Chapter 1116 Everything Has Bias



Everyone has the dream of getting rich overnight and becoming famous overnight.

The reason why students at Kyoto University of Chinese Medicine are so welcoming to Yun Heng is precisely because Yun Heng is young and has just graduated.

Within two or three years of graduation, they have achieved achievements that they may never achieve in their entire lives.

In fact, most students don’t really want to hear Yun Heng talk about any big principles. What they want to hear more is Yun Heng’s history of making a fortune, or to be more precise, how he achieved such success at this age.

On the one hand, I am curious, and on the other hand, I want to learn from it.

Most students don’t actually consider the difference in talent. After all, this is Kyoto University of Chinese Medicine, and the students who can be admitted to Kyoto University of Chinese Medicine are all top students.

When they were in school, they were all top students in the class and not bad students. Yun Heng only went to Zhongzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine.

In the eyes of many people, if Yun Heng can do it, then they can do it too, they may just not have the right method.

The first case story that Yun Heng described successfully aroused the interest of most students in traditional Chinese medicine.

Yes, in actual clinical practice, it is not uncommon for diseases that cannot be solved by modern medicine. After all, the foundations of the two are different. What is difficult for Western medicine may be very simple for Chinese medicine. This is a deviation.

If you can study hard, maybe you don't need to be that special. If you are lucky enough to get an opportunity, you may be able to succeed.

Just as Yun Heng said, they don’t expect to meet a female singer by chance like Yun Heng did, it would be fine if they could meet an ordinary patient.

If you can go to the hospital and cure some of your illnesses, that would be amazing.

After all, opportunities come to those who are prepared.

For a moment, the enthusiasm of the class was instantly aroused.

Micheline sat below, feeling proud of it.

Yun Heng is now very organized in many things and can understand the mentality of many people, which makes Michelle feel very involved.

After all, Yun Heng learned psychology from her. Before she confirmed her relationship with Yun Heng, she gave Yun Heng several books, and Yun Heng occasionally asked her for advice.

For a woman, the most proud thing is that the person she loves has achieved remarkable success. If she also feels involved in this matter, it is even more worthy of pride and happiness.

"Now let's talk about the second case."

As he spoke, Yun Heng wrote down the second medical record on the blackboard.

Everyone watched attentively.

"This is a variant of exogenous typhoid fever!"

"The condition wasn't serious originally, but it got worse step by step."

With the previous case, some capable professors or principal tutors gradually realized the situation of this disease.

Just as Yun Heng said just now, Chinese medicine and Western medicine have different judgment standards. In patients with some diseases or special physical conditions, it is really possible to treat a minor illness into a major one.

Of course, such situations also occur in clinical Chinese medicine, where one cannot affirm oneself and deny others.

However, Western medicine often turns minor illnesses into major ones not only because of misdiagnosis and incorrect treatment, but also because it simply relies on examinations and tests without considering the overall situation. Local treatments can cause serious consequences, leading to changes in symptoms.

Traditional Chinese medicine treats minor illnesses into major ones, which is mostly caused by the doctors' insufficient skills and misdiagnosis and incorrect treatment. The reasons for the two are essentially different.

Traditional Chinese medicine is dialectical medicine, not idealism. The premise of dialectics must be based on traditional Chinese medicine, and the basis of traditional Chinese medicine is the laws summarized from long-term observation and treatment.

Just like what Yun Heng explained to Lawrence in the foggy city, when it's cold, it goes down, and when it's hot, it goes up. This is what we observe and it's the fact. As for why, I don't know. I only know this rule, and this rule is constant, so it can be used as a basis.

Western medicine, on the other hand, requires calculation and proof, and then draws the conclusion that hot air rises and cold air falls.

That's the difference.

There are also changes in the four seasons, day and night, which are also visible and are constant laws. Now science is trying to prove things like the earth revolving around the sun, and how the twenty-four hours in a day came about.

At that time, Chinese medicine did not know about the earth, and did not even know that the earth was round, but the laws that can be seen have remained unchanged from ancient times to the present.

Through dialectical reasoning based on the laws, if it conforms to the laws, then it exists; if it does not conform to the laws, then it is wrong. So theoretically speaking, as long as the level is high enough, there is no disease that Chinese medicine cannot cure.

This is also the reason why there are great individual differences in Chinese medicine. When you meet a great Chinese medicine practitioner, you will be amazed at the magic of Chinese medicine and think he is a miracle doctor. When you meet a poor practitioner, you will be so angry that you will vomit blood and think he is a liar.

Back to the medical records.

The patient was only infected with typhoid fever, which is a common cold, but due to his physical constitution and age, the cold evil involved other organs, so there was a deviation in the treatment.

Chinese medicine treats diseases by relying on the bias of medicines, and this bias exists in everything, not just Chinese herbal medicines. Chinese medicinal materials are not limited to Chinese herbal medicines. Even stones, animal and plant hair, and wood ashes can be used as medicine.

Similarly, current Western medicine is actually biased. The reason why patients’ conditions become worse and worse is because the bias of the drugs used does not match the patient’s own condition.

For example, if a patient has a fever but has coldness in his body, and the antipyretic medicine he uses has yin and cold properties, then after the fever subsides briefly, the patient's overall condition may worsen.

The patient had a fever, chills, and sweating due to a cold. After taking the cold medicine, the patient began to have diarrhea. This means that the wrong medicine was used. However, such reactions are called side effects in Western medicine.

As mentioned earlier, Chinese medicine has no side effects, but it cannot be taken indiscriminately. It must be used according to the symptoms, because the treatment relies on the bias of the medicine, which is a correction. If used correctly, it can correct the problem, but if used incorrectly, it will disrupt the original balance.

In fact, it is really reasonable to explain the side effects of Western medicine by bias, because Western medicine is aimed at all groups, and when it encounters some patients, various reactions will occur because the medicine is locally effective but not overall effective.

"Everyone sees the changes in the patient's condition..."

Yun Heng described the patient's condition in detail.

"From the development of the patient's condition, we can actually see that if the patient had met a good Chinese medicine doctor at the beginning and taken the right medicine, the condition would have improved quickly and would not have occurred. It was precisely because of improper treatment that the condition continued to develop and became a crisis."

"If there were more good TCM practitioners, we could master Chinese medicine and avoid more similar cases when we encounter similar patients in clinical practice. Doctors are there to cure diseases and save lives. Curing patients is our greatest achievement..."

Extending from the medical records, Yun Heng once again achieved the purpose of his lecture, and the students in the class listened with great interest. Not only did they not find it boring, but they found it very interesting.

Whether it is the first case or this case, Yun Heng actually combined the study of traditional Chinese medicine with interests, whether it is for fame or for a good job, you see, is it useful?

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