"Good morning, Doctor Yun!"
In the morning, Yun Heng was still the first of the three outpatient doctors to arrive. When he arrived at the clinic door, Jiang Yanyan and Liu Hongxia from the infusion room were still there earlier than him.
After saying hello, Yun Heng entered the clinic, took his own cup of water, made tea, filled it with water, and then sat in the chair behind the examination table and rubbed his wrist.
After returning home yesterday, Yun Heng continued to practice holding the needle until after ten o'clock in the evening. This was two days in a row, and today his wrists and fingers were extremely sore.
In fact, for many things, the most difficult part is often the basic skills, and the most difficult part is getting started. People often say that action is worse than words, and putting ideas into action is often more difficult than mastering what you already know.
Yun Heng is a hardworking child and he knows this very well. Therefore, once he starts, he will stick to it without hesitation.
After rubbing my wrists and fingers for a while, a patient came in three minutes before eight o'clock.
The working hours at the community hospital are 8 o'clock, but if the doctor has opened the door of the clinic long ago, the patients will come in and queue up first. Therefore, He Haipeng and Zhou Suyun almost always arrive on time, at most five minutes early.
A patient came to the clinic three minutes before eight o'clock. This was the earliest patient to come to the clinic early in the morning since Yun Heng came to Xiya Community Hospital.
The person who came in was a woman in her thirties, with a little boy about ten years old.
At the community hospital, most of the patients are elderly and children, and there are relatively fewer adults. However, Yun Heng has been seeing more adults recently, and rarely encounters children. Yesterday afternoon, he met a baby with colic, and today he met a little boy about ten years old, who was the second pediatric patient Yun Heng had met.
"Sit down."
Yun Heng greeted him politely, observing the child and asking politely, "How old is the child? What's wrong with him?"
When I was in school, my teachers taught me that pediatrics is also known as the dumb subject among all departments. It can be said that it is a relatively difficult subject to learn.
Most children do not have accurate language expression ability, especially those under ten years old. Their expression ability is not very accurate. They often cannot clearly explain why they are uncomfortable, whether it is bloating or pain, sleepiness or tingling.
In traditional Chinese medicine, pain is often divided into nine types, namely, bloating pain, falling pain, stabbing pain, colic, burning pain, cold pain, throbbing pain, empty pain and dull pain.
Different pains often represent different meanings. Some adults often find it difficult to distinguish these nine types of pain, let alone children. Children under four years old cannot even express themselves clearly in simple words, let alone describe their conditions or symptoms.
Patients cannot accurately express their feelings or describe their symptoms, which makes it very difficult for doctors to make a diagnosis.
Yun Heng has average talent and is a hardworking person, so he studied very hard in school and actually memorized a lot of things, especially some books or teachers' instructions, which Yun Heng remembered very clearly.
Pediatrics is also known as the mute department. Children cannot express their condition accurately, so doctors must be more careful when treating children.
Observe more, ask more questions, and discover some problems from the details.
Therefore, when the child came in just now, Yun Heng observed him very carefully, observing his walking, his body shape, and his expression.
As Yun Heng asked, he picked up his pen and started to record in the medical record book.
The patient is thin and has a pale and dull complexion.
"The child will be ten years old in three months, and he keeps complaining of stomachache." The child's mother hurriedly answered.
Yun Heng stopped registering and said gently, "Come, let me take a look at the situation."
The concept of stomach pain is very broad. What kind of pain does it feel?
Whether it is bloating, dull pain, or stabbing pain, different pains represent completely different situations. The child's mother only knows that her child has a stomachache, but she doesn't know exactly what the pain is. So at this time, Yun Heng can only verify and judge.
As a master's student at Zhongzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Yun Heng actually has a very solid foundation. After eight years at the medical university, he may not have much clinical experience, but he has read a lot of books and mastered a lot of basic knowledge.
Some people comment on modern Chinese medicine, saying that traditional Chinese medicine is specialized and specialized, while doctors who graduated from medical schools are broad-minded.
Traditional Chinese medicine refers to those who have been learning medicine from a teacher since childhood. Because of their early exposure, they understand what they are best at and what they like most very early, and thus choose their direction very early.
Traditional Chinese Medicine is a large category, and it can actually be divided into many subdivisions, such as acupuncture, massage, bone setting, internal medicine, pediatrics, preventive medicine, etc.
A person's energy is often limited. Although most Chinese medicine practitioners are actually general practitioners and know a little about everything, they also have their own strengths and weaknesses.
For example, one person is good at prescriptions, another is good at bone setting, another is good at acupuncture, and so on.
Because I got involved early, I was able to move towards the direction I like or am good at early on, so I became specialized.
Medical students have not yet entered the clinical field and have not found their way, but the school teaches them everything, as long as it is related to the major. This also leads to the fact that medical students, as long as they study hard, actually have a rich grasp of theory. What they lack is a process of combining practice with theory.
Yun Heng has a solid theoretical foundation. He has been in contact with patients every day these days and has also been practicing in a simulated space. His improvement is relatively fast, at least in the early stages.
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