Capítulo 1489: Chapter 1489: Take Doctors’ Advice Seriously
“He called to tell he’s coming back tomorrow. I said there’s no rush, but he said his family was urging him to return so as not to delay his studies,” Ren Chongda said, thinking how fortunate he was that his students were generally mature and steady, causing him little trouble as a counselor.
Student Pan went ho for his grandfather’s funeral, and it’s uncertain how he’s feeling now. Xie Wanying wished on one hand that Student Pan would quickly bounce back, and on the other hand, she found the situation quite regrettable.
“You care about him a lot,” Ren Chongda asked her, curious about her interest in this matter, just like Cao Yong.
With fifty students in a class, the probability of sothing happening in a student’s family over several years of study is high. It wasn’t just Pan Shihua; last year another boy in the class lost a family mber and she didn’t inquire about it then.
Mainly because what happened with Student Pan was very similar to what happened with her grandfather. Xie Wanying couldn’t express this. Facing the attentive looks from the counselor and Senior Cao, she pulled at the corner of her mouth and said, “It just happened. Earlier incidents with students from other classes, they didn’t inform .”
As the only girl in the class, she usually interacted more with the two senior sisters and was practically isolated from the information shared among the boys.
“Tomorrow, your class monitor has to work and won’t be available. You can co help do so work in the office while you’re free,” Ren Chongda seized the opportunity to get so help.
Cao Yong squinted his eyes, looking at him.
Under Cao Yong’s gaze, Ren Chongda suddenly realized he had just roped in the girl Cao liked as a worker, gulping down his words. It was too late to change his mind.
Xie Wanying readily responded, “No problem.”
Helping the counselor with work seed great, providing a chance to peek at internal information in the teacher’s office.
Seeing her eagerness to go, Cao Yong didn’t object.
In private, Ren Chongda discussed technical issues with Cao Yong: “Our hospital is renowned for gynecological oncology treatnt, but our obstetrics departnt is a bit lacking.”
When it cos to obstetrics, general tertiary hospitals have to give way to specialized hospitals like maternal and child health hospitals. These specialty hospitals handle nurous births every day. Like any dical specialty, obstetrics requires doctors to accumulate experience. The more birthing cases they handle, the more complications they encounter, enabling them to swiftly anticipate potential problems.
“Both husband and wife work at our hospital and have, for convenience, registered with our obstetrics departnt,” Ren Chongda said.
In fact, hospital insiders understand which places have better technical expertise, and they don’t necessarily opt to receive treatnt at their own hospital.
“Does he regret it? Should have sent his wife to the maternal and child health hospital?” Cao Yong asked.
“Regretting now does him no good. That’s why he’s anxious and doesn’t know what to do. Would you help him talk to Director Lin?”
“Did Director Lin discharge her?”
“Before eting you, I got another call from him. The test results suggested it wasn’t amniotic fluid. Director Lin thinks there’s no big problem, suggesting hospitalization for two more days for observation. If all is well, she can go ho and rest, waiting to return when it’s ti for delivery. He feels the back-and-forth is unsettling.”
Good dical skills an not changing opinions capriciously. Each frivolous change of opinion can cause significant anxiety for the patient.
Director Lin might consider them hospital colleagues, disregarding such minor issues.
At this mont, honestly, even Cao Yong felt the obstetrics departnt at their hospital seed sowhat unreliable, saying, “In this case, she might as well rest at ho and be more cautious herself.”
“If their family could look after Xiaobing, it’d be fine. You forgot their families and hotowns are thousands of miles away,” he replied.
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