Huoshenshan, a hospital with 1,000 beds, was finished today and it will be able to receive patients from tomorrow, state media said.
The 269,000-square-foot building is one of two new hospitals that has been constructed in Wuhan in the wake of the World Health Organisation's declaration of global emergency.
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Construction on Huoshenshan, a hospital with 1,000 beds, was finished today and it will be able to receive patients from tomorrow, state media said

The 269,000-square-foot building is one of two new hospitals that has been constructed in Wuhan in the wake of the World Health Organisation's declaration of global emergency

Building design was based on a Beijing hospital that was constructed to help tackle the SARS virus in 2003
The design for the buildings was based on a Beijing hospital that was constructed in 2003 to help tackle the SARS virus.
Engineers from across the country were reportedly brought in to help speed up construction.
Like the hospital in Beijing, the Wuhan centre will be made out of prefabricated buildings.
The hospitals will either be allowed to take supplies from other hospitals or order them from factories.

Pictured: Medical staff with coronavirus patient in Wuhan, China

Engineers from across the country were reportedly brought in to help speed up construction

Like the hospital in Beijing, the Wuhan centre will be made out of prefabricated buildings

The hospitals will either be allowed to take supplies from other hospitals or order them from factories
China's army has reportedly been given control of the hospital. Some 1,400 military medics have been brought in from the People's Liberation Army to the new hospital, dubbed 'Fire God Mountain', according to state media.
The official Xinhua news agency said many of the staff were involved in the fight against another coronavirus, SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome), which killed some 650 people in mainland China and Hong Kong in 2002-2003.
It is one of two makeshift medical facilities that the authorities decided to build in order to relieve hospitals swamped with patients in Wuhan, the central city at the epicentre of the national health emergency.

Chinese tourists wearing protective masks queue at Don Mueang airport in Bangkok, Thailand, as they wait to board flights back to China

Some 1,400 military medics have been brought in from the People's Liberation Army to the new hospital, dubbed 'Fire God Mountain', according to state media. Pictured is the mayor of Wuhan handing over the hospital to the deputy commander in chief of China's army

The official Xinhua news agency said many of the staff were involved in the fight against another coronavirus, SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome)
People in the city of 11million people, which has been under quarantine for more than a week, have complained of waiting hours in line to see a doctor.
The new coronavirus, which is believed to have originated at a wild animal market in Wuhan, has killed more than 300 people and infected another 14,000.
The second field hospital, 'Thunder God Mountain', is set to start admitting patients on Thursday, with 1,600 beds - 300 more than originally planned.

People in the city of 11million people, which has been under quarantine for more than a week, have complained of waiting hours in line to see a doctor

During the SARS outbreak about 4,000 people reportedly worked day and night to build the hospital in seven days

People work at a workshop of a medical equipment company in Qinhuangdao, north China's Hebei Province

Workers make protective suits at the workshop of a company in Jinxian County, east China's Jiangxi Province

People work at a workshop of a medical equipment company in Qinhuangdao, north China's Hebei Province

Workers make protective masks at the workshop of a company in Jinxian County, east China's Jiangxi Province
During the SARS outbreak about 4,000 people reportedly worked day and night to build the hospital in seven days.
Only one of the 305 people who have died from the disease has been outside of China, in the Philippines.
As the coronavirus death toll in China today rose to 304 and the World Health Organisation has declared a global emergency, it has also emerged:
- There are now almost 10,000 people infected, mostly in China, with cases in 25 countries and territories including the US, Canada, France, Italy and Germany with Sweden the latest;
- After two days of uncertainty, a Boeing 747 rescue plane carrying mainly British citizens took off from the city of Wuhan last night, touched at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire. It left China carrying 83 Britons - but had been expected to be carrying 150 – it had space for 450-plus passengers;
- Dozens of expats with seats booked were left stranded in China after being given between seven minutes and two hours to get to the airport in city with public transport shut down; Foreign Office now in 'urgent discussions' with EU countries about a second rescue flight back from Wuhan;
- Wirral residents furious that the 83 Britons being evacuated from China will be housed in NHS unit in the area;
- Scientists writing in prestigious medical journal The Lancet estimate that up to 75,800 individuals in Wuhan, the centre of the outbreak, may have been infected with the new coronavirus by January 25 – significantly more than the official toll of 2,639 in the deserted city

Medical workers inspect the CT (computed tomography) scan image of a patient at the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University

A medical worker helps a patient with CT (computed tomography) scan at the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University

Workers make protective suits at the workshop of a company in Jinxian County, east China's Jiangxi Province
Quite amazing. Could do with some of these worker...
by manyana 1825