"She fainted on the staircase." Dr. Qi read what was written in the patient’s dical record and speculated, "Did she et soone outside and say sothing to others that caused emotional distress?"
Min Dongxiu’s mind was a ss, utterly confused, so she had no choice but to tell the doctor, "I’ll call ho later and ask if my aunt’s friends know if she had contacted them beforehand."
These belong to personal privacy; doctors are not interested in knowing. Dr. Qi asked these questions rely to inform the family: "Cancer patients, having undergone surgery and chemotherapy, are already very weak. Don’t stress her out. Today it’s a heart issue; who knows if tomorrow it might be a cerebrovascular accident."
"Yes, yes, yes." Min Dongxiu agreed while knowing these matters must be clarified by her family to put the doctor’s advice into practice and get rid of those who upset her aunt.
"First, we’ll admit her for inpatient care and complete other specialized examinations. If necessary, we will consult relevant departnts like neurosurgery for the patient." Dr. Qi started arranging for the patient’s admission and politely asked the opinion of the surgical colleague beside him, "What do you think, Dr. Shi?"
It’s an internal dicine case, so Shilei isn’t involved. We’ll discuss when internal dicine needs surgery consultations. The only reason he’s standing here is because Student Xie’s appearance is quite odd.
The transportation of transfer patients has never needed a doctor; a nurse is usually enough. Besides, this patient’s condition is not critical enough to need an oxygen bag to sustain her life.
Dr. Qi wrote dical orders for the patient’s family to handle the admission procedures. The patient completed the ergency admission process and entered Cardiology Unit Two.
The sound of Aunt Min lying on the rolling stretcher echoed through the ergency corridor, disappearing at the end. If the ambulance didn’t need to return to Beidou Third Hospital imdiately, Xie Wanying had intended to accompany Aunt Min to the inpatient departnt. Now she could only watch her depart, thinking: At least Aunt Min should be relatively safe at Guo Zhi Hospital.
"What’s your relationship with her?"
Upon hearing the voice, Xie Wanying turned and found that Senior Shi hadn’t left. The teacher’s gaze was sharp, always intellectually alert. She admitted frankly, "Aunt is my mom’s old friend."
Shilei quickly grasped the key point: "Earlier, a bunch of us spoke, yet the patient’s family didn’t ntion this."
"The family doesn’t know," Xie Wanying said.
Shilei’s eyes displayed two big question marks: Is this a secret?
"Didn’t have a chance to say." Xie Wanying explained. Mainly, she didn’t know how to suddenly bring it up with Aunt’s family. Aunt Min likely hadn’t had the chance to tell her family about her unique relationship with her mother, so if she ntioned it now, they might find it odd.
"Ti to go, Dr. Xie." The nurse and driver on the Beidou Third Hospital ambulance urged.
"Mr. Shi, I’ll go now." Xie Wanying gratefully bid farewell to her senior; seeing familiar faces here made her much more at ease. Then, she turned around and quickly walked out of the ergency room, jumping into the ambulance.
Regarding her words and actions, Shilei was contemplative.
"Dr. Shi."
The voice made Shilei freeze montarily before slowly turning around, realizing it was Du Yeqing coming out of Zhang Huayao’s office; it was unclear if he had seen the earlier events.
Du Yeqing glanced at his sowhat stiff face, lightly touched his fraless glasses to indicate questioning.
After making things clear, Shilei truthfully reported, "Xie Wanying just brought her mom’s old friend to be admitted to our Guo Zhi Hospital’s internal dicine."
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