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Now reading: Chapter 1092: 430: Watching Death as the Third Hospital Rise from My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points, a Romance novel by My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points.

Chapter 1092: Chapter 430: Watching Death as the Third Hospital Rises (Part 2)

Zhou Can directly used the back of his hand to feel her forehead temperature.

It didn’t feel like a fever.

“Have you done any examinations?”

“No. Both Xiao Jing and I just graduated not long ago, and are currently interning at a company. We also need to rent a place to live. Since seeing a doctor at a major hospital costs a lot of money, she didn’t dare to go.”

It was not a family mber but the patient’s roommate from the shared apartnt who replied.

The two might also have been classmates.

“Have the patient’s family arrived? Her condition is very dangerous, and many rescue asures require the signatures of imdiate family mbers.”

Zhou Can asked again.

“Xiao Jing’s mom has been notified and is on her way. However, because her ho is out of town, it could take seven or eight hours, or even longer, for her to arrive.”

Zhou Can nodded and asked no further questions.

He directly looked at Director Lou.

“From the symptoms, it doesn’t look like myocarditis. It’s more likely to be a major lung issue. I suggest declaring the condition critically and sending her to the ergency room for intubation. Once the patient’s blood oxygen level improves slightly, we can perform further checks. This may require consultation with doctors from respiratory dicine. For safety, inviting doctors from cardiology to consult together is the most reliable.”

Zhou Can gave his diagnostic suggestion in a serious tone.

The patient’s condition was more dangerous than imagined.

Using pure oxygen might not hold out until the family arrives.

This was Zhou Can’s judgnt.

“Tracheal intubation is an invasive procedure. We can phone the family and have the patient’s roommate sign on her behalf. We will report to the dical Departnt here in ergency.”

Director Lou placed significant importance on Zhou Can’s diagnostic opinion.

Seeing the severity expressed, he imdiately made the decision to proceed and prepared the paperwork to send the patient for ergency room resuscitation, while also calling respiratory and cardiology doctors for urgent consultation.

The patient’s roommate was also a twenty-three or twenty-four-year-old young girl who might be facing such a situation for the first ti, looking pale and slightly trembling.

Upon hearing the doctors’ discussion results, she hurriedly dialed the patient’s mother’s phone again.

She repeated the hospital’s decision for resuscitation.

The family seed to disagree.

“Doctors, I called the patient’s mom, and she said she disagrees with intubation.”

“Give the phone. Let talk.”

When facing this life-threatening rescue, Director Lou showed high responsibility.

He was even more anxious than the patient’s parents.

After a round of communication, the patient’s mother persisted in disagreeing with the hospital’s rescue asures.

The communication with the family was very difficult, taking nearly half an hour, and Zhou Can watching beside felt like swearing.

What kind of mother is this!

The daughter is lying in the hospital, almost dying, yet stubbornly refusing intubation rescue. Moreover, he realized while standing by that the family doubted the hospital. They believed it was rely a small cold and directly declaring critical condition and requiring tracheal intubation was purely excessive dical practice.

The mother should have been fully aware of her daughter’s condition throughout.

Really, such a mother is beyond understanding—for not persuading the daughter to seek treatnt in a major hospital at once, but instead letting the child return to the rental room alone after an infusion at a small clinic.

Ignorance is truly terrifying.

In current tis, because of hospitals related to Kamata, various online consultations have hard many people.

Those so-called experts and renowned doctors may only be a bunch of dical technology graduates who might not even have their specialized diplomas. Regarding high-level international hospital nas, perhaps even their business licenses are forged.

Anyway, those people work through search engine rankings and bidding and try their best to guide patients to consult and arrange offline appointnts.

Once tricked into going there, various money-pit tricks formally co on stage.

If you’re not a professional, you can’t see the depth. You just think the hospital looks pretty decent from the outside, and the service is warm and attentive.

Actually, a hospital is genuinely not a service enterprise.

Doctors and nurses are not servers.

Many patients think the doctor looks grim and has a poor attitude, mistakenly thinking they entered a hotel.

dically, in so sense, it should belong to a resource.

At critical monts, it’s a precious resource that can save patients’ lives.

So hospitals try to et market needs by conducting smile training and providing warm hospitality services, which is a bit laughable but also sad in this era.

At this mont, the patient suddenly began convulsing, her hands trembling.

“Director Lou, now intubation might not be much use.”

Zhou Can looked on from the side, truly heartbroken.

A young life in her twenties, gone just like that.

“Ah…”

Director Lou turned to look at the patient, his face flushed with rage.

“We regret to inform you that because you trusted your own judgnt, believed in so-called online expert consultations, and trusted in online self-education, your daughter has now missed the best timing for rescue. We will still do our best to attempt saving her.”

Director Lou’s patience was really comndable.

If it were Zhou Can, he would definitely want to scold the family to death.

What kind of people are they!

“Proceed with resuscitation as per protocol!”

Director Lou no longer ntioned intubation.

Zhou Can’s mood was equally depressed.

“Xiao Zhou, go back to the operating room and continue your work!”

Director Lou waved powerlessly.

“I suspect there’s definitely a major problem with the patient’s lungs. Sigh… It’s a pity no tests were done. Otherwise, if it’s confird to be pulmonary artery or vein embolism, at least so thrombolytic drugs could be tried. Right now… it’s truly only a matter of doing one’s utmost and leaving the rest to fate! This girl is afflicted with such a mother; it’s truly lantable!”

Zhou Can sighed long and hard.

Encountering such things wasn’t a first for him.

Nonetheless, every experience made him feel deeply saddened.

Despite the great strength of doctors, if patients and families don’t cooperate in treatnt or trust doctors, there’s nothing more to be done.

For instance, in the ICU, a patient clearly has a significant chance of recovery. However, families fear losing both life and financial resources, eventually opting to give up, adamantly requesting tube removal, which can only be honored.

Everyone should pray, hoping to et not only a good doctor but also trustworthy family and spouse when seeking dical care.

For big surgeries, if family mbers do not sign consent, the hospital, besides working on persuasion, has no other ans.

Returning to the operating room, Zhou Can was sowhat downhearted.

However, this did not affect his enthusiasm for surgery; he quickly adjusted himself and again focused on the surgical tasks.

Having gone through this tragedy, he cherished every surgical opportunity more.

Behind this, lay the trust of patients and their families in him.

During lunch, Zhou Can got the ssage that the girl died because ‘rescue’ was ineffective.

This was not surprising at all.

When he observed the girl convulsing with upturned eyes, he knew the most valuable rescue window had been missed.

At that mont, sending her for ergency intubation didn’t guarantee saving the girl’s life.

But it held so hope.

“Dr. Zhou, check out this news from within the community! The Third Hospital’s Cardiothoracic Surgery completed another ultra-high difficulty cardiac surgery recently. Moreover, the patient was a wealthy tycoon from Shanghai. Just four hours later, he was able to resu work; isn’t that too incredible?”

Qiao Yu noticed Zhou Can’s foul mood.

He deliberately brought up so news that Zhou Can was interested in, to divert his attention.

“I’ve already seen that news. This matter is likely true. The Japanese cardiac surgery expert at the Third Hospital does indeed have very high surgical skills. However, his approach involves minimally invasive procedures using endoscopy. Additionally, his surgical team has been expanded. I heard that a top cardiac surgeon in our country surprisingly willingly serves as an assistant to him.”

Although Zhou Can was usually extrely busy, he was not oblivious to the outside world, focused solely on scholarly pursuits.

He often kept an eye on industry trends and news dynamics.

Regarding the dostic renowned cardiac surgeon willingly serving as an assistant to the Japanese expert, Zhou Can offered no comnt.

Rocketing to accusations of traitors and national betrayers would clearly be unreasonable.

This matter should be viewed correctly.

There are more people than just that top cardiac surgeon wishing to be students of the Japanese expert.

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