Chapter 701
If any type of talent wants to be cultivated in batches, there must be a prerequisite.
That's standardization.
Once a level of standardization is reached, it will be easy to train talents.
For example, in military academies, the teaching materials are all compiled from real cases, from shallow to deep.
Each case has a detailed explanation, and students only need to make deductions based on the case after they are familiar with it.
Although these are just a process on paper, at least in theory they can do it.
After arriving at the grassroots level, through the accumulation of time, they will become familiar with it step by step and transform the knowledge they have learned into their own.
Most of the officers trained by military academies are grassroots officers, nothing more than station commanders and generals.
This level itself is not high, and the influence it can have is very limited.
Even if a mistake is made, it will not affect the entire battle situation. In other words, although it is just an armchair battle, there is room for error.
When the waves wash away the sand, what remains are the real talents.
Although promotion through military merit has continued in the past, the biggest problem is that it is easy to break down.
Moreover, the quality of officers varies widely, and through the military academy model, I dare not say how high the upper limit will be in the future, but at least the lower limit can be raised.
For an army that is constantly improving, this is enough.
Moreover, the channels for promotion at the grassroots level of the army have not been completely cut off. With military merit, you can still be promoted, but you only have to study in a military academy for a few years.
The advantage of this model is that after learning, they can immediately go back and invest in new positions, without the need to go to internships, sum up experience, etc.
In addition, the greatest significance of the military academy is that it has changed the traditional model of running the military.
In the past, the military was mostly run by the personal charisma of generals, but now more reliance is placed on unified models and more scientific methods.
Another advantage of this is that officers can plug and play and only need to get familiar with the army for a period of time. Unlike in the past, if an army changed its generals, it basically required a running-in period of half a year or a year.
Just fine.
Although it can still fight, the combat effectiveness of this unit cannot be fully stimulated until this running-in period is passed.
The military can do this, and other disciplines can do the same.
But medicine is a relatively special subject. It is different from those ordinary subjects, or even far different.
Standards have always existed, such as medicinal materials, formulas, etc.
Even the diagnostic techniques and judgments have standards.
But the biggest problem in medicine is that people are different.
No one's condition will be exactly the same or remain the same.
It is this unknown change that brings huge difficulties to medicine.
Wang Buxu carefully read the plan submitted by the medical school.
In other words, it is a preliminary discussion opinion. There are many plans, but they have not been finalized.
However, Wang Buxu always felt that these plans were not good.
For example, the first one is relatively reliable.
The School of Medicine proposes to continue to allocate disciplines and establish a Department of Diagnosis and a Department of Prescription.
The reason is that every doctor must learn diagnosis and prescription. Although prescription seems easy, so many medicinal materials and medicinal properties need to be written down, which takes about one to two years to complete.
And you need to keep reviewing it in the future to avoid forgetting or remembering it wrongly.
This will take up a lot of their time and energy.
Diagnosis is the key to medical treatment. Whether it is diagnosis or prescribing medicine, it requires a lot of experience to accumulate.
Both of these require a lot of time, so it is recommended to separate them.
Those who diagnose should do it professionally. There is no need to learn knowledge about medicinal materials. You can focus all your energy on this in the future.
The prescription focuses on medicinal materials, diagnoses the results, and prescribes medicine based on the results.
Although this was also a solution, Wang Buxian directly ruled it out.
If a doctor doesn't know how to prescribe medicine, is this okay?
If one person's condition is simply described, how can it be possible for another person to prescribe the most accurate prescription?
And it’s too troublesome. If we do this, there will be a lot of wrangling in the future.
You say he didn’t diagnose correctly, and he says you prescribed the wrong medicine. Whose fault is it?
There was no way to judge at all. Wang Buxian didn't want doctor-patient disputes to fill the entire Han Dynasty in the near future.
Although it is estimated that such a thing is unlikely to happen these days, but who can say for sure?
Other ideas are even less reliable.
As for the unified prescription of medicine, although the effect may not be very good, it can still cure the disease. It is just a matter of taking more medicine.
Although this seems to solve the problem in a short period of time, what will happen after a long time?
Because there are more convenient ways, no one is willing to invest huge energy in researching technology.
There is only one consequence of doing this: one generation of talents will become worse than the next.
Therefore, there are no shortcuts in medicine.
If you take a shortcut today, reality will slap you hard tomorrow.
Of course, there are not no shortcuts, and there are also more suitable and more perfect solutions.
Medical students need a lot of practice to gain experience. If they can't see a disease once, they can't see it twice, or they can't see it a hundred or two hundred times, wouldn't they still know it?
As the saying goes, a patient becomes a doctor after a long period of time. Basically, a patient can prescribe his own medicine, although I don't agree with it...
What about a professional doctor?
If we use a large number of actual cases to provide them with experience, wouldn't this increase the speed of growth?
Why do big cities in later generations have high medical standards?
In addition to political reasons, there are other factors. For example, because of the geographical location, people trust this place more, so there are more patients. With more patients, more people can be seen and treated, so naturally
Got experience.
If everyone discusses and learns from each other behind closed doors, isn't this progress?
There are not many patients in small hospitals, so the most they can do is get vaccinated and have a basic physical examination to check for fevers and colds. Those diseases that are not even listed in big hospitals can make the whole hospital feel like they are facing a formidable enemy.
.
Wang Buxuan suddenly laughed.
He found that his mind seemed to be getting slower and slower now.
Such a good example, a ready-made model is right in front of you, but you have even forgotten it?
If this trick had been remembered earlier, would it have caused a group of people headaches for so long?
Simple, trivial, awesome...
Wang Buxu waved his hand and directly approved his opinion.
Chapter completed!