Back in 1996, the eldest daughter of Oldman Xie’s Family, Xie Wanying, said that she wanted to be a surgeon, to which many people laughed at her .
“ A Phoenix gives birth to a phoenix. And a ...
"She is the best student in the family." Wen Shining stated the truth.
The entire Wen family is proud of this acupuncture sister.
The emergency doctor from Capital Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine came with a nurse in the car to see the patient. She was a female internal medicine doctor named Zhou.
When Dr. Zhou arrived, he was surprised to hear that the doctor treating the patient was a Chinese medicine doctor. He asked, "Are you from the same field?"
Thinking that maybe he knew her, Dr. Zhou searched Wen Zihan's face for a while but couldn't recognize her. He had no choice but to ask again, "Are you a student?"
In fact, according to his cousin Wen Shining, Dr. Wen Zihan is not very young, but his face looks too young.
Wen Zihan replied politely: "It has been three years since I finished my studies."
To be more precise, a postdoctoral fellow has scientific research work experience and is a staff member.
Dr. Zhou did not expect that she was a postdoctoral fellow and suspected that she did not work in traditional Chinese medicine after graduation but chose another career.
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Every year, many medical students who graduate do not choose to work in the medical industry. This situation also applies to students of Western medicine schools as well as students of traditional Chinese medicine.
I can only say that the Wen family likes to keep a low profile. If they insist on telling others that they are doing a postdoctoral fellow abroad, it will become a bit of a show-off.
Besides, no matter what the doctor's academic qualifications are, in the final analysis, the doctor is there to treat patients. As long as he can cure patients, academic qualifications take precedence.
Dr. Zhou took out a stethoscope from the pocket of his white coat and examined the patient.
This is even more obvious in modern Chinese medicine hospitals, especially in the emergency departments, where the basic medical procedures are not much different from those in Western hospitals.
Ordinary patients' families do not understand the modern Chinese medicine training system.
The old lady, the patient's family member, only saw Dr. Zhou listening to her husband's heartbeat like a Western doctor, and all she could feel was that Dr. Zhou might not be as good at Chinese medicine as Dr. Wen.
Then the old lady said to Dr. Wen, "Will you go to the hospital with our old man later?"
"No need, a doctor from the hospital is here to see you." Wen Zihan said.
"Is there any special situation?" Dr. Zhou asked as a routine matter.
The old lady was afraid of offending her and dared not say anything more.
Dr. Zhou turned around and asked the nurse to give the patient an injection.
For emergency patients, it is routine procedure to at least leave an intravenous line to facilitate rescue.
"What kind of medicine?" asked the old lady.
Dr. Zhou was reluctant to answer.
When family members ask this question, doctors may have the following impression: You don’t trust me at all, right? Are you afraid that I will give the patient the wrong medication?
This concerns the evaluation of both the doctor's medical ethics and skills, and is a very serious issue.
But the patient's family members usually don't think so much. They are just worried and anxious, and sometimes they say things without thinking.
Dr. Zhou is young and has not yet acquired the steady mindset of an experienced doctor. He answered the family member casually, "First, hang a bottle of saline or something to keep the vein open."
The old lady didn't understand the medical terms at all. She just remembered asking, "Didn't you bring any medicine?"
This is about someone missing a diagnosis.
Dr. Zhou complained that this mistake was not hers. When she first received the 120 call, the person who called said it was a cerebrovascular problem, and she brought mannitol.
Halfway through the journey, she received a call saying that the patient did not simply have cerebrovascular problems but also had liver disease. She and the ambulance were halfway there, so there was no way she could go back to get new medicine.
The right thing to do is to rush to the station and send the patient back to the hospital for treatment as soon as possible, because only the hospital has all the complete diagnostic equipment and medicines.
The old lady didn't listen to her explanation and asked, "Aren't you a Chinese doctor?"
What you said are all Western medical methods. Where are the Chinese medical methods? If you are a Chinese doctor, why don’t you show them to us?