Chapter 351: 【351】Must find Dr. Xie Chapter 351: 【351】Must find Dr. Xie “Yes, Dr. Tan is here, show it to Dr. Tan,” Gao Zhaocheng said.
Tan Kelin’s eyelids fluttered: as far as he could recall, he hadn’t seen any nurses for a consultation recently.
“Our colleague went to see Dr. Xie for her condition, that’s why the test was ordered—,” the nurse tried hard to explain.
The problem beca more perplexing with the explanation, leaving the doctors at the scene astonished:
“You went to an intern for dical care?”
“Are you too embarrassed to ask a professor for help?”
“Professor Li, are they too embarrassed to ask for your help?”
“Stop talking nonsense!” Professor Li broke into a sweat and clarified loudly, “When have I ever refused to see a colleague for dical care?”
“Dr. Tan, do you refuse them dical care?” soone questioned Tan Kelin, wondering why they sought his student rather than him.
Tan Kelin imdiately stated firmly, “Neither I nor my team would dare refuse any colleague.”
Isn’t that obvious? Any doctor who dared to do such a thing would surely not want to stay in this hospital.
Ordinary patients couldn’t be refused, let alone colleagues.
“What’s going on!” Shen Jinghui turned around to inquire personally about the situation.
With the leader asking, the nurse consulted with her colleagues: “Maybe we should wait until their eting is over to discuss this.”
“Can’t Dr. Xie as an intern co out first?”
“Is Qiaowen in a hurry?”
“How could she not be? Would she be rushing over here right after getting the CT results if she wasn’t?”
“Student Xie, when have you ever treated anyone?” Sun Yubo, unable to wait any longer, turned to ask the student.
“She ca to see on Tuesday,” Xie Wanying answered her teacher.
“What was the diagnosis?”
“I shouldn’t say if the patient doesn’t want to disclose it, Teacher Sun.” Reluctant to breach patient confidentiality, otherwise she would have spoken up during the commotion earlier.
“Did you prescribe dication?”
“No, I wrote an order for a test. They said any doctor’s signature would do, so I didn’t ask Teacher Tan.”
Ordering a test was sothing nurses often did themselves before seeking a doctor’s signature. If it wasn’t dication or a frequently perford test, doctors would sign off on it after a quick review, essentially as a routine check-up.
“Why are you making a commotion at the door? Co inside and explain,” Associate Director Liu called the nurse standing at the door inside.
Unable to leave, the nurse ca in and said, “It’s nothing serious.”
“Whether it’s serious or not, bring the test results for us to review. What, you think we’re not as good as Dr. Xie?”
Hearing the Associate Director’s insistent questioning, the laughter of the doctors filled the conference room at varying volus, clearly sensing that the nurses were hiding sothing from everyone.
With the departnt leader intervening, the nurse had no choice but to hand over the test report for review.
“It’s not ‘nothing serious.'” Associate Director Liu quickly concluded after reviewing the report.
“Exactly, which is why we ca to ask for Dr. Xie’s opinion,” the nurse said.
“Why are you asking her? This case requires surgery. She’s an intern and can’t perform surgeries,” Associate Director Liu said, bewildered by the nurses’ behavior, knowing they should understand this much and wondering why they would make such a statent.
“No, we just wanted to hear her opinion first. She’s the one who diagnosed it. We’re not asking her to perform the surgery,” the nurse clarified.
“Dr. Xie diagnosed it? Were you initially consulting Dr. Xie?” Associate Director Liu presud that if an intern could diagnose the condition, a full-fledged doctor could do so even more reliably.
“No, we first consulted many doctors. We went to doctors from her own departnt, to the gynecology departnt, and to gastroenterology. We’ve done quite a few tests,” the nurse explained.
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