"You go to Guozhi to see the patient." Since he had some matters at home that he needed to go back to deal with, Du Haiwei assigned Dr. Zuo Liang to see Aunt Min.
"Yes, Teacher Du." Zuo Liang responded. This patient had a special accident in their hospital. The follow-up matters need to be handled well. The doctor cannot be cold and cause the patient and his family to complain. Everyone wants to know what the patient's condition was at that time. Sudden illness.
When she walked out of the office, Xie Wanying followed Dr. Zuo Liang and said, "Teacher, I want to accompany you to see the patient, okay?"
"Okay." Zuo Liang said, remembering that she had a good relationship with this patient, and it would be better if she went to comfort him.
With the teacher's permission, Xie Wanying went to the locker room to change her clothes after get off work and came out to get into the teacher's car downstairs. When she walked to the door of the ward, a person walked towards her in a hurry without looking at the passers-by, and she almost collided head-on with her.
"Oh, why are you walking without looking at people?" The voice from the other side blamed her preemptively.
Xie Wanying only heard the familiar voice and looked at the face of the person opposite.
At the same time, Shen Xifei, who raised her head and caught her eyes, screamed when she recognized her face, covered her mouth and muttered: "Why are you here?"
"I'm interning here."
Shen Xifei glanced at her daily clothes again, remained alert to her words, and asked, "Are you off work?"
"yes."
Shen Xifei made way for her and hoped that she would leave quickly.
Xie Wanying was in a hurry and passed her directly.
After glancing at her leaving figure, Shen Xifei ran into the ward with a bang, walked to the nurse's station and asked, "Is Teacher Hu here?"
"I don't think I saw him." The nurse looked at the ward and saw Dr. Hu missing, and said to her, "Go and ask Dr. Su. She is from Dr. Hu's team, so she may know where Dr. Hu is."
Shen Xifei went to find Dr. Su according to the nurse's directions. As she approached, she heard Dr. Su complaining to others about the heavy workload.
"I'm so busy that I'm going to be paralyzed. I don't know when we will have another person in our team." Dr. Su felt as if he had crawled out of a deep pond, and his voice was weak.
"Is your team short of people?" the doctor she was talking to asked her.
"There are always one or two people less than other groups. Dr. Hu is very strict, and most people don't like to come to her group." Dr. Su's words seem to be inconsistent with other people's impressions of Dr. Hu.
I originally thought that Dr. Hu's attitude towards patients was not very good, and he would be a doctor who was relatively casual about his work. He was not strict with himself, so he was harsh on his patients. This was a wrong public impression of doctors.
The actual situation is that a doctor's attitude towards patients has nothing to do with the doctor's personal technical level.
Some doctors have a cold attitude towards patients, but their medical skills are very commendable. On the contrary, some doctors seem to be gentle and considerate to patients, but they can't always see the patient's disease well. The patient's biggest worry is nothing more than thinking about it. Find a doctor who has good skills and a good attitude towards patients, the best of both worlds.
It can only be said that there are not so many perfect things in this world.
The fact that some medical experts have such a general attitude towards patients is based on their own understanding of medicine. Patients do not understand this either, and can only think that doctors have some kind of resentment towards patients.
As mentioned before, doctors generally only have personal feelings for their friends and family, and do not have much emotional involvement with patients. Doctors treat patients to fight against the disease and have nothing to do with the patient himself. Patients do not need to think about this.