Chapter 519 Who Rolls First



A doctor from the local Chinese medicine hospital arrived at the scene and heard that there was a patient who needed Chinese medicine treatment. He hurriedly asked what was going on.

When he heard that the patient was a famous traditional Chinese medicine doctor in the capital, the colleague from the emergency department of the Chinese medicine hospital hurriedly retreated and explained: "I am not an acupuncture doctor."

Acupuncture, a unique technical brand of Traditional Chinese Medicine, is famous all over the world.

The result is that this technology is very difficult to learn.

For example, it is more difficult for Western medicine surgery to achieve mass replication and promotion of technical doctors than Western medicine internal medicine, and the same is true for traditional Chinese medicine. Traditional Chinese medicine prescriptions are widely promoted and replicated in clinical practice. It is difficult for traditional Chinese medicine acupuncture to be learned and replicated by individual doctors.

The capital gathers the most famous Western doctors as well as the most famous Chinese doctors.

In small places, the talent gap is multi-faceted, including a shortage of Western medicine doctors, a shortage of Chinese medicine doctors, and an even greater shortage of acupuncture doctors.

If you count, there are more private clinics that prescribe medicine or private acupuncture clinics. The sharp contrast in numbers is obvious at a glance. It is not that there is no demand for acupuncture, but that there is a lack of talent in acupuncture.

A local TCM colleague said, "I won't say how skilled the acupuncture department of our hospital is, but how can they give the professor a single injection and see the results?!"

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Originally, Western doctors thought that Professor Jiao’s words were ridiculous, and their Chinese medicine colleagues confirmed that this was true, which made Dr. Cui Shaofeng even more anxious.

I wondered whether I should make up my mind to ask someone to carry Jiao back to the hospital, but carrying a patient is not a doctor's job.

Doctors are not policemen. They should not do this unless the patient is a mentally ill person who is harming himself or others and needs the doctor to use medication to comfort him or her.

"Let Dr. Xie say a few words." Dr. Luo Yanfen, who had been optimistic about Dr. Xie from the beginning, suggested to Leader Cui.

Others in the team echoed: Yes, let her speak.

It seems that everyone trusts Xie Juanwang more.

Dr. Cui stepped aside.

Dr. Xie didn't say anything just now because he respected the team leader.

As a seasoned person in the workplace, she knew that it was inappropriate to casually undermine the leader's prestige as it would affect the operation of the entire team.

It's time, Dr. Xie said, "I understand what Teacher Jiao means."

What did Jiao Lao mean by that? He insisted on giving her the injection, was he deliberately making things difficult for Dr. Xi?

No, Mr. Jiao simply used his professional knowledge to determine that his injuries did not need to be carried to the hospital for treatment, and he even believed that forcible carrying would be bad for the injury.

As for the arguments between Jiao and others, he has some childish problems.

Dr. Cui was actually right about this problem in the elderly, it is similar to that in children.

The only mistake is that the underlying logic of a child’s period of order is that the child, as an individual, demands to be respected by the people around him.

It is incorrect to treat children simply as ignorant children. The awakening of children's self-awareness during their early childhood is not the children's fault. Children simply inherit human genes, which include human self-awareness.

In the eyes of others, the elderly may think that their various functions are failing as they age, but the elderly believe that they need to be respected by others just like children until they die, which is why they are so stubborn.

Older people are just like children; stubbornness is only exacerbated by the pressure of their surroundings.

We must respect Mr. Jiao’s self-esteem.

Jiao Da Lao is a master of traditional Chinese medicine. He has always believed in the traditional Chinese medicine technology that he is engaged in and loves, and does not allow others to arbitrarily reject his traditional Chinese medicine technology without academic debate.

In Jiao's eyes, it is ridiculous to use a professional license to veto.

In medical practice, in many special circumstances, doctors must save lives as long as they can, and they must put the patient's life value first and maximize their interests without violating social morality and professional ethics, and it is in line with the medical exemption for doctors' life-saving behavior.

After hearing what Xie said, Dr. Cui was alarmed: "Do you want to give him an injection?"

Dr. Xie Wanying said: "First, Professor Jiao needs to convince me with his academic ideas."

The blame was now put back on Jiao's own head.

The other doctors almost laughed out loud: By the way, if you want Xie Juan to be the King Juan, you must first let yourself be rolled up.

Professor Jiao's eyes widened. He seemed to have expected this, but he was not too surprised. He replied calmly, "No problem. I am here to guide you to give me the acupuncture, not to ask you to give me the acupuncture by yourself."

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