【519】Who rolls first?

Style: Romance Author: Fat mother is kindWords: 1350Update Time: 24/01/12 05:52:06
Doctors from the local Chinese medicine hospital arrived at the scene and heard that a patient needed Chinese medicine treatment and quickly asked what was going on.

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

Acupuncture, a unique technology brand of traditional Chinese medicine, is famous all over the world.

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

For example, it is more difficult for Western medicine surgery than Western medicine internal medicine to copy and promote technical doctors in batches, but it is the same for traditional Chinese medicine. Traditional Chinese medicine prescriptions are widely promoted in clinical practice. The addition and subtraction of a prescription is used to target which disease. Traditional Chinese medicine acupuncture and moxibustion are difficult to analogize. It is difficult for individual doctors to learn the operation and copy.

The most famous Western doctors and the most famous Chinese doctors are gathered in the capital.

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

A quick look at the private sector shows whether there are more private clinics prescribing medicine or more private acupuncture clinics. The sharp contrast in quantity makes it clear at a glance. It’s not that there is no demand for acupuncture, but that there is a lack of talent for acupuncture.

A local fellow TCM doctor said matter-of-factly: "I don't know how skilled the acupuncture department of our hospital is on a daily basis, but asking them to give a professor an acupuncture will be effective?!"

Originally, Western doctors thought Professor Jiao's words were ridiculous, but colleagues in traditional Chinese medicine confirmed this, which made Dr. Cui Shaofeng even more anxious.

I was wondering if I should make up my mind and ask someone to forcefully carry Mr. Jiao back to the hospital. However, it is not the job of a doctor to forcefully carry a patient.

Doctors are not policemen. Unless the patient is mentally ill and has harmed himself and others and needs a doctor to comfort him with medication, he should not do this.

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

Others in the team echoed: Yes, let her say it.

Everyone trusts King Xie Juan more emotionally.

Dr. Choi stepped aside.

Doctor Xie didn't say anything just now out of respect for the team leader.

As a reborn professional, she knows that casually asserting the authority of the team leader will affect the operation of the entire team and is inappropriate.

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

What does Mr. Jiao mean? Are you deliberately making things difficult for Dr. Xi by insisting on giving her an injection?

No, Mr. Jiao simply believed that his injury did not need to be carried to the hospital for treatment based on his professional knowledge. He even believed that forced lifting would be bad for the injury.

As for Mr. Jiao’s conflict with others, it’s just a childish thing.

In fact, Dr. Cui was right that this problem of the elderly is similar to that of children.

The only mistake is that the underlying logic of a child's orderly period is that the child as an individual demands to be respected by those around him.

It is not correct to treat children simply as children who are ignorant. The awakening of self-awareness in the child's order period is not the fault of the child. The child only inherits human genes, and human genes include human self-awareness.

In the eyes of others, the elderly may think that various functions of the elderly are no longer good and will be disabled when they get old. However, the elderly believe that they need to be respected by others until they are old, just like children. This is the so-called stubbornness.

In the elderly, just like children, the symptoms of stubbornness will be highlighted by the pressure from the surrounding environment.

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

Mr. Jiao is a master of traditional Chinese medicine. He believes in the traditional Chinese medicine technology he practices and loves throughout his life and does not allow others to arbitrarily refute his traditional Chinese medicine technology without academic debate.

It is ridiculous in the eyes of Mr. Jiao to use any professional license to veto it.

In medical practice, under many special circumstances, doctors must save lives as long as they can save lives. Maximizing the value of patients' lives and maximizing interests does not violate social morality and professional ethics, and is in line with medical immunity for doctors' life-saving behavior.

After hearing these words from classmate Xie, Dr. Cui sounded the alarm: "Do you want to give him the injection?"

Dr. Xie Wanying said: "First of all, Professor Jiao himself needs to convince me academically."

The blame was thrown back on Mr. Jiao's own head.

The other doctors almost laughed out loud: By the way, if you want to pass the exam, you must first let yourself roll up.

Professor Jiao's eyes widened and he seemed to be expecting this. He was not too surprised and answered calmly: "No problem, I am guiding you to give the injection, not asking you to give it to me alone."