The reason why she paid attention to this technology was that the family of one of her hospital colleagues went to the provincial capital hospital for related treatment due to illness.
Now that she has said it all, the seniors should have no more questions.
When she looked up, Xie Wanying saw everyone glaring at her: This?
"Four or five years? Xie Wanying, do you know what this number means?" He Guangyou, who had been half-joking with her before, couldn't help but frowning.
Five years is an important survival indicator for cancer patients. Even ordinary people know that living beyond five years is equivalent to whether the cancer is "cured."
"Teacher He. This five years is not that five years." Xie Wanying said.
"What's not?"
"You are talking about the five years after radical surgery. That is indeed an important indicator for cancer patients. If there is no tumor recurrence and metastasis within five years after radical surgery, the chance of recurrence and metastasis will be greatly reduced, and it can be optimistically regarded as a cure for cancer. But what I am talking about is palliative treatment, not radical surgery. How can we compare these two five-year periods? Palliative treatment cannot even be called a cure." Xie Wanying conscientiously did the academic explanation and debate work with her predecessors.
"But you have to know that many patients do not live more than five years after radical surgery. If there is a new option, they may not necessarily choose radical surgery." Gong Xiangbin and others argued with her.
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"Teacher Gong, patients and their families will only choose radical surgery first. Palliative treatment will only be chosen if surgery is really not possible. Because people want to live longer. Therefore, this technology belongs to a relatively small market." In addition, she said about the four or five years, "Teacher, you can't look at the data in this way. The four or five years I mentioned refers to the longest time a patient can survive. How can it be compared with the longest survival period of several decades after radical surgery?"
What Xie Wanying didn't understand was that, as far as she knew, the National Association's Hepatobiliary Department had always looked down on this technology because the benefits were too low and the audience was too small. Just as she said, even if there was only a glimmer of hope to live longer, the patient and his family would beg the doctor to perform surgery instead of choosing this kind of radiotherapy palliative. I mentioned it to Professor Hao because they were focused on this technology, unlike the National Association.
Every doctor engages in scientific research based on interest; without interest, it cannot be done.
The group of people were left speechless by her refutation.
Someone was laughing nearby.
Qiu Ruiyun turned to Song, who was secretly laughing, and said unhappily, "Tell me what you think."
Song Xuelin opened his throat and told a fable in a tone that couldn't be flatter, just like telling a bedtime story: "I have a cat at home, and it can help me dig for treasure in my house. That day, I took it to the house next door. I had no emotional connection with that family, let alone friends or enemies. As a result, the cat saw that there seemed to be treasure in their house, and helped them dig it out of the instinct to dig for treasure. Even though the treasure in other people's houses was actually not something I was interested in. How do you think I felt?"
This story is easy to understand. The seniors understood it, and Xie Wanying also understood it.
"Are you trying to mock us with this story?" Qiu Ruiyun put her hands on her hips, neither angry nor crying, and the muscles on her face were squeezed into a ball.
Song Xuelin looked calm and composed: What? Isn’t the story he told true?
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