Chapter 7: Making a Decision



The crowd quieted down.

A large group of people just discussed a lot, and in the end they all agreed with Dr. Tong. Medicine, after all, is about effectiveness.

Go to a Chinese medicine doctor to save money, and if the Chinese medicine doctor can’t handle the problem:?

A sharp light flashed on Doctor Tong's sunglasses: Well, maybe this patient will have to be sent to Fang Ze for emergency treatment later.

If he were to get slapped in the face, it would be a waste of the reason why Dr. Tong came here today.

Doctor Wen bent down and examined the child first.

A major characteristic of female doctors is that they are meticulous, and Dr. Wen is the same.

All the onlookers could see how her slender hands gently and considerately examined the child's head, hands and other parts.

But you have to know that the child is currently suffering from an emergency, and the doctor's "slow" movements will be highly questionable.

...

...

After Dr. Wen finished the physical examination, he immediately took a needle from the student beside him.

Doctor Tong looked at the watch on his wrist: the other party's speed in examining the patient was quite experienced.

You have to be experienced, otherwise the child's family will be anxious and cry out.

Several Chinese medicine students who followed looked at the densely packed crowd around them and swallowed their saliva secretly: they were rookies and they would get scared just by seeing people watching them.

I really admire Teacher Wen. His hands didn't shake at all as he held the needle in front of so many people.

Teacher Wen, who was holding the needle, was now being stared at by hundreds of eyes, as if he was being roasted by the scorching sun.

Doctor Tong's face turned serious. Although he was a Western medicine doctor, he knew what it meant when everyone looked at the needle in Doctor Wen's hand.

It is said that acupuncture needles can cure diseases, but the sharpness of acupuncture needles is comparable to the scalpel in the hands of surgeons. If there is a mistake, it will not save people but kill them. No wonder some people have proposed that acupuncture in traditional Chinese medicine is the most primitive scalpel.

The current diagnostic conditions in the clinic are limited, and the children have not undergone any high-end instrument examinations. Under such circumstances, if the needle is inserted, it will be equivalent to a blind piercing in the eyes of Western doctors.

Cough cough. Doctor Tong coughed twice to calm his heartbeat.

He was really a little afraid that Dr. Wen would have a car accident. If he did, he, the director of neurosurgery, would no longer be able to pretend and would need to rush to provide emergency treatment.

In a flash, Doctor Wen, who was holding the needle, turned around, faced the child, and grabbed one of the child's fingers at lightning speed. He fixed his eyes on the child and gently dropped the finger holding the needle.

That time, it was like a dragonfly skimming the water, but in fact, it was more like a flying sword piercing the throat, after all, it was a needle.

The acupuncture needles penetrated into the acupuncture points on the fingertips of the children in the blink of an eye within a few tenths of a second.

The people around rushed to ask each other: "Did you see it clearly?"

No one could see Dr. Wen's movements clearly, including Dr. Tong.

Since the children are young, the needles used are naturally smaller.

Such a thin needle looks like a silver hair in Dr. Wen's hand. The worst thing is that a needle that is too thin will inevitably have a soft needle body and needle tip.

It is difficult to control the strength of soft objects.

Doctor Tong's facial expression suddenly became more serious.

Fortunately, Dr. Wen did not seem to have made any mistakes, so Dr. Tong did not have to take off his disguise.

Unfortunately, Dr. Wen's traditional Chinese medicine skills made this Western medicine doctor look like an ordinary person. He was so dazzled that he could only exclaim in his heart: Mysterious, mysterious.

Next, everyone held their breath and looked at the child who had received an acupuncture injection from Dr. Wen. The child's eyelids moved.

The mother shouted excitedly: "Dong'er Dong'er - Mom, Dad, Dong'er is awake."

The child woke up.

Oh my god!

The people around ran around to tell each other, cheering and calling the doctor a god, but no one could understand what was going on.

Doctor Tong had already stretched his head forward: I can’t understand it, he doesn’t understand it either.

Western medicine is simply incapable of performing such a miraculous scene.

According to conventional Western medical diagnosis and treatment, the first thing that can be done for this child is to perform a brain examination.

If the instrument examination shows that there is no problem inside the child's brain and it is determined that it is caused by high fever, the child will be given a fever-reducing injection.

Wait until the child's fever subsides before observing the child's state of consciousness.

It will be troublesome if the child does not wake up.

Dr. Wen's skill in waking up children with just one needle is the reason why he, the director of the Western medicine neurology department, pursued his goal to this point.

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