Chapter 4285: 【374】Contest

Chapter 4285【374】Contest

 As early as the phone report came out, everyone was silent.

Until someone said: "Do you want Vice President Zhang to complete the surgical resection next?"

The person who said this obviously had concerns, wondering whether it would be better for Guozhi people to remove the root cause of the disease for his own people. Besides, Mr. Zhang is recognized as the top surgeon in the field of thoracic surgery in the capital area.

  It was not said by people from Guozhi, but by Section Chief Yang from Guoxie.

Perhaps Section Chief Yang represents Dean Wu’s concerns?

What should you do if your own people really mess up the job?

 No doctor dares to guarantee victory in every battle.

Dr. Zhang Huayao turned his head and glanced in the direction of Dean Wu with his cunning gray eyes: "What do you think?"

 The ball was instantly thrown back to Dean Wu.

 At this time, it is not necessarily the surgeon who has the final say. In all walks of life, once the leadership is in place, the person in charge may become the leader. At this time, how the leader does things will test the quality of the leader.

  In order to allow surgeon Xie to complete this operation, he must first talk about the surgical aspect that Chief Yang is concerned about: removing the lesion as completely as possible.

 This includes tumor mass resection and precise expansion, necessary lymph node scanning and lymph node specimen extraction.

 The decision-making leader needs to judge whether Chief Xie can achieve the above goals without any surprises.

Everyone looked back at the first half of the operation, when the surgeon Xie led the two assistants, and his outstanding performance, such as his smooth and smooth rhythm, seemed to be fine.

However, senior surgical experts know that this has nothing to do with the speed of surgery.

 The example that should be given at this time is Teacher Tan's paper. Excellent and capable surgeons accurately select targets based on their eyesight.

  The results provided by the pathology department ultimately rely on the specimens collected by the surgeon. It is impossible for the pathologist to serve as the general commander for the surgeon and can only be used as a reference.

 Only surgeons can ask pathologists according to their own needs, and the pathology department is always an auxiliary department. Based on the above, it can be seen that if a knowledgeable person wants to ask a surgeon which operation is good, it is enough to know whether the data on the promotional posters produced by certain hospitals for the doctors of the hospital are true or false.

 Are there any new technologies? How many operating tables are there? How many lives have been saved through surgery? How long is the patient's postoperative survival after the most difficult surgery? As long as the hospital doesn't lie, these are all hard indicators of the surgeon's technical level.

 These clinical data are unfair because young doctors have shorter working hours than older doctors, so it is unfair to compare the two.

Hence, we can understand why medical students all like to flock to the best hospitals. A fair environment is undoubtedly more important for young people: from the small database of young people, we can see how much excellent technical leadership their talents require.

According to this, Mr. Zhang’s rhetorical question was obviously competing with Dean Wu.

 My person was snatched away by you. Do you see her talent? Please let the data speak. - Mr. Zhang.

 Zhang Sanshu seemed to have found an outlet.

 Dean Wu said calmly and loudly: "It seems there is no reason to change the surgeon."

 It is necessary for one’s own people to support one’s own people.

 As to whether Section Chief Yang’s strategy is to use bricks and mortar to attract others, I won’t say.

Dr. Zhang Huayao waited for the other party to give evidence.

"I heard a phone report from the pathology department that it was minimally invasive lung adenocarcinoma, which is an early stage of lung cancer, but that doesn't mean we can take it lightly. This is consistent with Dr. Xie's preoperative judgment, and she was the first to discover that the patient had lung cancer." Dean Wu finished the chain of medical evidence in an orderly manner.

 Others nodded: Dean Wu really thinks the sword is still young.

Unexpectedly, Director Wu got up and said something unnecessary: ​​"The operation results have repeatedly confirmed that Dr. Compare."

 (End of this chapter)