The obstetrics and gynecology department of a hospital is the hardest hit by medical disputes. Other departments cannot compare to it. Incidents like today are very common in the obstetrics and gynecology department, but much less common in other departments.
Picking up the thermos and drinking a sip of water, Dr. Li waited for the patient to vent his emotions before giving medical advice: "You can try hydrotubation. Your previous doctor should have mentioned this surgical option to you." This was all the doctor could do.
"Can you guarantee that this operation will not leave me with other sequelae like an abortion?" asked the female patient.
The doctor cannot guarantee this. All surgeries may have sequelae, and doctors can only try to reduce the incidence rate. As for specific patients, each patient is different, so there is no way to know what the absolute consequences will be.
The female patient yelled: "You doctors have said everything. I, the patient, should bear all the responsibility, right?"
Don't say that. If a doctor violates the operating procedures, medicine has rules for doctors to follow in everything they do. If a doctor violates the rules in this regard, it is a medical accident and the doctor is responsible.
"The abortion I had done before made me unable to get pregnant. Was it your doctor's fault or mine?"
Abortion surgery has various risks, which cannot be completely avoided by existing medical means, not to mention the potential sequelae that cannot be explained by medicine. The doctor has informed you in advance, so any thing that the doctor desperately advises you not to do must be considered carefully by the patient.
What Dr. Li needs to consider now is that this person is making a fuss and the consultation time is endless. Other patients behind him can only wait until they are dying. He advised this patient: "Go sit next door and drink a glass of water. Think carefully about whether you want to have this operation and then tell me."
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"I don't want it. You'd better explain it to me clearly today, otherwise I won't leave." The female patient said angrily.
This person didn't come to seek treatment, but only to clear herself of responsibility. She didn't care whether the expert was an expert or not, or whether she cared about other patients. She just knew that she couldn't afford to lose.
Even a good-tempered doctor like Dr. Li could no longer tolerate this and could only order her to leave: "If you have any complaints, you can file a complaint with the relevant department or sue us."
The boss is not afraid of you suing him. Because it was you who was making trouble. The doctor wants to help you and give you medicine to regret it, but you still have such an attitude. Forget it, let's break up.
The female patient stood up and kicked the table: "Believe it or not, I will strangle you to death."
Chi. This light gasp came from Geng's slightly shrunken mouth. As a male medical student, this must be hard to imagine. The incident with Pan made him think that female patients only attack male doctors.
It's so wrong.
In clinical practice, female doctors generally sympathize with female patients, but female patients may not necessarily empathize with female doctors. For example, both mother-in-law and daughter-in-law are women, and there are many cases where mother-in-law makes things difficult for daughter-in-law.
In fact, Geng does not need to feel strange. This is also the case in departments with mostly male patients. It is impossible for male patients to empathize with male doctors. In this case, patients will not see you as a man or a woman, but will only see you as a doctor and hate you. What the counselor said happened in front of medical students.
The door of the clinic opened, and two family members who had been eavesdropping outside came in. They were probably afraid of being implicated and sent to the detention center, so they pulled the female patient up and said, "Okay, stop making trouble."
"Why am I making a fuss? It's obviously her fault, why do you say I'm wrong?"
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