"How did you end up working with Troublemaker Hu?" soone asked Doctor Su.
"In our departnt, besides Teacher Du being the most famous, second is Troublemaker Hu. The head is just a figurehead; technically, they aren’t as strong as the two," Doctor Su revealed secrets unknown to people from other departnts.
Troublemaker Hu has a difficult personality, but to be fair, in terms of skills, he’s only slightly inferior to Du Haiwei.
What outsiders don’t know is that Troublemaker Hu is extrely strict at work, causing imnse pressure on his subordinates. If one isn’t careful, the pressure could lead to a breakdown. Doctor Su was one such person, constantly adjusting ntally due to pressure from the superiors, which led to a recent decline in her professional performance.
Troublemaker Hu is strict with himself and doesn’t let others overstep their bounds. That’s why last ti he criticized Du Haiwei’s son. What does a dical student understand to evaluate her?
As for the claims from Doctor Zuoliang and Dr. Guan that Troublemaker Hu avoids responsibility, Doctor Su said, "Troublemaker Hu dislikes cleaning up others’ sses. Unlike Teacher Du, who can keep quiet and help when he can, Troublemaker Hu won’t help. He believes that if he helps, you’ll take advantage, not realizing your mistake. A doctor should take responsibility for their own mistakes; why should colleagues always clean up for you? While his reluctance to help makes people dislike him, it doesn’t an he doesn’t empathize with colleagues. He defended Doctor Zhou because he knows being a doctor isn’t easy; sotis work and life pressure causes minor slip-ups, but they don’t deserve severe punishnt. If Doctor Zhou can correct his mistakes, he should have a chance. It’s not that she doesn’t want Doctor Zhou to be punished, she just dislikes how the hospital imdiately jumps to severe punishnt."
The public’s sentint towards doctors is harsh, believing the profession involves life-or-death situations, and even the smallest mistake is unforgivable. But scientifically, doctors are human like everyone else, and just as prone to montary lapses. The law punishes with the aim of guiding people back on track, thus it doesn’t strike down a person for errors. Why should the public treat dical personnel differently, dehumanizing them?
Troublemaker Hu’s judgnt is well-founded: doctors’ errors should be legally punished, not driven by public sentint. A country ruled by law shouldn’t distinguish citizens unfairly.
Such thinking from a doctor only leads the public to believe the doctor is making excuses for their mistakes, lacking noble character.
Doctor Su stands by Troublemaker Hu, saying, "I really can’t admire Teacher Du’s saintly style. Few can emulate Teacher Du’s personality and behavior."
Finding soone like Du Haiwei, who selflessly considers others, among a hundred ordinary people is challenging. Thus, Doctor Su believes others have no grounds to criticize Troublemaker Hu’s perspective. The average person’s capability is similar to what Troublemaker Hu suggests, possibly even lesser.
"Troublemaker Hu is quite reasonable," Doctor Su added.
Everyone calls Troublemaker Hu a troublemaker, yet Doctor Su claims her boss is reasonable?
"Last ti the patient took the wrong dication on their own, Troublemaker Hu didn’t think it was my or the pharmacy staff’s fault. The issue stemd from the patient not listening to the attending doctor’s advice. Had they insisted on finding the attending doctor, everything would’ve been fine," Doctor Su said.
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