What are the dilemmas facing medical organizations in the face of the epidemic?

According to relevant medical experts, the epidemic is not going to end in the near future, and there are many dilemmas faced by medical institutions, mainly in the following categories:

Staff in medical institutions, the daily work intensity is very high, which can easily lead to resignation and other phenomena. In some of the more serious areas of the epidemic, many medical institutions and hospitals, health care workers, daily working hours up to 12 hours, from 6:00 every morning to do nucleic acid testing, has been continued until the evening of 10:00 or so, such a high intensity of the pressure of work will allow many people to have resigned, once the number of health care workers are not sufficient, many nucleic acid testing work efficiency will be reduced, the epidemic There is no way to control the risk of the epidemic in a short period of time, bringing a lot of potential risks to people in all other provinces and regions.

Medical equipment for medical institutions is prone to be inadequate, especially the price of test strips for nucleic acid testing as well as equipment for the machine, are very expensive small counties and third and fourth tier cities of the medical institutions, it will be difficult to cope with such a high amount of funds for medical equipment, even if in the first and second tier cities of the medical institutions, the pressure on the output of funds on a daily basis are also Very big, so want to solve this dilemma need to have the support of the local government's financial financial to alleviate the phenomenon of insufficient funds for medical equipment.

Medical institutions innovation ability insufficient, the virus under the epidemic is in constant change, as some of the grassroots medical institutions, it will be difficult to innovate new projects, especially for some of the medical institutions of the equipment appeared to be aging update is not timely, the proportion of personnel allocation is relatively small, the financial income of the medical institutions is far from being enough to meet the needs of the people of the world. The result is that the financial and financial income of medical institutions is far from being greater than the expenditure, and in the long run is likely to face financial difficulties, resulting in the inability to normal business and work.

Overall, the underlying logic of the difficulties faced by medical institutions is that the pressure generated by the epidemic has led to the financial chain of medical institutions being easily broken. This can lead to a range of difficulties, such as inadequate staff salary allocations and inefficient equipment that is not up to date.