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Chinese Hospital Helped Prevent COVID-19 Outbreaks In San Francisco's Chinatown

SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX 5) -- One of San Francisco's most densely populated neighborhoods -- considered a high risk for the spread of COVID-19 -- managed to stay ahead of the curve with the over a century-old Chinese Hospital leading the way.

San Francisco Chinatown was considered a potential COVID-19 hot spot, where thousands of people cram into single room occupancy residences called SROs.

"We were worried," said Chinese Hospital CEO Dr. Jian Zhang.

Zhang realized the serious risk early on when China deployed doctors to COVID-19's ground zero in Wuhan, during Chinese New Year, a major holiday.

"You don't leave family unless something is really important, something is really bad," Zhang noted.

The hospital's doctors like Jennifer Chen recognized Bay Area infections could explode.

"A lot of our patients go back and forth between China, Hong Kong as well as the United States," Dr. Chen said.

Two months before San Francisco sheltered in place, Dr. Zhang pleaded for PPE over social media. Donations from China and the U.S. poured in.

"It was overwhelming support from people all over the world," she said.

And on local Chinese language media, the hospital spread the word on washing hands and social distancing.

Patient and hospital donor Arthur Chan listened.

"Jian convinced me use a face mask. I'm very stubborn, I don't want to use it," Chan said.

The result: only a handful of COVID-19 infections ended up at Chinese Hospital.

So far, several patients who tested positive recovered at home. The emergency room admitted several others, including some seniors citizens aged 68 years and older.

Dr. Ziang says all of them survived. And none of the patients lived in Chinatown.

"We're really blessed Chinese Hospital doesn't have an outbreak," Dr. Zhang said.

In addition, the response to COVID-19 is an example of how Chinese Hospital is extending its reach.

It took in patients from Zuckerberg General Hospital to free up space for COVID admissions.

121-year-old Chinese Hospital has been undergoing a multi-million dollar improvement project over the past several years.

It added patient beds, upgraded the emergency room, opened a new cancer center and gastrointestinal clinic, and expanded same-day surgeries.

"We want to reach all the members of our community, not just the Asians," Dr. Chen said.

Still, the hospital remains committed to the Chinese community.

For example, there was concern that half the people who died of COVID-19 in the city were Asian American.

So the hospital recently launched a pilot program with the health department offering free COVID-19 testing and health tracking to SRO tenants in Chinatown.

The hospital said 32 people in one SRO on Waverly Place tested negative last week. The program will continue to expand to other SROs to prevent an outbreak of the virus.

"It's not over," said Dr. Zhang. "How do we continue to keep the community safe?"

That remains a focus as the nation's only independent hospital built by and for the Chinese community keeps its sights on patient care on the streets of Chinatown and beyond.

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