Published: 22:01, December 21, 2022 | Updated: 22:06, December 21, 2022
Testing booths turned into fever clinics as China fights virus
By Xinhua

Residents line up for COVID-19 test at a booth in Shanghai on Dec 16, 2022. (ANDREW BRAUN / AP)

SHENZHEN — Nucleic acid testing booths are being converted into consultation rooms for fever patients in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province. These changes are among the latest efforts by Chinese cities to cope with rising numbers of COVID-19 cases.

To relieve the mounting pressure on hospitals, several districts in the southern Chinese city are transforming their testing booths into consultation rooms that can receive fever patients and prescribe basic medicines, according to officials and residents.

In addition to the consultation rooms, some have also been repurposed as vaccination rooms, according to the company that supplies the booths in Shenzhen

In Futian District, 53 such booths have been put into use as fever consultation rooms, according to the district's health bureau. In Bao'an District, 66 community health centers have engaged in similar projects to reuse idle testing booths.

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The 4-square-meter consultation rooms can accommodate one doctor and one patient at a time, and are equipped with disinfection equipment and a ventilation system. Their strategic locations have made it convenient for residents experiencing fever to seek treatment, said Chen Biqin, director of a community health center in Futian.

Many nucleic acid testing booths were made redundant after China scaled back mandatory testing. In addition to the consultation rooms, some have also been repurposed as vaccination rooms, according to the company that supplies the booths in Shenzhen.

READ MORE: China launches second COVID-19 booster shot

Facing an influx of fever patients in recent days, many Chinese cities have rushed to open more fever clinics and stock up on medicines. Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, has increased its number of fever clinics in hospitals from 114 to 199, as experts estimate the city's COVID-19 outbreak will peak in early January.

Last week, a temporary fever clinic with four consultation rooms was put into use at the Guang'an Gymnasium in Beijing's Xicheng District. It is equipped with a temporary pharmacy and medicine storehouse, providing sufficient antipyretic drugs and materials.