At that time, the hospital will act in accordance with the legal judgment.
The procedure is time-consuming and labor-intensive, and the family members cannot accept it. On the other hand, because they don’t understand medicine, they are afraid that the hospital will do something wrong and their family members will die unjustly.
If we take the legal route, the patient's medical records must be sealed as soon as possible. But in actual operation, this is simply not possible.
Especially for this kind of emergency patient resuscitation, clinical practice always involves first rescuing patients and then completing medical records. Family members clamor for medical records and explanations, but the doctors cannot provide them. This situation has once again deepened the patient's family members' distrust of the hospital.
So let’s talk about why family members often think that hospitals fail to fulfill their responsibilities and kill their own patients. Usually this impression is based on ordinary people’s understanding of medical treatment. They believe that children who are not in serious condition when they are sent to the hospital will definitely be saved.
In fact, do the family members think that the child's condition is not serious? Is it really true that the child's condition is not serious? On this issue, even doctors cannot guarantee 100% that the child's condition is not serious. Medical science is too esoteric. After initially thinking that the child's condition was not serious, his condition suddenly turned serious and he died.
Many patients went there, especially pediatric patients.
It is too difficult to distinguish such responsibility in the face of medicine.
The ambulance stopped at the entrance of the emergency department.
In the past, a group of doctors and nurses would have swarmed out to help pick up the patients.
Not today, a bunch of people were blocking the door.
The medical staff in the emergency department were unable to protect themselves. Only a nurse took a blood pressure monitor and came out to pick up the patient. When passing through the crowd of family members, the family members were sitting on the steps and blocking the way. The nurse had to shout: "Get out of the way."
There is a lathe that needs to pass by to push the patient to the emergency room."
The family members were in a bad mood and their eyes widened when they heard this.
Seeing this situation, Xie Wanying, who was in the car, decisively discussed with Senior Brother Huang: "We won't go to the emergency department. We will drive to the CT room for examination."
These people want to make trouble. It's not that they don't understand their feelings, but the doctor really can't care. The patient at hand also has a life, and the doctor has only one thing to do, which is to protect the patient at hand.
Huang Zhilei heard what the junior sister said made sense, and immediately asked the driver to turn around and drive the ambulance to the CT room at the back.
The stretcher was rolled down from the ambulance and sent to the CT room for emergency CT. After a while, Xie Wanying saw Brother Zhu who was running all the way.
Zhu Huicang asked: "What's going on? I couldn't hear clearly on the phone."
Several people entered the CT room and checked the examination results on the computer with the CT doctor.
An experienced doctor can determine the general outline of a patient's condition from the initial data before the composite film is produced.
As long as you think about it, you will know that it is unlikely that only a piece of glass will enter the human body in this kind of explosion injury. When the glass explodes, it is like a thousand arrows piercing the heart. Since the human body itself has a barrier, once this barrier is broken somewhere, death will be here as if it is desperate.
Take advantage of the loopholes.
The clinical symptoms that usually appear are that there may be more than one glass fragment in the patient's skull. Unfortunately, the glass fragments are too small and cannot be detected by CT. The doctor may be able to make some inferences based on the degree of craniocerebral injury.
"Hematoma in the temporal lobe." The CT doctor said, and after consulting with the neurosurgeon present, "the length of the longest piece of glass should be about ten centimeters."
This length is consistent with what Xie judged for the first time on site.
The other doctors present who had heard her diagnosis earlier were filled with emotion. Presumably, the final diagnosis of the firefighter who sent Xuanwu was similar to what she said.