560 Taking up Everything (1/2)
In the Emergency Medical Center's resuscitation room were resident doctors who moved in chaos but still did everything systematically.
In terms of experience, the resident doctors at Yun Hua Emergency Medical Center had quite a lot of experience.
Besides, they had also studied for either five years or ten years in a medical institution. After graduation, they would go through internships, housemenship, and become resident doctors, which would take up at least three years and at most six years.
In other industries, people who had graduated for four or five years could say that they had some accomplishments. For most of them, whatever that they learned in colleges and universities might even be irrelevant for their careers.
It was true that the fault-tolerance rate of the medical industry was too low. If a Bentley or Jetta were torn to shreds in an accident, what should be scrapped will be scrapped, and the parts requiring new parts will be changed, but the car accident patient must still be rescued regardless of which car he or she was in.
If it were an ordinary car accident or emergency, the resident doctors of Yunhua Emergency Medical Center would not be afraid of them. Zheng Pei was the most senior resident doctor here, and he had been a resident doctor for more than four years. It was possible for him to stabilize the vital signs of critically ill patients and refer them to a specialist department after that.
However, three ambulances sending in four patients in one go was slightly above what they could manage.
In fact, if there were any more patients, Zheng Pei would directly request for Department Director Huo to solve the problem.
If there were fewer patients, he had nothing to worry about and could carry out his tasks at ease.
There were four patients. One was near death, one critically injured, and the other two's injuries were not light as well. Coincidentally, the pressure they placed on the current Emergency Medical Center was the greatest.
He could not request the department director to solve this situation.
The department directors of the hospital in the evening were equivalent to living swords, and when these swords were used, it must be for something major. Huo Congjun was a department director of an Emergency Medical Center. If someone of his caliber came to the resuscitation room and found that there were not enough patients and that the degree of their injuries was not high enough, he would turn around and open his mouth to scold the person who summoned him.
Forget about the department director, Zheng Pei did not even dare to request help from the third-string doctors. The associate chief physicians were not slaves, and they had their own lives to live. They would only come over at night when the situation was so urgent that the attending physicians could not handle them.
Hospitals could not do anything about it. Nowadays, hospitals did not apply the eight-hour workday, five-day workweek, or annual vacation system, they wanted doctors to work twenty-four hours, and Ling Ran was the only one who was willing to work this way at present.
When Ling Ran appeared in the resuscitation room, some of the panicking resident doctors instantly calmed down.
Ling Ran as a doctor who led a group independently. In theory, he could be a third-string doctor.
When Ling Ran arrived, he not only brought along human and technical resources, he also shouldered the responsibility in this situation. Ling Ran inevitably became the current leader of the Emergency Medical Center.
”Doctor Ling,” Zheng Pei, a wide-eyed man with bushy eyebrows, hurried to Ling Ran, greeted him, and said, ”Give the commands, we'll listen to you.”
If Ling Ran did not come, Zheng Pei would be the person-in-charge of the resuscitation room. For a senior resident doctor like Zheng Pei, every patient who had chest pains during the night shift could cause him to be so busy that he wanted to die, and it would be worse for him if there were four at once. He could treat them, but it would be even better if he had a pillar of support.
”What is the situation now?” said Ling Ran, who never had the thought of shifting responsibility.
Based on his life experience, evading responsibility in advance was pointless, and it was not in line with his character.
Zheng Pei and Ling Ran did not have much contact. When he knew that Ling Ran had decided to take on responsibility, he became at ease and quickly reported. ”Four people. One is near death, in a coma, and has an open abdominal injury. Another one is conscious but critically ill with multiple bleeding. The third has a bone fracture at the leg with multiple injuries in the limbs. The fourth has an arm fracture, and also has the lightest symptoms…”
”Notify the Orthopedics Department, General Surgery Department, Neurosurgery Department, and the Cardiothoracic Department…”
”We've notified them for consultation,” Zheng Pei said.
”Okay, I'll assign tasks later. Everyone, get dressed,” Ling Ran said. With the help of a nurse, he wore his surgical attire, put on goggles, a mask, and put on two layers of gloves.
The resident doctors in the resuscitation room stared at Ling Ran as he carried out this process. They imitated what he did.
”Wear double gloves.” Ling Ran reminded a resident doctor in front of him as he checked how the crowd was dressed one by one.
”Double gloves are inconvenient…” the resident doctor muttered.
Ling Ran said calmly, ”We don't have time to do the five classic transfusion-transmissible infections check, so we don't know if the patient is a carrier of HIV or is a hepatitis patient…”
”There won't be such a coincidence, right…?” the junior resident doctor muttered in a low voice.
”Give him another pair of gloves.” Ling Ran did not argue with him. He just gave an order.
Nurse Liu was the supervisor nurse on duty. She quickly took a pair of rubber gloves and went to him. She then glared at the resident doctor and said, ”Wear it. It's for your own good.”
The young resident doctor felt slightly embarrassed. He said, ”Doctor Zhao doesn't ask this of us.”
This time, no one acknowledged him.