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This photo taken on January 22, 2020 shows medical staff members wearing protective suits at the Zhongnan hospital in Wuhan in China's central Hubei province. - China banned trains and planes from leaving Wuhan at the centre of a virus outbreak on January 23, seeking to seal off its 11 million people to contain the contagious disease that has claimed 17 lives, infected hundreds and spread to other countries. STR/AFP via Getty Images

Hospital staff in Wuhan are wearing diapers while working, because they don't have time to use the bathroom in between treating coronavirus patients.

The city of Wuhan went under quarantine earlier this week, leaving local hospitals alone to care for an overwhelming number of patients at the epicenter of the novel coronavirus, 2019-nCoV, outbreak.

The outbreak is taking a toll on patients and doctors alike as medical staff live in fear of contracting the disease themselves as they care for infected people.

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Hospital staff in Wuhan are wearing adult diapers because they don't have time to use the bathroom in between treating coronavirus patients, The Washington Post reported.

The city, which has about 11 million residents, went under an unprecedented quarantine on Thursday local time amid the novel coronavirus, 2019-nCoV, outbreak. The lockdown has resulted in local hospitals being overwhelmed with patients seeking treatment in the city.

Photos and videos circulating on social media show people packed into small hallways and doctors treating patients sitting on the floor.

The Post reported that medical staff are also wearing diapers so they don't have to take off their hazmat suits in case they rip it and can't get a new one due to lack of supplies.

Along with the shortage of hazmat suits, hospitals are also experiencing a low supply of other protective gear, such as surgical masks and protective goggles, according to ThePaper.com, a Chinese news site, citied by The Post.

"We know that the protective suit we wear could be the last one we have, and we can't afford to waste anything," a Wuhan Union Hospital doctor wrote on Weibo.

The abundance of patients and overwhelming work has been taking a mental toll on medical staff in the city, as doctors worry of contracting the disease themselves.

Beijing-based therapist Candice Qin told The Post that she talked to a doctor who was infected by a patient, saying the doctor was "devastated." Qin added that the doctor isolated herself in her apartment without telling her parents, feeling a "sense of helplessness and loneliness."

"I think it is a strain for every doctor and every nurse in Wuhan, both physically and mentally," Qin told The Post. "We know that patients are worried, but we should bear in mind that doctors are just as human as well."

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