My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points Chapter 550: 238: Starting from the lowliest doorman, accide
Chapter 550: Chapter 238: Starting from the lowliest doorman, accidentally aligning with the director’s thinking
Resident Doctor Luo Shengsheng is basically at Dr. Zhou’s beck and call when it cos to Digestive Internal dicine.
This kind of special treatnt is only available to Dr. Zhou as a resident in training.
One shouldn’t underestimate the convenience that cos with an invisible status, it can often be a big help. Not to ntion night shifts, where other doctors and nurses help keep an eye on patients, so one can sleep soundly in the on-call room at night.
So residents need to work shifts of 36 hours, a super-intensive duration of continuous work that even Ironn can’t withstand without sneaking in so naps along the way.
Being able to sleep for a few hours during a shift ans one can fully recharge the next day.
It can also prevent sudden death.
…
He went straight to the No.1 Special Expert Consultation Room. Although it wasn’t yet the start of the working hours at one o’clock in the afternoon, the hallway outside and the waiting hall even further outside were already packed with patients seeking dical advice.
With improved living standards in modern tis, digestive tract diseases caused by overeating have also increased.
There are also those who frequently miss al tis due to busy work schedules, hastily settling for a al.
Over ti, various problems will arise in the digestive tract.
The most common ones are stomach ulcers and enteritis, etc.
Unbeknownst to many, stomach ulcers greatly increase the risk of gastric cancer.
To speak of overeating and overdrinking is to ntion the increased burden on the body. The risk of diseases such as liver, kidney, and cardiovascular illnesses all greatly increase.
Dr. Zhou arrived just in ti.
Director Shang, along with a clinic nurse and an assistant doctor, brought three graduate students over.
The chief physicians in the hospital are usually associate professors or professors, especially those with strong academic backgrounds, who also teach at Tuya dical College while practicing dicine.
Generally, the assistant doctors who accompany the lead physician to the clinic are key figures being developed.
They are basically treated as direct disciples.
There’s a saying in dicine, to treat an illness one must first diagnose.
All diagnostic procedures start with diagnosing the patient, identifying the cause of the illness, and then proceeding with the corresponding treatnt.
If one doesn’t even know what disease the patient has or where the lesion is, one might end up with a case of “treat one, kill one; treat two, kill a pair.”
The hospital has its own chanism for training newcors.
Normally, one starts with a one-year internship in the inpatient Departnt, one to three years of residency, accumulating experience in various reception procedures, treatnt of various diseases, and then gradually following a ntor to the outpatient departnt to learn.
It’s worth ntioning that for inpatient departnt physicians to consult in the outpatient departnt, they typically only get one chance per week.
That is, they consult for one day.
For chief physicians or those with considerable fa, the hospital can’t wait for them to consult 24 hours a day.
However, because of various work, etings, and research commitnts, they are often too busy and the hospital is often forced to mandate a certain number of consulting days per week for them.
For instance, Director Shang is mandated to consult no less than two days per week, but Director Shang is exceptionally busy. The cases that his attending physicians and resident doctors can’t handle must be dealt with by him personally.
He also needs to conduct research, teach at the college, ntor students, perform interventional surgeries on patients, attend various conferences, and even visit other departnts or make external visits to other institutions.
He is really too busy.
Therefore, he has to arrange his weekly schedule, if Monday morning is free, then consult for half a day in the morning. If Tuesday afternoon can be squeezed in, then consult for half a day on Tuesday afternoon.
As a result, when patients book appointnts, they often find that experts and professors appear to wage guerrilla warfare, consulting at unpredictable tis.
In fact, these national treasure-level chief physicians are trying hard to make ti to complete their outpatient duties.
For Dr. Zhou, a resident in training, to be able to consult alongside a chief physician is a reward given by Director Shang.
It’s also recognition of his work attitude and strength.
“Have you been waiting a long ti, Dr. Zhou?”
Director Shang greeted him with a kind smile.
“I’ve just arrived too. Walking here, both the hallway and the waiting hall were packed with people. I never imagined the outpatient volu of Digestive Internal dicine could be so daunting!”
Dr. Zhou’s purpose in making conversation was to lighten the atmosphere.
So as not to kill the conversation with boredom.
“Haha! The afternoon is still okay, the morning outpatient volu is even bigger. How well a departnt is developing can actually be reflected in the patient volu. Since our Digestive Internal dicine at Tu Ya established separate endoscopic examination and interventional surgeries, our overall patient satisfaction has been quite good. Word of mouth spread, and that’s how we got to where we are today.”
Director Shang is the leading figure in Digestive Internal dicine.
When it cos to the outpatient volu of his departnt, his face and eyes shine with pride and self-satisfaction.
This is the prosperity he has worked hard to achieve over many years.
It is also a satisfactory report card he has presented in leading Digestive Internal dicine over the years.
“Oh, by the way, let introduce you. This is Zhou Can, a resident in training who has rotated to our departnt. This is Huang Xinggui, an attending physician in the anorectal field of Digestive Internal dicine. These three are the graduate students I ntor, Qiu Chengyu, Xie Lin, and Luo Jingyi.”
It is often said that there is a considerable number of female doctors in Internal dicine.
With two of the three graduate students ntored by Director Shang being female, it seems the rumors are not unfounded.
“Hello, it’s great to et you all. I look forward to working with you in the future!”
Dr. Zhou humbly introduced himself, being very polite and courteous to the three graduate students.
“Hello!”
“Dr. Zhou is quite handso!”
“If you have any challenging issues in the anorectal area, feel free to discuss them with at any ti!”
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