I Can Hear the Heart's Voice of Traditional Chinese Medicine-Chapter 341 - 150: Those Western Medicine Cannot Save, I Will Save With Traditional Chinese Medicine (Double - )
Xie Mingsong is considered an experienced doctor at the District Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, with rich clinical experience.
He hasn’t gone to sit in at the United South Chinese Medicine Association or to the City Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, but his abilities are by no means lacking. It’s just that as he’s gotten older, he’s become used to staying at the District Hospital and is too lazy to move.
Besides, his status at the District Hospital is extremely high, and he might not have the same treatment if he were to go elsewhere.
So, he really doesn’t want to leave.
Anyway, going or not going to the City Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital doesn’t make much difference to his salary and treatment.
Going to the City Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, he would be a chief Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor, and not going, he still is.
Moreover, during his consultation days, many people register to see him, and his reputation among patients is growing.
From a humble intern to where he is today, he has surpassed his own expectations.
For Xie Mingsong, this is already very fulfilling.
When Lu Xuan and this batch of interns arrived at the District Hospital, the hospital actually arranged two interns for him. At that time, he was also aware that Lu Xuan had excellent grades, but he delegated the task of selecting to Liu Rong.
After all, Liu Rong, being the chief of the internal Traditional Chinese Medicine department, with an administrative position, was naturally the best person to handle the distribution of interns, and it allowed him to avoid offending anyone.
In addition, Liu Rong usually respected him quite a lot. Although Liu Rong wasn’t very capable, he was very respectful to an experienced doctor like him, always greeted him with a smile, and would always bring some good things from home for them.
Over time, people chose to turn a blind eye to the things Liu Rong did.
Xie Mingsong was inherently the typical nice person, not wanting to offend anyone, just wishing to manage his small domain, working when it’s time to work, consulting when it’s time to consult, and trying his best to serve every patient he sees.
Also, occasionally he would give some pointers to the two interns he was mentoring.
The two interns, as the nurses mentioned, one was the child of Liu Rong’s friend, and the other seemed to be a relative of Liu Rong, calling him Uncle Cousin.
However, Xie Mingsong didn’t mind these things—mentoring is mentoring, and the interns allocated to the District Hospital were generally good. He didn’t necessarily have to choose the best, and since he was retiring in a couple of years, he didn’t plan on taking on any students.
Over the years, he had mentored quite a few students, and with retirement approaching, he was reluctant to take on even those two students.
If he’s going to mentor, he must be responsible.
He must be responsible not only to the students but also to the patients.
There’s no way he could allow two Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners who can’t even take a pulse to harm patients, right?
This, Xie Mingsong couldn’t do.
But if he took them on, he could forget about having a restful retirement.
Precisely considering these, when Liu Rong was allocating interns, he didn’t actively select anyone. Since he wasn’t taking any students, he’d just mentor them for one or two years—who wouldn’t work?
Furthermore, it was a favor to Liu Rong—why not?
The incident of Liu Rong driving Lu Xuan away was something Xie Mingsong heard about, but he didn’t say anything, nor did it stir any emotions within him.
As a chief Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor, he had seen countless interns.
Every year, many interns come by—some good, some average, and some even better than Lu Xuan. Who would remember an intern who offended the chief of the internal Traditional Chinese Medicine department and was driven away?
Don’t mention him—the nurses at the District Hospital probably wouldn’t remember a young person being driven away by Liu Rong either.
Everyone is usually very busy; who has the time to pay attention to a small intern?
If a nurse left, it would probably have a much bigger impact than an intern leaving.
And Lu Xuan leaving didn’t even cause a ripple.
Even the few nurses who were relatively well-acquainted with Lu Xuan only mentioned once that year that Lu Xuan left the District Hospital and went to the Health Center, and after that, no one mentioned it again.
After hearing about it, Xie Mingsong even thought at the time, although everyone was in Yong City, the chance of encountering him again in this life was nonexistent.
After all, an intern who went to the Health Center nearly had a zero chance of returning to the District Hospital in this life.
But what he didn’t expect was that in less than a month, he would meet this young man once driven away by Liu Rong again.
And in such circumstances.
Faced with Ji Huan’s situation, although he was a chief Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor, in front of these top big shots in the ward at the moment, he obviously had no room to act and wasn’t interested in meddling in this mess.
But what completely surprised Xie Mingsong was that, in a helpless situation, Huang Beishan actually invited Lu Xuan.
At this point, Xie Mingsong felt a bit muddled; he didn’t know where the issue was, to cause such a situation: someone who was driven away from the District Hospital, unlikely to have any development, appeared before him as if a deity descended, and became regarded by people like Huang Beishan as the future leader in Yong City’s Traditional Chinese Medicine circle, a leading figure in Traditional Chinese Medicine for decades to come according to Huang Beishan.
And this young man, only in his twenties, seemed to be now the teacher of the acupuncture legend Zhou Jiande in Yong City.
The extent of his acupuncture prowess, making Zhou Jiande willingly become his disciple, was unimaginable to Xie Mingsong.
Furthermore, Huang Beishan even admitted personally that Lu Xuan’s understanding of internal Traditional Chinese Medicine was no less than his own.







