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Now reading: Chapter 1691: 1220: I'm Not Finding Fault with You from Surgery Godfather, a Fantasy novel by Ocean And Summer.

Chapter 1691: Chapter 1220: I’m Not Finding Fault with You

Many top hospitals in Europe and Arica actually receive a lot of their inco from global patients, which in turn helps lower dical costs for their own citizens, with foreign subsidies offsetting dostic expenses.

“Take care of this after you’re discharged. You need plenty of rest during your hospitalization.” Yang Ping worried that he would push himself too hard, like he did while solving problems a few days ago, staying up all night. For Adams, staying up all night now was a terrifying thought that could easily lead to life-threatening situations.

Adams twisted his neck: “Professor Yang, rest assured, I now go to bed early and wake up early, living a regulated life. By looking at the test results over the past few days, those data curves are continuously improving. I see a bright prospect. You’re right; I don’t need to know the details, just that the rain won’t penetrate my skull. Now I see the hope that K Therapy is bringing .”

Saying this, Adams once again took out a large notebook, each page of which was a curve chart.

“I’ve made a curve chart for each test result so I can visually observe its trend. The situation is very optimistic. Looking at these curves, I can sleep peacefully without needing sleeping pills.” Adams pointed at those curves and said.

Actually, this isn’t anything profound. Nurses often create temperature curves to observe temperature change trends. Adams’ curves are similar to these temperature curves, except he’s approaching his various parater changes with a mathematician’s perspective.

“My pain has improved a lot compared to before. It’s truly amazing how, in just a few days, there can be such a good effect. I can feel that the pain is significantly reducing.” Adams turned his head to look at the pain score chart on the wall.

For tumor patients, especially in the late stage, the most affecting factor of life quality is pain, so pain treatnt for tumors is also a specialized field.

K Therapy fundantally killed a large number of his tumor cells, easing the pain at its source. How many tumor cells were killed, Adams? He couldn’t intuitively feel it, but he could feel the pain intuitively.

So the relief from pain gave him great confidence, and it also vastly improved his quality of life.

For soone troubled by pain, even a little relief constitutes a huge improvent in quality of life.

“This is my story. I can share it with everyone and provide it to doctors and nurses as research materials. It might be sowhat useful to your experints because it’s a patient’s various experiences with experintal therapy from their own perspective. I’ve written it in great detail with both objective and subjective accounts. If you need it, feel free to take pictures or make copies.” Adams took out another notebook from the drawer beside the bed and handed it to Yang Ping.

Yang Ping took the notebook. It was almost filled, rely recording his dical experience at Sanbo Hospital. Yang Ping casually flicked through a few pages and was shocked by Adams’ excitent, prompting him to look through more than ten pages.

This notebook is extrely valuable, not only helping with improving hospital dical procedures but also significantly aiding experints. Such detailed, rigorous, and patient-perspective records haven’t been done by any patient before.

“Make copies and photos of Mr. Adams’ notes; they help us greatly. Thank you, Mr. Adams.” Yang Ping handed the notebook to Dr. Li beside him.

Dr. Li promptly went through it and then passed it around to several doctors.

“Thank you; it’s my duty. I thought about it for a long ti. I should fulfill my responsibility as a volunteer, and I think I can achieve what others haven’t, writing my treatnt experience with precise and subtle penmanship. Regardless of whether I can recover, I can leave sothing valuable behind.” Adams said confidently.

“I’ve also done a little thing to help you, but I haven’t finished it yet, so it’s still a half-finished product.” Adams magically took out another notebook.

Just how many notebooks does he have, and how much work has he done? His work efficiency is indeed high.

“This is my study on the workflow in the ward. After studying it, I found many areas that need improvent. I reviewed the entire workflow from a mathematical perspective and discovered that optimizing it according to my suggestions would double your work efficiency and greatly reduce error probabilities. I’m sorry, please, don’t misunderstand; I’m not finding fault in doctors’ and nurses’ work. I just want to identify so process inadequacies and improve on them. Your doctors’ and nurses’ work is already excellent.” Adams handed this notebook to Yang Ping.

Yang Ping looked over it. The notebook currently wasn’t very long, only a few dozen pages. He understood the work pattern and flow of the entire ward, not involving dical technology, but purely work process, highlighting nurous issues with a red pen, such as redundant work, connection breaks, potential errors, and so on.

True to the form of a mathematician, he thoroughly analyzed work patterns and processes from a mathematical perspective, pointing out many outdated aspects, and offered suggestions for improvent, but for now, he hasn’t presented a systematic improvent plan.

“For example, your shift changes and mode, patient examination arrangents, dication delivery, intravenous fluid procedures, duty arrangents, and so on…” Adams highlighted temporarily identified issues.

When sothing is elevated to an extrely professional level, it certainly provides a completely different perspective.

“Dr. Deming’s theory advanced Japanese quality control into a world-leading position. I think this is no big deal. Trust , give so ti, and I can create a dical managent theory that can help your dical managent reach a world-class level. I need ti, more in-depth understanding of how the entire hospital’s dical activities operate, and more ti for detailed and in-depth observation and analysis. Clearly, observing one ward is insufficient; I will continue to work hard.” Adams didn’t want to just talk idly, he was serious in his deanor.

And judging from his notes so far, the problems he had noticed were indeed significant, and his proposed improvent directions were very scientific. Yang Ping believed he indeed had the ability to establish a world-class dical work model.

“Work models are crucial. Random, crude, and outdated work models only waste ti, increase the probability of errors, burden doctors and nurses more heavily, and render dical equipnt and services extrely inefficient. We never thought the model was the problem. In dical work, we can confidently say, this current managent level is like a workshop style; it’s not just you, it’s the sa in the United Kingdom. The efficiency and quality of work are low because no one has realized this problem. For more than a hundred years, we’ve been doing things this way; what’s wrong with that?”

“Earlier, factory managent also faced this question. Now you see, the gap between advanced and backward managent in different enterprises is significant, and hospitals are no different. Hospitals have scientific managent thods fitting their operations. We must break away from this workshop-style managent, similar to how factory production managent is extrely professional and scientific, moving towards lean managent. I’m not deliberately finding faults but aiming to help improve models, so I must relentlessly point out as many faults as possible.”

“For example, arranging the various examinations for all patients in the hospital. You don’t have a scientific model; there should be an algorithm that calculates patients’ annual, monthly, weekly, and daily various checks, designing a scientific distribution model allowing patients to rationally use various equipnt together, rather than in disarray. Regarding ergency exam arrangents, how exactly do you reserve ergency equipnt? Is it a separate allocation or by queuing? You don’t have a scientific mode, it’s very casual, and this waste is dreadful.”

Adams spoke more and more passionately, while Yang Ping listened very earnestly. He was right; these matters were previously unnoticed and weren’t treated as a science to be studied.

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