Wang Lu at work
Chutian Metropolis Daily, February 20 (Reporter Zou Bin) "Hello, I am a resident of Building xx, I have finished my hypertension medicine, can you buy me some medicine tomorrow?" Last night At about 10 o'clock, Wang Lu, a grid member of the Huangshigang community in Huangshi City, received requests from residents for help.
Wang Lu is 28 years old and is a "recruit" from the Huangshigang community neighborhood committee. She arrived at work a year ago and devoted herself to the community epidemic prevention and control work on the fifth day of the day. Epidemic prevention and control is an order, and grassroots work is even more urgent. Even if he has less than a week of employment and does not fully understand community work, Wang Lu will immediately take up his post and devote himself to the frontline of fighting the epidemic. The
community is the first line of defense for epidemic prevention and control. Only grid management and carpet tracking can effectively prevent and control. After Wang Ming (pseudonym), a resident of the sixth grid of the community, was diagnosed with new coronary pneumonia on February 9, because he did not bring any daily necessities, his son who lived with him needed to be isolated at home. No one was prepared and had to turn to the community for help. Wang Lu and another volunteer who had just taken over the work of Sixth Grid for two days that day climbed to Wang Ming's 10-story home and sent the daily necessities sorted out by her son to the hospital. In the days that followed, Wang Lu and her colleagues also shouldered the responsibility of delivering daily necessities to residents in isolation, disinfecting the community, and taking out garbage for residents in isolation. The reporter asked Wang Lu if he was afraid of being infected? Wang Lu said that there are too many things to do every day, and I have to think about how to do it better and faster. The residents must do well the things that the residents confessed, and I can only think about it after the epidemic is over. Although it was difficult during the
epidemic, Wang Lu and the group members quickly became acquainted with each other. Apart from going home to sleep, Wang Lu "fighted" with her colleagues from 8 in the morning to 8 in the evening, and had no time to rest at noon. Together, they count and verify the various needs and trends of the residents of each grid.
"Although the epidemic has blocked daily communication, as a grid member, our work has become more important due to the needs of residents. We are the hands and feet of residents." Wang Lu said, she passed a building last week When I was downstairs, I met an old lady in her 80s who was going downstairs to buy vegetables. Wang Lu immediately let the old man go home and helped her go to the vegetable market to buy three fresh vegetable moss.
Huangshigang Community Neighborhood Committee is responsible for many old houses in the jurisdiction, and the residents are relatively dense. In particular, many elderly residents do not know how to shop or buy medicine online, and are very dependent on community leaders. Since the closed management of the community, 8 group leaders in this community have kept calling and QQ24 is online. Buying vegetables, medicines, buying urgently needed supplies, testing and reporting body temperature, returning to residents with cold symptoms, helping residents to relieve their stress...For so many days, Wang Lu and her colleagues have not shut down the machine 24 hours a day , Before going to bed, the WeChat group and QQ group in the mobile phone will turn on the largest reminder tone. Once residents ask for help, they must respond. During the
epidemic, Wang Lu and her spouse had to go to work. For safety, they sent their 3-year-old son to live separately. The first time I was separated from my mother for so long, every time the mother and son met were far apart downstairs, the little guy was so sad that he cried, crying to find his mother.
Wang Lu and the son who was sent to his grandmother’s house met through a glass door.
Wang Lu’s work log reads: For everyone, it is unfortunate to encounter the epidemic; for each community worker, it is even more so. For a test, we must be a grid member who can stay connected for 24 hours.