Li Chu followed Director Chen and several attending physicians to another ward to check on the newly admitted patients with kidney failure.
The hospital's research project on kidney failure has passed the review of the hospital committee and has been successfully approved by the ministry.
We've also spoken to other hospitals in Beijing, so now when other hospitals receive patients like this, they recommend that they come to Peking Union Medical College Hospital for treatment.
He examined each patient individually, and by taking their pulses and reviewing the data in their lab reports, he found that the findings were largely consistent with the research report he had previously submitted.
According to Li Chu's research report, kidney failure is divided into four stages, from mild to severe.
This classification allows frontline doctors to intuitively understand the stage of a patient's condition through the various data on the test reports, enabling them to provide targeted treatment.
This alone has made Director Chen admire Li Chu to the point of complete awe. To compile such a massive amount of data by himself, even though it is still very rough, is already quite remarkable.
In particular, they also needed to find patterns and summarize them, which greatly reduced the workload of their research group.
Sometimes Director Chen even wanted to crack open Li Chu's head to see if the structure inside his brain was different from that of ordinary people.
After seeing the patients, Li Chu discussed their follow-up treatment with Director Chen in the office for a while before leaving.
Now that the research report has been submitted, he doesn't intend to interfere any further. One cannot be greedy, and you can't possibly do everything.
Once this research report is fully completed, his name will definitely be on it, so there's no need for him to argue with the internal medicine department about who should take the lead.
When I returned to the clinic, the awards ceremony in the auditorium was still going on.
He was too lazy to go over and listen to those leaders repeating the same old things over and over again.
He has never liked these kinds of abstract meetings.
Sitting in his chair in the consultation room, slowly drinking water, Li Chu suddenly realized that he hadn't signed in for a long time.
Since the system gave him those nine acupuncture manuals last time he checked in, he hasn't checked in again, and the system has never given him any notifications. It's a pretty laid-back system; it doesn't care whether you check in or not.
Thinking about this, Li Chu felt a little tempted. He hadn't thought much of it before, but now that he thought about it, he felt restless and couldn't resist.
"Whatever," Li Chu didn't hesitate any longer, nor did he wash his hands; he simply mentally checked in.
"Ding!" Sign-in successful.
"Ding" "Ding"...
The sound kept ringing, completely baffling Li Chu.
Is this even possible?
If I sign it once a year, will this voice ring in my head more than three hundred times?
The sound finally stopped after a long while.
This guy saves up his signatures for ten years at a time; the noise from all that clicking is enough to make him want to die.
Li Chu felt like his head was about to explode.
Hey, this check-in system can be used like this? I've really learned something new.
Suddenly he remembered something and hurriedly looked at his warehouse.
He didn't bother to look at the huge pile of rewards he had just received; he wanted to check the things he had already tidied up first.
Fortunately, nothing was missing. He was worried that making up for missed sign-ins would take back some of the rewards he had previously received.
If that's the case, then it's all for nothing.
I checked the time; there was still an hour until I got off work. I should first organize the things I just received as a reward.
He didn't count the money at all; he just put it all into the box where he used to keep money. He doesn't even know how much money is in there now.
Anyway, I can't spend all the money. The key is that there's nowhere I need to spend it. It's just a bunch of numbers in the end.
The canned goods were all piled up together, and we'll gradually bring them home later.
Li Chu received a considerable amount of gold this time, both large and small. Sometimes he wondered if handing over all this gold would be considered a contribution to the country's gold reserves.
Meat coupons, grain coupons, oil coupons, cloth coupons, cotton coupons—all were neatly stacked, to be stored at home for later use.
All the miscellaneous things have been tidied up, and now only one book remains where the sign-in reward items were previously piled up.
With anticipation, Li Chu picked up the book directly in his mind. The cover of the book read "XXX's Professional Skills and Experience in Nephrology".
The first line lists a person's name, whom he doesn't know, but there's a line below that provides an introduction.
After reading the introduction, Li Chu felt like he could fit a goose egg in his mouth.
This person is the future chief physician of the Department of Nephrology at Peking Union Medical College Hospital, a professor and doctoral supervisor at Peking Union Medical College, and also an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering.
This string of titles almost blinded Li Chu.
It is clear that this person will be an incredibly successful figure in the future, not only successful, but also a leading figure in the medical field.
Becoming a chief physician at Peking Union Medical College Hospital is no easy feat, let alone being an academician.
Currently, only Vice President Zhang is a member of the academic committee in the hospital.
Peking Union Medical College Hospital may be quite ordinary in the national context now, but it will be different in the future, consistently ranking among the top hospitals in the country.
Putting aside everything else, hospitals with a large number of patients can't even keep up with the demand for beds.
This book is the same as Hua Tuo's previous experience books; it's ready to use right out of the box and is for personal use only.
This system is designed to guide him to fully embrace the integration of traditional Chinese and Western medicine in the future.
He put the book of experience away and withdrew it from his mind.
He dared not open this book of experience now; if he opened it, it would start lecturing him right away, and he would faint immediately. The clinic was not a good place.
Having received this experience book again, Li Chu was able to maintain a calm attitude.
It's not that I'm not excited; who wouldn't like something that can be obtained without effort? Besides, this thing isn't like money or other vouchers, which are disposable and gone once used up.
This is invaluable knowledge; it's medical knowledge you need to keep learning as long as you live, the kind you can use for a lifetime.
But he seems to have become much more indifferent to these things now.
It's better if you have it; if not, you can just learn it yourself.
Anyway, through self-study, he has mastered a lot of Western medical knowledge. He wouldn't dare say he's comparable to attending physicians, but he's definitely better than those college students who have just started their internships.
He believed that as long as he was willing to work hard, he could become a qualified attending physician within a few years.
Of course, just focusing on kidney disease, our knowledge in other areas is far inferior to theirs.
These college students, after all, have undergone four years of professional study.
When it was time to leave work, the people in the auditorium finally dispersed, and Li Chu took his lunchbox and headed towards the cafeteria.
When he was at work in the afternoon, an unexpected person came to the hospital to look for him.
Chapter 173 It Exploded
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