Chapter 147 The Training



Regarding this situation, Dr. Wen Zihan turned to look at Dr. Xie Wanying.

Doctor Xie Wanying's lips curled slightly.

The two imperial envoys' faces were not serious, and they even smiled slightly at each other.

The two imperial envoys looked so excited that the medical student's heart suddenly started pounding: What the hell?!

"Doctor Xie, why don't you answer their questions?" Doctor Wen Zihan invited Sister Xie to answer, giving Sister Xie another chance to educate people.

The effect of Sister Xie’s answer would definitely be different from her answer.

If she answers, people who hear her will just think that since you are a Chinese medicine doctor, of course you understand.

If Sister Xie had answered this question, these people would have understood the importance of doctors having a comprehensive medical knowledge base.

Sister Xie is a Western doctor who was trained in a standard Western medical school. Personal education is the best.

...

...

Xie Wanying understood Sister Wen's intention in a second and nodded without refusing.

There are many students from the National Association of Chinese Medicine here who are Dr. Xie’s junior colleagues and it is up to Dr. Xie to “teach them a lesson” personally.

Dr. Xie Wanying asked the medical students, "You said Dr. Wen used meridian theory. What meridian theory did he use? What did Dr. Wen use meridian theory for?"

When medical students heard these questions, they were confused: they didn’t understand Chinese medicine at all and couldn’t answer them at all.

Doctor Xie Wanying immediately looked solemn: "Please answer the last question first."

The last question is, at least we can hear something from the rumors.

Apart from other things, what can Dr. Wen do in clinical practice as a doctor? Can't he answer such a simple question?

The medical students looked at each other and asked, "Doctor Wen treat patients?"

The student who asked the question earlier said that Dr. Wen was treating patients in the National Association for Cardiac Surgery Department, which shows that the "rumor" was spread by people who did not think professionally at all. No wonder Dr. Wen treated people based on the false rumour.

Dr. Wen was invited to the National Association for a consultation. A consultation is usually not for treating patients. This is a matter of common sense.

Senior Sister Xie narrowed her eyes like Bao Gong and looked at him.

A bunch of medical students almost hugged their heads and ran for their lives. They were so ashamed that they finally remembered to pick up their own intelligent brains: "Yes, it is a diagnosis."

Dr. Wen provides traditional Chinese medicine diagnosis to patients.

The status of TCM meridian theory in TCM diagnosis is self-evident. Dr. Wen adopts the Six-Channel Dialectics (mentioned before) in TCM diagnosis which is based on TCM meridian theory.

When it comes to diagnosing a disease, Western medicine has many ways to classify it.

Traditional Chinese medicine is the same. There is only six-channel dialectics in traditional Chinese medicine diagnosis.

The universal laws of medicine are shown here, so it doesn’t mean that if you study Western medicine, you will feel that studying Chinese medicine is like a world away. —— Questioning the first mistake that medical students just made.

The fact that I have read both Chinese and Western medicine has confirmed that there are too many similarities between the two, and the similarities are mainly reflected in the universal logic of human thinking.

Diagnosis serves treatment, which is like solving a math problem: one plus one equals two. There are various diagnostic criteria, and which one to use depends on the specific case.

It's not that you think Dr. Wen's use of the Six-Channel Dialectics in Traditional Chinese Medicine is magical, and that you can conquer all cases with ease by using this diagnostic technique.

To be precise, Dr. Wen must have learned more than just Six-Jing Dialectics, and the diagnostic methods he used in daily cases must not be limited to Six-Jing Dialectics.

After the medical students were awakened, they realized not that their medical knowledge was shallow, but that they had made the second fatal mistake: they dared to look down on medicine. They were like Dr. Ma, whose thought was sloppy and terrifying.

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