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Chapter 162 Dialogue

When talking about the special disease classification of parasites, people usually think of "diarrhea" and "malnutrition". Reporter Lin is no exception. He has seen many children infected with roundworms who have yellow faces and thin muscles and look like

It's like someone who just escaped from a war-torn area.

"Parasite...you mean diarrhea and malnutrition?" Reporter Lin took it for granted and put his own experience into it, "It should be relatively easy to identify diarrhea, right?"

Sun Lien smiled bitterly, "No, that's an intestinal parasite. This special parasite caused this ten-year-old child to grow to more than 70 kilograms in three years."

Over tea, the three of them chatted about Chen Wen's case. Although the two people opposite were reporters introduced by Dean Song, they should be more reliable. Sun Lien was still very careful to hide the fact that he could directly talk to Chen Wen.

According to him, this case was a little boy who lived in a pastoral area and fell ill while visiting relatives in Ningyuan. In short, except for the illness, all other contents were made up by Sun Lien himself.

Originally, Sun Lien was a little worried that these two well-informed reporters and teachers would be keenly aware of the loopholes in his story, and then directly expose him as lying. But what Sun Lien did not expect was that the two reporters discovered the loopholes in his story.

However, the two of them not only did not point out the error, but also used their wise perspective to find various explanations for the loopholes in Sun Lien's story.

It feels great to make up lies and have someone tell you the truth. Sun Lien finished telling the story happily. He took a sip of tea and moistened his smoky throat, "This is the first problem I encountered.

I also learned a lot from this patient."

You can't stick to the appearance, you must think about the deeper reasons. This is what Sun Lien learned from Chen Wen. It would have been very difficult to deduce Cushing's disease from the status prompt in the status bar, if it hadn't been for Chen Wen.

Gangrene appeared, and Sun Lien, who was pressed for time, had to find another way to diagnose Cushing's disease. It was impossible for him to imagine that Chen Wen also had cerebral hydatid.

From this perspective, the diagnosis of Chen Wen's disease actually had little to do with Sun Lien's judgment. Her diagnosis was actually due to MRI imaging.

Sun Lien knew it in his heart, so when others praised him as a great doctor, although Sun Lien was very happy, he did not dare to feel complacent at all. As Dr. Pascal said, other doctors can make mistakes.

But Sun Lien can't. He has now become the main doctor in the Fourth Central Hospital to deal with the diagnosis of difficult and complicated diseases. Considering the special positioning of the Fourth Central Hospital, Sun Lien is likely to be the last chance for a diagnosis for patients suffering from difficult and complicated diseases.

.

If Sun Lien made a mistake, the patient would probably have to pay the price with his life.

The so-called pressure does not only appear after repeated requests from superiors and colleagues. Sun Lien actually puts a lot of pressure on himself in his daily work. The most direct manifestation of pressure in Sun Lien is "It's not mine anyway."

The patient... doesn't have to be curious."

"When we left today, we heard that a patient came to your emergency room and broke his arm. He seemed to be a criminal suspect brought by the police." Reporter Lin sorted out the content of his interview, and then asked Sun Lien

He asked, "Do you often encounter patients like this?"

"What kind of... are you talking about?" Sun Lien was stunned. If they were emergency patients with bone injuries, then the emergency room would have seen too many.

"Crime suspect." Reporter Lin replied, "Hospitals are originally a place for dealing with illnesses. In this kind of environment, we will encounter... these people must be more than other places, right?"

Sun Lien thought for a moment and then replied, "This question... I really can't say. After all, I don't have statistical data. And during the time I was working, the number of police comrades coming was not... not particularly many.

"

Sun Lien originally wanted to answer this question in the negative, but as he spoke, he felt that the content of reporter Lin's question really made some sense. Many of the patients treated in the emergency department were indeed injured due to human factors.

For example, the large group of 4S store salesmen and housing agents who were fighting in the KTV, Gao Yan who was hospitalized for treatment due to methamphetamine poisoning, and Zhan Hao who was poisoned by his neighbor and is still recovering. In total,

If these things didn't exist, maybe the work in the emergency department would be much easier.

"That's still quite a lot?" The young reporter nodded, "When these people were sent to the hospital, Dr. Sun, what did you think?"

"What are your thoughts?" Sun Lien was stunned for a moment, then shook his head with regret, "What other thoughts do you have? I just feel sorry for them."

Reporter Lin raised his head and glanced at Sun Lien in surprise. He originally wanted to guide Sun Lien to answer something like, "Do your job well, so you won't be afraid of these criminal suspects." However, unexpectedly, Sun Lien did not follow the routine.

Play your cards.

"I have seen several patients like this." Sun Lien took another sip of tea. He talked a lot today and his voice was almost hoarse. "Most of these patients have one thing in common. They are all quite young. Since our time,

From a doctor's point of view, young patients generally respond better to treatment. Their bodies are younger, more resilient, and their physiological foundation is generally better than that of older people. In other words, they are better than children or older people.

Middle-aged and elderly people are more resistant and easier to treat."

Reporter Lin nodded. Instead of guiding Sun Lien's answer, he lowered his head and started writing.

"But they obviously have good bodies, but they have turned them into this..." Sun Lien shook his head, "Every time I see these young people, I always feel it is a pity. They don't care about their bodies.

On the one hand, on the other hand..." Sun Lien smiled sheepishly. He also felt that his idea was a bit too much. "If you don't care about your own body so much, why can't you give your good body to others? I see it too.

There are many people who want to live but fail to do so due to various reasons. They don’t know how precious life is.”

Reporter Lin nodded and quietly deleted Sun Lien's last sentence from the notebook.

"When you meet this kind of patient, do you have any special tendency in treatment or diagnosis?" The young reporter is still asking, "Will you have any reservations in treatment because the patient is a criminal suspect?"

"That is absolutely not and definitely not possible." Sun Lien replied solemnly, "Why don't I ask you a question instead. What do you think is the job of our doctors?"

"Heal the wounded and rescue the dying?" The young reporter was stunned, but he didn't expect that he would become the subject of the question.

"Saving lives and healing the wounded is indeed part of our job." Sun Lien said sternly, "As you summarized, our job does not include judging or judging whether a life is worth saving. That is not our job."

"As my instructor often said to us, professional matters should be left to professionals. It is the job of the court and judges to judge a person." Sun Lien nodded on the table and used his movements to emphasize himself.

In a tone of voice, "If we doctors start to judge whether a life is worth saving based on our own preferences, it means that we will overstep our authority. If non-professionals rush into certain professional fields, there will definitely be big trouble. Ignore everything else for the time being.

If there are reservations in treatment and diagnosis, leading to the death of the patient, it is no different from direct murder. In addition to legal responsibility, this heavy moral burden will easily overwhelm a person, or he will ignore it from now on.

In life, you will either fall into self-blame and be unable to extricate yourself. This kind of thing is too risky and does no good to anyone. We will definitely not do it."

Sun Lien sighed again when he said this, "In fact, doctors are probably the people in the world who most hope that their patients will recover and be discharged safely."


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