Chapter 68 Scared



Through Dr. Xie's indirect explanation, the others seemed to understand, but also seemed not to understand very well. The symptoms observed by traditional Chinese medicine are inferred from theory, without laboratory evidence to support them.

Perhaps because of this, Dr. Wen said that further examination is needed to verify the diagnosis. The risks involved are obvious. If the results of the subsequent examination cannot confirm the inference of traditional Chinese medicine, it will completely disprove the theory of traditional Chinese medicine.

Perhaps it can be said here that as a doctor, no matter what, careful consideration of the patient's surgery should be the first priority.

However, doctors must also take into account that a failed inference may very likely make others no longer believe you next time, a result that will have endless consequences and will not be worth the cost.

Moreover, the risk was not only borne by Dr. Wen himself, but also by the attending doctors. The first to bear the brunt was Dr. Fu, who had invited Dr. Wen to come for a consultation.

Considering the above reasons, it is advisable to consult with more doctors for insurance purposes.

Dr. Pan Shihua suddenly remembered a detail from the afternoon.

While he was busy in the ward, he heard a nurse come to report and asked him if he had invited a colleague from the hospital's Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine to come to the department for consultation.

At that time, he immediately denied it, but did not rule out the possibility that other doctors in the same department had invited him for a consultation with traditional Chinese medicine.

...

...

Later, the nurse seemed to understand the whole story and did not ask him again.

He was so busy that he had forgotten about the little episode until this moment when he suddenly connected the two and the answer was obvious.

No wonder the nurse didn't ask him again. It must be that Dr. Fu invited colleagues from the Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine to come for a consultation. The consultation process should be similar to that of Dr. Wen tonight. He would not tell the patient that it was a consultation with traditional Chinese medicine. It is very likely that he would just look at the patient at the door.

If his guess is correct, another fact that makes people puzzled is: Why did Dr. Fu repeatedly ask Chinese doctors to come for consultation?

Dr. Fu is a Western medicine doctor and has never studied Chinese medicine. Is it because of his doctor's intuition that he feels that the patient's condition has special circumstances and needs to be consulted by a Chinese medicine doctor?

Or - Dr. Fu actually studied Chinese medicine and found out that something was wrong with the patient's condition according to Chinese medicine?

Or - Dr. Fu felt that something was wrong with the patient's condition, but Western doctors couldn't diagnose it, so he had to ask a Chinese doctor for help. At this time, Dr. Fu trusted Chinese medicine more than Western medicine?

The more I think about it, the more scared I get.

Doctor Pan Shihua took a breath, his delicate eyebrows raised in horror, he turned around and squinted his eyes at the face of the leader opposite him, then immediately retracted them: You can't just doubt the leader in front of him.

The expressions of several people were as solemn as his. They probably looked back on the whole thing and discovered the big secret that they dared not tell like him.

Young Western doctors do not understand and cannot comprehend why those Western doctors who have been working in the field for many years would become interested in Chinese medicine.

What happened next was that Dr. Pan had guessed part of it correctly, as Dr. Fu took out the preliminary consultation opinion sheet from his colleagues in the hospital's Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine in the afternoon.

Because they did not communicate with the patient about the need for a TCM consultation, they just asked a TCM colleague to come and take a look, which really cannot be considered a real consultation. Therefore, this consultation form cannot be put into the patient's medical record as a real medical record, but was just hastily written on a piece of paper as a reference for the patient's attending physician, and Dr. Pan had never seen it before.

The Chinese medicine doctor in the hospital gave the following advice: the patient was suffering from Qi and blood deficiency and excessive sweating, so it would be best to take care of the patient before the operation. Before the operation, the anesthesiology department was reminded to be careful, fearing that something unexpected might happen during the operation.

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