National Physician: One Person Supports a Top-Tier Hospital

Why do experts and directors from various top-tier hospitals frequently appear at a community clinic? Why do nationally renowned experts and professors often visit a township-level health center?

Chapter 387 Paper

Yun Heng's paper is titled "On the Importance of Traditional Chinese Medicine Treatment Thinking - Summary of Thousands of Cases of Treatment Experience."

Yun Heng chose this thesis title after careful consideration.

Starting from practicing in the simulated space, Yun Heng has come into contact with many Chinese medicine doctors in the past six months, including Feng Xingping, Zhang Gengping and other chief physicians from tertiary hospitals. In addition, after a month of training at Ji Fengwen's training class, Yun Heng has more clearly discovered the problems in the treatment thinking of most Chinese medicine doctors.

The vast majority of Chinese medicine doctors have been influenced by modern education, especially medical students. Some of them even took elective and audited Western medicine courses while in school. After entering the hospital, most hospitals, even Chinese medicine hospitals, have Western medicine departments or departments combining Chinese and Western medicine. After entering the hospital, medical students are once again influenced by modern medical thinking patterns.

This has led to the fact that most Chinese medicine doctors today cannot deviate from the influence of some disease names or treatment ideas of Western medicine. In treatment, when Chinese medicine doctors encounter arthritis, they use blood circulation and blood stasis removal methods; when they encounter heat syndrome, they use heat-clearing and detoxifying methods; when they encounter bleeding, they use hemostatic drugs. Their thinking has been completely Westernized, which is completely unworkable.

Therefore, Yun Heng chose this topic and talked about the importance of traditional Chinese medicine treatment ideas in the treatment process based entirely on his personal experience.

Fortunately, Yun Heng treated quite a few patients during this period, including some classic case histories. Yun Heng quoted from classics and interspersed some of his own case histories, while also citing other classics. Yun Heng was quite satisfied with the entire paper.

After revising for about an hour, Yun Heng checked it again and felt that there were no major problems. Then he stood up and stretched.

"Ah, Director Ma!"

Yun Heng was stretching when he noticed someone behind him. He turned around and saw that it was Ma Tiequan.

"Director Ma, when did you come?"

Yun Heng hurriedly greeted him, "Director Ma, please take a seat."

"I've been here for a while, but I saw you were revising your paper, so I didn't disturb you."

Ma Tiequan chuckled, sat down in Yun Heng's original chair, then took the mouse to move Yun Heng's paper to the first page and started reading again.

"On the Importance of Traditional Chinese Medicine Treatment Thinking - Summary of Thousands of Cases"

Ma Tiequan reviewed it and commented, "Your topic choice is quite good. I just watched a little bit from behind. The arguments are well-reasoned, easy to understand, and based on actual cases. It's very convincing, but some of the wording needs to be revised."

"Well, I'm slowly revising it."

Yun Heng nodded.

"Let me help you take a look."

As Ma Tiequan spoke, he began to read it quite seriously.

Ma Tiequan had just read a little bit of Yun Heng's paper and was attracted to it. Now when he read it again from the beginning, he felt differently.

As the director of the Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine at Xihua Hospital, Ma Tiequan usually reads papers by newcomers. Nowadays, the biggest problem with many newcomers' papers is that they are empty and false.

The words are fancy and seem to be very good, with a lot of long speeches, but in fact there is not much useful content, and there is not much dry goods from beginning to end.

Yun Heng's paper was entirely based on his own personal experience, combined with medical records, and was well-reasoned and well-founded. Ma Tiequan gradually became immersed in it after reading it.

Yun Heng's paper was not too long, only about eight or nine thousand words, but Ma Tiequan spent a full forty minutes reading it.

"Good, well written."

After reading it, Ma Tiequan couldn't help but praise it, saying, "This paper can be said to shed light on the current state of Traditional Chinese Medicine from certain perspectives. The most serious problem facing most practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medicine right now is indeed their thinking. Some TCM doctors do have some skills, but when it comes to treating patients, they often make mistakes in their approach, which is the most fatal."

"I just wrote down some of my own experiences, which may not be accurate."

Yun Heng felt a little embarrassed.

“Your experience is real.”

Ma Tiequan said sincerely, "It is precisely because you don't have those random thoughts that your understanding is so valuable."

Ma Tiequan stood up and said, "Please send a copy of this paper to my email later. I will take some time to revise it for you in the next two days and then send it to you. In my opinion, this paper can definitely be published in a core journal."

"Thank you, Director Ma."

Yun Heng hurriedly thanked him. Ma Tiequan was willing to help him revise it, and Yun Heng was naturally very grateful.