Chapter 2568 【2568】Who Has Eye Problems
Dr. Yao was not convinced: "What the nurse said is not about the patients in your group. No matter what medical students do, it is wrong to do it without a teacher."
What this senior said made the hearts of a group of medical students feel cold: it means that as long as the teacher is not present, the medical students will never be able to save themselves?
In medicine, it is often time-sensitive to save lives. Not to mention waiting for the teacher to come, just saying that every minute and every second of waiting for the teacher to answer the phone may miss the best time to save the patient's life.
You still let medical students stand by at this time?
Don't forget that medical students study medicine to save lives. The indiscriminate judgment that medical students can never save lives regardless of the situation is a direct blow to the original intention of students as doctors to save lives. This is how embarrassing it is for medical students.
Such a teaching method is afraid that it will be questioned by the society.
It's a teacher, he won't sentence a student to death like Dr. Yao, it must be case by case.
For example, when I was in the second year of the General Foreign Language Association of the National Association of China, a group of teachers did not dare to sentence Xie to death.
In fact, should medical students save lives, should they save lives when patients are dying? The important thing is that medical students themselves should know how to control the risks of saving lives.
Just like a stranger reaching out to save someone, those who go to save someone should be sure of themselves, and if they are not sure, don't do it. If you are sure, and the patient's condition is too urgent to wait for the teacher to come and die, you must go to rescue anyway, otherwise your conscience will be hard for the rest of your life.
Taking a step back, perhaps Dr. Yao said this because he was afraid that the students would make mistakes and was impatient to speak out. It can be said that he did not understand the students at the scene. But, if you don't know the students well, you should at least get to know the situation of the patients at the scene first. Therefore, Dr. Han would not be so stupid as to rush to complain to this man.
Dr. Han rubbed his eyebrows angrily: What am I complaining about? Should I file a complaint before the situation is clarified? Am I stupid? At least I'm not stupid.
How was he so unlucky that he found such a person on duty in the PICU? By the way, this person is new here, he seems to have never seen this person before.
After filing the complaint, Dr. Yao held back his energy, thinking he was right, and waited for the student's teacher to criticize the student.
A group of medical students held back their grievances, and then looked at the teachers.
Cao Zhao put his hands in the pockets of his white coat and said nothing, not in a hurry.
The person who is really qualified to sue is not Dr. Yao, but the patient's attending doctor.
While others were talking, Mu Yongxian, as the attending doctor, went to his patient's bedside to check the patient's condition. After listening to Doctor Yao's report, his eyes brushed against the gloves Xie Wanying was wearing, and he clearly became puzzled: "You said she was doing chest compressions for patients?"
"That's right." Doctor Yao insisted.
"Her gloves are clean, no blood." Mu Yong first repeatedly confirmed that he has not become presbyopic.
Whose eye problem is it?
"What's wrong with her gloves, this is—?" Dr. Yao swung his head back, and was just about to continue saying that what happened if he didn't do it like this.
Suddenly, everyone looked at her face, with eyes full of words: Is the person on duty out of his mind?
The gloves are clean and blood-free. Can you tell that her hand went in and gave someone chest compressions?
The moment Dr. Yao reacted, he almost bit his own tongue, and turned into repeated blame: "I didn't say it, but the nurse said it."
When Nurse Liu heard the pot coming, she hurriedly threw the pot out again: "I heard what her classmate said."