Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s-Chapter 1849: She Is Different
Tiered medical treatment is poorly executed domestically. Why has there not been a strong push for comprehensive implementation of tiered medical treatment reforms? People have long been suspicious of the skill level at grassroots hospitals; even for small ailments, they don’t trust them and insist on seeing specialists at top-tier hospitals. This leads to those with money and resources hogging all the advantageous resources, squeezing out the life-saving space needed by critically ill patients at the bottom.
Improving the technical level of grassroots hospitals is exceptionally difficult. Even just ensuring initial diagnoses are correct, with no missed or incorrect diagnoses, sets a high technical bar for doctors. Even top-tier specialists can make diagnostic mistakes.
Don’t believe it? Reference the ordeal of Student Geng’s younger brother.
People avoid misdiagnoses only by rushing to top-tier hospitals, creating a vicious cycle that is unsolvable. Ultimately, medicine is a high-tech demanding field; regardless of wealth, people can only pursue superior resources to survive. The solution to the imbalanced supply and demand might only arrive with a technological breakthrough in the future.
Perhaps when machines can assist doctors in surgery and help less skilled doctors with diagnoses, such tiered medical treatment might instill some confidence in people.
Xie Wanying came in and once again concernedly advised Little Sister Luo: "Listen well to what the doctors here say. Given your situation, it’s best to lie down and not move around to protect the fetus—you must persevere and not overthink other things. If you need help with anything, have someone come find me. I’m temporarily staying at this hospital and haven’t left."
Little Sister Luo nodded at her words.
Brother Luo looked at Xie Wanying’s face, his cold lips pulled into a conflicted expression.
After Xie Wanying and others left, Little Sister Luo said to her brother, "She is different from the other doctors."
"Let’s see," Brother Luo wasn’t quick to draw conclusions because when they went to the noodle shop, they saw Xie Wanying and Hu Hao together with their own eyes.
"By the way, which department did Dr. Xie say she was from?" Little Sister Luo recalled what Xie Wanying said and asked her brother.
"Gynecology," Brother Luo replied confidently.
From her brother’s tone, Little Sister Luo could sense that her brother seemed very familiar with Xie Wanying’s whereabouts: What was going on?
Brother Luo didn’t tell his sister that he feared Xie Wanying would later regret and report to the police, so he went to the gynecology department several times a day to secretly observe Xie Wanying’s moves. To put it bluntly, he regretted his impulsive and rash actions earlier.
The next day was Saturday, with the usual half-day work shift and no surgeries. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞
Suddenly, the emergency room called. Immediately, a man stormed into the gynecology department seeking accountability, angrily confronting the doctors: "The medicine your doctors prescribed for my wife, you said she should take it this morning. After she took it, she began to bleed heavily, and now she’s in the emergency room. What do you say about this?"
The nurse receiving patients inspected the outpatient medical records in the patient’s bag and, upon seeing the doctor’s signature, summoned the department’s doctors: "Doctor Du, Doctor Zuo, there’s a family member looking for you, a patient who had a medical abortion."
Du Haiwei, about to start rounds, heard this and turned back with a group of people to the nurse’s station.
Doctor Zuoliang took the medical record from the nurse’s hand, saw it was yesterday afternoon’s patient, and asked the family: "Did she take the medicine?"
"Yes, she took the medicine you prescribed and began to bleed heavily."
"That can’t be right. This is routine medication." Doctor Zuoliang took the medical record to inspect it closely. As far as she could see, Student Xie’s prescription seemed correct, so she double-checked the medication bag the patient brought to check if the pharmacy had made an error. There was no error in dispensing, but the quantity remaining in the medication bag was abnormal.







