Chapter 4481: 【570】Everyone has his own merits

Chapter 4481【570】Each has its own merits

 Rural road projects are relatively complex. It is said that roads are being built every year in order to develop the economy. The roads have changed again and again, making Professor Pei, who came here for investigation a few years ago, unable to recognize the road.

The driver was called from the city. He doesn't usually drive this way and he doesn't know the road either.

It just so happens that everyone knows the allusion of the nanny-child doctor. When asking someone for directions on the road, they ask: Where is the clinic of the female Bodhisattva?

 A group of villagers pointed out the direction directly to them without thinking: there, there, where to go.

 Doctors are needed everywhere and people can get sick everywhere. In rural areas, rural medical care is in urgent need.

The villagers are usually afraid and don't want to go to big hospitals for medical treatment, and try not to go. The reason is that the journey is long and the two major hospitals are expensive and they can't afford it.

Does this mean that rural doctors are scarce and can be easily employed?

 Just the opposite.

Professor Pei is an expert in this field and has deep experience. He said: "Big hospitals cannot cure diseases. With security guards, at least your personal safety is guaranteed. Rural clinics do not have such conditions."

 Another important reason why rural medical care cannot develop is precisely because they cannot deal with medical troubles, which makes more rural doctors do as little work as possible in modern times, leaving villagers to go to cities to find hospital doctors for medical treatment.

 When the senior industry leaders heard this, they knew what the problem was.

To be honest, no one in the country, inside or outside the country, expects a rural doctor to be able to cure all diseases. What they expect is that rural doctors can treat minor diseases and do the hierarchical diagnosis and treatment that basic medical institutions can do.

It is enough to be able to detect the early stage of a serious illness, just like a doctor does, and accurately carry out the preliminary work of hierarchical diagnosis and treatment, and send the patient to a medical place that can be treated.

 This problem really tests the skills of doctors in primary medical institutions.

 Community hospitals have just been equipped with primary examination machines. When they arrive in rural areas, rural doctors do not have any examination aids and rely entirely on the doctors’ bare hands.

Dr. Xie Wanying said: "What doctors in big hospitals can't do, maybe only Dr. Tong can do it."

Everyone in the car heard this and squinted their eyes: Here we go, King Xiejuan is going to bring about another tornado. Dr. Xie, is this an exaggeration?

 Really not.

Medicine is a down-to-earth subject with strong practicality. Doctors in large hospitals are accustomed to relying on instruments. Over time, their medical experience and skills will weaken in this area, and some young doctors may even fail to practice it at all.

  In comparison, rural doctors do this kind of work every day, and their colleagues who do it seriously will definitely accumulate experience in this area that exceeds that of doctors in big cities.

This is like someone saying that you should go to the Northeast to see an orthopedic department. There are many patients with fractures in the Northeast in winter, and the orthopedic surgeons in the Northeast have the most experience.

While a group of people were chatting in the car along the way, the driver drove the car in the direction pointed by the villagers, preparing to enter a certain village.

This situation seems to remind Dr. Xie of the trip he went to the countryside with Professor Nie, Sister Jiang, and others for a free clinic.

Dr. Chang, who was traveling with us at that time, suddenly remembered that incident and said with emotion: "That time, the villagers were so enthusiastic and kept circling our car. The driver was afraid of hitting someone."

This time it was obviously the opposite of what Dr. Chang said. The village was deserted, and no one held up red banners to greet them.

I accidentally saw a dog passing by. I looked up at their minibus and looked into the dog's eyes. It barked twice, which alerted one or two villagers to look around.

The most damning thing is that when the minibus just turned a corner, the driver didn't expect that there was a big hole in front of him, and the front wheel got stuck in the hole and suddenly couldn't get out.

The people in the car were swaying around.

When the villagers saw this, they shouted: "Doctor Tong, it's bad, there was a car accident."

 Doctors on the bus: This...

 (End of this chapter)
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