Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s-Chapter 1863: Was She Agitated?
Too many people. A variety of people were blocking the passage and the door. Following the stretcher bed and ambulance, Xie Wanying had to stand on tiptoes, looking around, unable to see Senior Brother Shim or Boss Zhang.
Approaching to receive the patient was an internal medicine doctor with the surname Qi, someone she had not seen before, contacted by the patient’s family themselves.
After a while, she finally saw a familiar figure in the corridor: was it Shilei from Guo Zhi’s Cardiology Department?
Shilei was standing at the nurses’ station preparing to write something when he suddenly sensed eyes on him from behind. He turned his face, saw her, was momentarily stunned, then put away his pen and walked over.
At this moment, Xie Wanying and the other medical personnel had moved the patient to a corner inside the emergency room, and Dr. Qi was flipping through the medical records. Shilei squeezed through the crowded throng and came up to them.
"Mr. Shi," Xie Wanying respectfully addressed her senior.
Dr. Qi, seeing her greet, looked at Shilei and asked, "Do you know her? She called you her teacher?"
"She is a medical student from Guoxie, your internal medicine Dr. Shim’s junior sister." Shilei briefly introduced her to his colleague.
"She’s from Guoxie?" Dr. Qi glanced again at the records, noting that they indeed stated Beidou Third Hospital. He gasped in wonder, "Did Guoxie send its student to intern at Beidu Third?"
This situation was so rare, rare to the extreme. The two medical schools were known rivals, constantly vying against each other. Training each other’s students equates to nurturing a competitor; could it be that Beidu’s brain short-circuited?
Dr. Qi’s head was filled with countless whys, questioning Xie Wanying curiously, "Do you have any family working at Beidu Third?" 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺
Such examples exist; when one’s child can’t get into one’s own medical school, they have to resort to using connections to arrange for their child to intern at their own teaching hospital.
"No." Her parents were just ordinary folks.
Shilei didn’t share Dr. Qi’s surprise; his thoughts were entirely opposite. If a student is competent, any medical school would welcome them to intern. The one being shortsighted wasn’t Beidu, it was Guoxie, allowing their student to learn on their rival’s turf without fear of being poached. It only showed Guoxie’s confidence was out of this world.
The two doctors from Guo Zhi read the patient’s medical history, quickly discovering some oddities. Dr. Qi couldn’t stop himself from asking, "Is the patient under some sort of stress?"
Did his aunt experience some kind of shock? Min Dongxiu, hearing this for the first time, pressed Dr. Qi for details, "What’s the situation?"
"Did the patient become unsteady and fall, or did she get overly emotional?" Dr. Qi knew while asking that the former was less likely; if she were physically weak, a fall was more likely to result in broken bones rather than a heart condition. So, being startled and developing a heart condition seemed more plausible. In that case, it would be akin to emotional agitation. It seemed to be stress-induced arrhythmia rather than an existing organic disease flare-up, since the patient’s history and current reports didn’t support that.
"My aunt was hospitalized alone, able to walk and move by herself, and she was very optimistic about life. We were extremely surprised when we received sudden notification from the hospital about her accident." Min Dongxiu explained the family wasn’t accompanying the patient in the hospital, and the patient was fine before, so this stress certainly wasn’t from within the family but external.







