Chapter 150 The Nanny's Niece's Counterattack 150 ...
That day, a doctor who came to learn from her approached her with the examination report and said, "Dr. Lin, I'm not confident that I can extract the nerve cells from this donor using minimally invasive methods. Would you like to come?"
Lin Wei glanced at it and asked, "Have they already lost all contact with the person?" She frowned slightly, realizing that minimally invasive surgery would indeed be difficult under these conditions.
Dr. Li: "Their family is facing some difficulties, and few of their relatives are willing to help, so the old man insisted on donating to his granddaughter."
Lin Wei nodded after hearing this, "Okay, I understand. You can go ahead and get back to work." She knew that although neural cell transplantation was feasible, it still had some drawbacks.
For example, nerve cells require multiple donors, and sometimes it's really hard to find someone to donate to.
However, compared to other expensive technologies, this is a viable option for people who don't have the money. Several family members might be able to pool their resources, but if they actually need the money, it will be very difficult to raise it.
This was much better than Lin Wei had anticipated.
She is now hesitant about whether to continue researching the two technologies she previously worked on: artificial neural scaffolds and stem cell technology.
The main reason is that I feel the research still presents certain difficulties.
It's troublesome, and trouble is what she hates most.
However, after thinking about it for several days, Lin Wei finally felt it was necessary.
However, it's not due to a vegetative state, but rather another disease. If stem cell technology makes a breakthrough, it could help treat many diseases. Artificial neural scaffolds could potentially help repair damaged nerves. In Zheng Heng's case, with an artificial neural scaffold, the surgery would be much simpler, and even without surgery, her recovery would be excellent.
Therefore, it still needs to be studied.
However, she had an even more pressing matter to attend to: enrolling in graduate school. Having been reminded by Dr. Wei earlier, she had consulted other doctors at the hospital about how they pursued higher education, and after learning the approximate application period and process, she had been closely following this matter.
So as soon as the time came, I took the opportunity to enroll in Professor Dou's part-time postgraduate program, which is also known as an in-service postgraduate program, and I also enrolled in Director Zheng's clinical postgraduate program in Hanshao City.
Of course, the price was much higher than that of a full-time postgraduate program. The two programs together cost 60,000 yuan. It was very expensive for her in the past, but it is just a small amount for her now. She can't even remember how much money she has in her bank account.
The government provides her with funding for anti-tumor drugs, vaccines, and her research institute salary. The hospital also pays her salary, and Chi Boyan's Cl drug receives a payment every so often. All of this adds up to quite a bit. She hasn't counted the zeros carefully; she just regularly sends some money to her parents back home.
Lin Wei originally wanted to bring them to live in City A, but the group was used to life in the countryside and didn't want to come, so she had to give up on that idea.
When Professor Dou learned that she had applied to be his graduate student, he laughed and said, "The seniority is all messed up." Before, she only needed to call her senior sister, but now, if she was being particular, she had to call her teacher.
However, while Lin Wei dared to call out, she dared not listen. After hearing Lin Wei jokingly call out, she quickly waved her hand and said, "Never mind, just call me like before. I'm afraid the teacher will find out and I'll get a scolding."
What is this called? Reversing the Heavenly Stems.
Lin Wei was laughing heartily beside her. She was the one being talked about, and she was the one who was afraid. I never would have guessed. She usually has a stern face, but she's actually afraid of teachers.
Professor Dou: "You have no idea how much better-tempered he is now that he's older. He used to be so fierce." She was also his youngest apprentice. Because she was young and smart, she had never experienced his strictness, but Professor Dou had certainly witnessed it firsthand.
Lin Wei didn't doubt her words; since the person involved had said so, it must be true. She felt sorry for her for a minute, haha.
After enrolling in a part-time postgraduate program, Lin Wei's life hasn't changed much compared to before. If she had to point out a difference, she now has to attend online classes and occasionally go to offline classes a few times. However, compared to full-time students who have to stay at school all day, it's already much better.
How convenient is it to register through someone you know? Sometimes when you really can't get away, you can ask them to make an exception.
So when Director Zheng told her that his graduate student had gone to work at the Affiliated Hospital of University A after graduation, and asked her to take care of him when they met, Lin Wei immediately agreed.
“Okay.” He had taken good care of her before, and now that his student hadn’t made any major mistakes, she would naturally ask others to take care of her as well.
The care provided here certainly doesn't mean letting him idly loaf around in the department and do nothing, but rather helping him integrate into the department as quickly as possible and learn all the techniques.
As a result, Wen Feiang received special attention from the teachers in the department. His first department for residency rotation was gastrointestinal surgery. On the first day, he was taken to the operating table. Fortunately, it was an appendectomy, which he could barely understand a little bit of.
You know, he used to work under Director Zheng in the cardiac surgery department, so how would he know anything about gastrointestinal surgery? Is everyone at A University this quick to learn?
Unaware that someone had secretly given them instructions, the high-pressure work in gastrointestinal surgery made them want to cry. They thought graduate school was bad enough, and having a professor who frequently worked in a hospital was going to kill them, but starting work made them want to die even more, especially seeing others earning only a few thousand a month. Ha!
Lin Wei came to Hanshao City for her cardiac surgery internship during the summer vacation, while he was on vacation. Coupled with the pressure of writing a thesis, the two just missed meeting. So Lin Wei didn't know him at all, nor did she know what he looked like. She only learned his name from Director Zheng.
Although Wen Feiang later learned from the doctors in those departments that she had interned in their cardiac surgery department, she was now a big shot. Would he dare to try to curry favor with her? He wasn't that thick-skinned.
Only those in the gastrointestinal surgery department are still speculating about their relationship.
However, since Dr. Lin has already said that, it's not unreasonable to give her face. Besides, it's difficult to get them to go easy on us, but it's easy to put pressure on them.
Wen Feiang even thought he was being targeted, but the chief physician and other doctors treated him very well. They would invite him to eat with them and were usually as gentle as a junior. However, they would make things difficult for him at work, which he couldn't understand no matter how hard he tried.
Lin Wei was unaware that her actions had caused a recent graduate to become withdrawn. She was currently writing a paper on the awakening of vegetative patients and the advantages of intensive care units over traditional methods of waking them up. Thinking of Chi Boyan, she casually added his name to the paper as well.
These two papers also officially proved the news that the disease of vegetative state has been conquered.
Because the Flower Kingdom had already received some news, everyone was relatively calm. However, people around the world with patients in a vegetative state were filled with shock and ecstasy.
"Is this true? Does the Flower Kingdom really have a way to treat vegetative state patients?"
"When will this technology be transmitted to our country?" A group of people were full of anticipation. If the Flower Country has a solution, it shouldn't be far behind their country's doctors, right?
This made them think too much. They really didn't know. Everyone can read papers, but they know nothing about the operation, the equipment for culturing nerve cells.
Hospitals in various countries held meetings to discuss whether to send some doctors to study in the United States. This was the first time the United States had appeared in their discussions; previously, it was always the United States and Japan. However, the changes in the United States in the past year have been truly remarkable.
“If we send people to the Flower Kingdom, wouldn’t that mean we are inferior to it?” Some people objected, especially those who were hostile to the Flower Kingdom. In their eyes, the Flower Kingdom was extremely weak, so how could it be worthy of their learning?
However, she was countered with, "So you're just saying that all the other hospitals sent people, and our hospital is the only one lagging behind?"
"Not only that, the technology needs to be learned, and the intensive care unit also needs to be purchased." Optical technology is useless without the intensive care unit.
A large influx of foreign doctors into the country greatly enhanced the reputation of the Chinese people.
"I never imagined they would come to our Flower Kingdom to study one day."
Some foreigners, unable to wait and unwilling to go to the country of flowers, sought out another person mentioned in the paper, but the outcome was predictable.
The surgery performed by Chi Boyan was extremely expensive. Just the nerve cells alone required convincing about fifty people to donate for safety, which deterred the vast majority of people. Only a few wealthy individuals could afford the hassle and forced their company employees to donate.
In the end, those who didn't have enough money still had to go to the Flower Country, but even then, it was useless, and they had to bring their families along. This, to some extent, promoted the economic development of the Flower Country.
At this moment, Lin Wei was actually glad that she had been so farsighted. If she hadn't had those doctors learn beforehand, she really wouldn't have known what to do with so many patients. Should she have let them come excitedly only to leave dejected?
In the face of medicine, everyone is equal. Even foreigners have only one identity in front of them: patients.
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