"On this point, everyone should learn more from Yun Heng."
Ji Fengwen looked at everyone and said earnestly, "As the saying goes, when three people walk together, there must be one who can teach me something. Each of you has strengths, but everyone also has weaknesses. If you want to improve, you must first know yourself, be good at correcting and concealing your own shortcomings, and learn from others' strengths."
Ji Fengwen glanced at Ren Xuedong again and said, "Ren Xuedong has done a very good job on this point. He knows how to learn from Yun Heng. Just now, when Yun Heng was concentrating on reading the patient's medical records, only Ren Xuedong and Yun Heng were reading together. None of you thought of taking a look at the patient's medical records..."
"People can't lack self-confidence, but they can't be conceited either. Self-confidence is based on repeated verification and validation."
Ji Fengwen said, "Master Xie Yunzhang, everyone must know him. He is a renowned master of traditional Chinese medicine, a national master of traditional Chinese medicine. Master Xie's diagnosis by observation is quite impressive. He can basically tell what a person's condition is with just a glance. However, even Master Xie, when treating patients, always asks questions repeatedly and conducts careful dialectical analysis to ensure that he is not wrong."
Everyone knew the Xie Yunzhang, Yun Heng, and others Ji Fengwen mentioned. They were national masters of medicine, masters of traditional Chinese medicine, members of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, and experts at the Kyoto Health Bureau. They enjoyed ministerial-level treatment and were renowned for treating national leaders. They sometimes even represented the country abroad, treating foreign heads of state. They were the most influential and powerful Chinese medicine experts in the domestic medical community.
Looking across the country, including Western medicine doctors, no doctor has the prestige and authority like Xie Yunzhang.
Xie Yunzhang is most famous for his diagnosis by observation. Fifteen years ago, at an international conference, several foreign experts challenged Xie Yunzhang on the spot. Xie Yunzhang accurately described the symptoms of each patient with just his eyes, without taking the pulse or asking any questions. For a moment, the foreign experts and domestic Western medicine masters present were dumbfounded. That incident also became a legend in the medical community.
But even so, Xie Yunzhang always asked questions repeatedly and made careful dialectical analysis during his actual consultations, and seldom prescribed medication based solely on visual diagnosis.
"Yun Heng, tell everyone about your experience."
Ji Fengwen smiled and said to Yun Heng, "Just say whatever you think."
Yun Heng thought for a moment and said, "When I first arrived at the community health center last year, I had only graduated three or four months ago, and had been at Xihua Hospital for only a month. My clinical experience was almost zero..."
"When I first started seeing patients at the community health center, I was very nervous because I had no teachers to tell me what was right and wrong. When I was with patients, I had to be extremely careful, cautious, and careful... because I knew that any negligence on my part could have extremely serious consequences for the patients..."
This is what Yun Heng really thinks.
The reason why Yun Heng has developed a cautious and repeatedly verification-seeking way of thinking is actually due to his daily consultations in the community hospital.
As the saying goes, children from poor families grow up early, and this saying is also very appropriate for Yun Heng.
People like Ren Xuedong, Dang Siping and Yue Shaojiang all have teaching teachers in large hospitals. Newcomers, even if they are masters with eight years of undergraduate and master's degrees and three certificates, and have a medical qualification certificate, when they first arrive at the hospital, senior doctors will not rashly give you the opportunity to see patients independently.
When people like Ren Xuedong and Dang Siping were in the hospital, even if senior doctors gave them the opportunity to practice, they knew that they were being reviewed by senior doctors and that if they made mistakes, someone would cover the consequences...
But after Yun Heng arrived at the community hospital, he was the only Chinese medicine practitioner in the entire community hospital. There was no one to guide him, no one to back him up, and no one to correct him when he was right or wrong. He was like an orphan with no one to rely on, so he could only rely on himself.
The simulation space certainly gave Yun Heng the opportunity to practice and learn, but in actual medical consultations, the simulation space was of no help to Yun Heng.
It was precisely the environment of the community hospital that forced Yun Heng to be cautious and careful. When encountering patients, he would repeatedly verify and ask questions until he could no longer find any problems. Only then did Yun Heng dare to give the patients medicine.
Yun Heng said it calmly, but everyone could hear the sadness in his calm tone.
The newly graduated medical student joined a community health center and became the only Chinese medicine doctor in the community health center. He had no teaching teacher or colleagues, so he could only explore on his own.
Although many medical students who have just entered the hospital self-deprecatingly call themselves medical dogs who are ordered around and scolded by senior doctors at every turn, if you think about it, for newcomers who have no clinical experience, being ordered around and scolded by senior doctors is actually a kind of happiness.
It's like a child with parents complaining to an orphan, "My mother beat me, I hate her for not buying me this and that."
To the orphans, such complaints sounded like showing off. For them, such beatings and scoldings were something they dreamed of.
If Yun Heng did not have the simulation space, he might have lost his chance to become a doctor since the moment he was kicked out of Xihua Hospital by Hong Shuangmin.
To Hong Shuangmin, Yun Heng might have simply offended him by publicly questioning him as the department director. But to Yun Heng, if there were no panel and no simulation space, it would have changed his fate.
For a child from a rural area, he worked hard day and night to get into a medical university. He studied for eight years for his undergraduate and master's degrees, and he graduated at the age of 27.
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