The term that cos to mind is: bizarre.
Zhou Junpeng raised his phone, needing to call the person who tipped him off in the ergency room, and on the other hand, he started walking to find the on-duty doctor and nurse here.
The call connected.
"Li Chengyuan, you told there’s a critical case in neurosurgery, is it a patient brought in by your ergency team? I’m in neurosurgery now and don’t see anyone being resuscitated. Has your ergency departnt not sent the patient to the inpatient departnt yet?" Zhou Junpeng asked.
Li Chengyuan said, "The patient was sent up a while ago. I told you to go check, I don’t know if there’s a resuscitation happening, that’s up to the doctors to decide. The patient sent up didn’t go through our ergency departnt."
"If they didn’t go through your ergency departnt, how did they get admitted?"
"You’re mistaken, it was Dr. Cao and his team who took the patient to the CT room, did the scan, and then took them directly back to neurosurgery. Of course, there’s no need to go through our ergency room."
The patient was brought in through a special channel by Cao Yong, and Zhou Junpeng understood yet was sowhat confused: "Did the preliminary CT results look bad, so the patient’s been sent to the operating room for surgery and that’s why they’re not in neurosurgery?"
Normally, Zhou Junpeng’s guess wouldn’t be far off; if the incoming patient’s condition was critical and a green channel was opened, they could indeed be taken directly to the operating room for resuscitation.
Li Chengyuan directly dismissed his idea: "That’s probably not the case. Maybe you should check Dr. Cao’s office."
"The patient was taken to Dr. Cao’s office? Is the condition not severe?" Zhou Junpeng suddenly realized and exclaid, "What’s the relationship between this patient and Dr. Cao?"
This question. Li Chengyuan admitted that he hadn’t seen anyone in the ergency room, so he called a colleague to check neurosurgery. According to reports: Is the patient Cao Yong’s brother-in-law?
Rumors shouldn’t be spread without confirmation. Li Chengyuan, afraid of being held accountable by Cao Yong later, told Zhou Junpeng, "If you’re worried, go take a look yourself."
He had to go for a look, especially because Fu Xinheng ntioned he was in neurosurgery. Since the supervisor went, he had to show concern. Zhou Junpeng hurriedly walked towards Cao Yong’s office, phone in hand. Finally, he heard so commotion, unlike the silence from a while ago.
Who is inside, and what’s happening? The closer Zhou Junpeng got, the louder he heard the noises from Cao Yong’s office. It was a bit like the hustle and bustle of a market, indicating there were quite a few people inside.
When doctors argue, it’s no different than common folks. Each stands by their opinion, and their voices can boom like cannon blasts.
Two people, apparently disturbed by the noise, stepped out to the door for a breather.
Zhou Junpeng recognized the faces of those two—they were Gong Xiangbin and Guo Yiping from Hepatobiliary Surgery—and asked, "Why are you hepatobiliary folks here? Is the patient inside from the Hepatobiliary Surgery departnt?"
The Hepatobiliary Surgery ward was opposite; if the patient belonged there, why weren’t they sent across the hall? Gong Xiangbin and the others were about to refute this reasoning when they reconsidered; if the young patient inside had a brain issue, they wouldn’t be in neurosurgery.
"What’s the relation of the patient to Dr. Cao?" Not daring to recklessly enter Cao Yong’s office, Zhou Junpeng asked the two at the door.
Seeing him being clueless, Gong Xiangbin and Guo Yiping mischievously suggested, "See for yourself."
Zhou Junpeng, dubbed the Jade-faced Fox of cardiology, wasn’t easily tricked. He stood sideways at the door and quietly peered through the crack to see what was happening inside: Wow, how many bosses are in there. No wonder the argunt sounds like it could lift the roof.
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