A large group of people looked at Director Qin, and almost all of them rounded their mouths, as if shouting "boo".
Director Qin would have covered his mouth with both hands and clenched his teeth.
Nearly, almost scared the patient.
It is equivalent to the surgeon not frightening the patient, but the bystanders being frightened first. Such a situation is not uncommon in clinical practice.
Just because the person doing the operation knows what's going on doesn't mean that the bystanders can understand why the other person knows what's going on, even if the bystander is a big boss.
Young people are to be feared. This is a classic saying that Mr. Zhang often mentions. It will never go out of style. Now Director Qin has the same thought in her heart. Of course, she has not yet figured out why the surgeon, Dr. Xie, said that local anesthesia is not needed.
Is it possible without local anesthesia? Traditional Chinese medicine technology is only an auxiliary effect. No wonder Director Qin thinks so, she is a doctor of Western medicine, not traditional Chinese medicine.
The view of traditional Chinese medicine is that in operations where Western medicine technology is the mainstay, it can only be an auxiliary. This is not because Director Qin underestimates traditional Chinese medicine. If the operation is based on traditional Chinese medicine technology, Western medicine is equally auxiliary.
The technology must be able to cross majors and surpass others, and its technical strength must be equivalent to surpassing the original owner, which is not an ordinary difficulty.
What surprised Director Qin even more was that this technology was a traditional Chinese medicine technique. The Chinese medicine doctor who performed the technology, Dr. Wen, did not even say that Western medicine does not require anesthesia. Instead, it was their Western medicine doctor, Dr. Xie Wanying, who took the initiative and said: Our Western medicine doctors are "not as good as ours"
"People" is no longer needed.
This female surgical genius from the National Association is truly: one-minded in legend, but in reality she is even more one-minded than in legend~
Director Qin turned to look at the Guoxie people, is this true?
All the members of the National Association and Guozhi nodded in unison: Dr. Xie’s performance today was just trivial.
It's definitely not a matter of not being as skilled as others.
Look at the Chinese doctors present who are all shocked.
Wen Jinsheng and Professor Wang looked at each other with eyes that had never been so nervous: Is this a Western doctor helping to verify their traditional Chinese medicine technology?
What's so strange? There are many things where Western medicine has verified the theories of Chinese medicine. Just like Chinese medicine, they often say that we need to learn from Western medicine.
In the same medical circle, with the same dream of treating diseases and saving lives, the most correct way is to work together. Since we can see that the technical effects of traditional Chinese medicine are achieved, why bother giving patients extra injections? This does not mean that it will reduce the trouble of doctors' operations, but that it can
To minimize the additional harm that the operation must cause to the patient.
In this regard, is Dr. Xie’s judgment correct?
Can she make the decision alone?
At least big bosses like Director Qin have already raised questions. The reason why others are not rushing to speak out is simple. Just because they don't understand doesn't mean their judgment is definitely wrong. You can look at the situation first before talking.
What Dr. Xie can see is indeed not something that ordinary people can see quickly.
Dr. Song, who was the assistant, was closest to the surgical area. He simply stretched out his gloved fingers to gently press the surgical preparation area to test the patient's reaction.
The sleeping patient did not move his eyelids and continued to sleep, as if he did not even notice that the doctor was touching his body.
A severely ill patient may have delayed sensory responses.
Dr. Song then increased the pressure on his fingers.
Everyone was watching. Director Qin stood on tiptoes and looked around, fearing that he might miss the patient's reaction to crying out in pain.
There were no cries of pain on the hospital bed, only the patient could feel Dr. Song's fingers tickling him, nudging the corners of his mouth in his sleep.
After making a comprehensive judgment, Dr. Song remained silent and his eyes were shining brightly.