Thinking back on when the accident started, it should have started when the Poison King opened his mouth after going to work. Boss Zhang, the Poison King, is the Poison King. He will kill you due to "poison".
What is it if it’s not poison? When he reached the patient's bed and leaned over to check, he was grabbed by the patient's irritated hands and took off the anti-splash surgical mask. Immediately after, a mouthful of blood spattered on the left side of his face after the patient coughed violently.
Don't think that doctors are really "insensitive" and can feel nothing when being splashed by pollutants. No, Dr. Lin Hao is just a human being. He has no special constitution and his reactions are no different from those of normal people.
At that moment, he felt like he wanted to vomit blood with the patient.
what to do? As a doctor, you can only endure and must endure. Lin Hao, like him, has a stomach churning and a cool look on his face, pretending to be a miracle doctor, as if he doesn't care.
In this situation, it is not easy for the brain to successfully deceive oneself, so for now, I have to complain about the poisonous king Boss Zhang.
Going crazy.
Immediately after, another mouthful of blood came out of the patient's mouth. His pupils narrowed.
At this moment, he didn't know if his brain was anesthetized from more than a year of clinical training. His immediate reaction was not to hide the blood, but to hold the patient's head to the left with his hand and let the blood flow from the patient's trachea. Let the contents flow out as smoothly as possible to avoid suffocation.
Watching the patient cough up blood one by one, Lin Hao felt that the tips of his gloved fingers were cold, and he threw the sticky blood on the left side of his face to the back of his head.
If this continues, sooner or later he will suffocate and this patient will die. How can it not make his body tremble with coldness.
Beep beep, the alarm on the monitor kept ringing. First, the patient's cough caused a huge floating heart rate curve to sound an alarm, and now the blood oxygen saturation value is popping red.
Lin Hao took a sharp breath.
He guessed it right, the blood oxygen continued to drop, almost falling below 80%.
"Dr. Lin." The nurse ran back with a suction tube and a series of suction devices such as a negative pressure bottle, asking for the doctor's orders.
The main reason is that the patient has just been sent to the hospital for emergency treatment, and there is no time to prepare for the sudden change in condition, so the medical staff can only deal with it in a hurry.
"Suck, suck--" Lin Hao spat out two words.
The nurse connected the connecting tube, negative pressure bottle, etc. to the central negative pressure suction device at the head of the patient's bed, turned on the negative pressure, and shouted: "Okay." Then, following the doctor's instructions, she picked up the sputum suction tube with gloved hands and approached the patient. He opened his mouth and nose, and found that the patient's mouth was closing and closing when he coughed and it was difficult to cooperate with sucking out the blood clots. Then he shouted: "Someone help me, open the patient's mouth."
The colleague shouted, and another nurse arrived at the scene to provide support. Seeing the doctor holding the patient's head, he reminded: "Doctor Lin."
Lin Hao seemed to be in a daze.
Then Nurse Li came over and asked the attending doctor: "Should I contact the Department of Internal Medicine or Surgery?"
The more chaotic the situation, the more anxious you are. However, clinically, rescue operations are often accompanied by constant noise from all around, just like a tsunami in a wet market that can drown the head of the central decision-maker.
Lin Hao's ears were buzzing loudly, and his mind could hardly remember what he was thinking about half a second ago. How do you think that in such a state, he can maintain normal and coherent thinking and make scientific and logical medical decisions that can withstand scrutiny?
It’s so difficult. It turns out that it is so difficult to become a doctor and practice medicine independently.
(End of chapter)