Chapter 3752: 【3752】non-hypocritical

Chapter 3752 [3752] Non-hypocritical

"No." The patient refused.

What is the intention of the patient who insists that it is not possible?

"I don't have surgery anymore."

The moment these words landed in the ward, there was no doubt that there was a heavy, bang sound.

Director Fang was going to sit on the ground on the spot.

The patient's sons and daughters looked as white as white, almost as if they were going to die together.

No surgery? The patient has to be operated on in this situation. The patient chooses the path of death, right?

The doctors looked stern and frowned.

The venomous Mr. Zhang stopped talking.

This situation is actually not uncommon in clinical practice.

Not every patient will choose surgery, and sometimes it is not because of medical expenses at all, but purely because of other concerns. Problems that can be solved with money are never big problems. The most difficult problems are those that cannot be solved with money. Rich people don't even think that money can solve all problems.

What is the reason why the patient is unwilling to have surgery? Do you really want to die?

Definitely not. Whoever wants to live if he can live must be forced by something to not want to live this way.

Like the patient in front of me lying on the hospital bed, sucking oxygen, breathing hard, talking and wheezing, thin face, long-term malnutrition, suffering from illness for many years, almost destroyed mentally by the illness, and his eyes have long been dim.

It is conceivable that the patient thought that if he was to suffer another big knife, he might as well die.

"You don't have to be too pessimistic." Director Fang cheered himself up and comforted his old friend, "Small incision surgery is also a minimally invasive surgery."

"You don't have to lie to me," said the patient.

This patient is knowledgeable and educated. He has sought doctors many times and obtained enough medical information from various channels. He not only heard from doctors but also from patients, and has witnessed clinical cases. It's really not something a doctor can fool with a few words. No wonder Director Fang said from the very beginning that this old friend was "stubborn" and needed a professional expert to do the work in person.

The so-called small incision surgery requires at least an incision of more than six centimeters in front of the left chest. The small incision surgery for four-vessel lesions also needs to split the lower sternum, otherwise the doctor's hand cannot reach the right crown for surgery on the right crown.

"He coughs for a long time and his ribs and sternum hurt, so he has scruples about it." Xie Wanying said.

One of the characteristics of COPD patients is long-term coughing, and the ribs and sternum are therefore affected and suffer from aseptic inflammation. As long as the cause of COPD is not eliminated, such inflammation is difficult to heal. Another operation on the sternum, the patient can imagine that the bone after the operation probably hurts so much that life is worse than death.

Some patients can tolerate it. Some patients can no longer take it. Each patient's threshold for pain is different.

"Is that so, Dad?" the patient's children asked their father.

Patient Mr. Li's eyes had long been fixed on the face of the female doctor in front of her, and there was a flash of light in the patient's eyes as if she was about to burst into tears.

It is not easy for patients to find a doctor who can understand their pain.

If he just said that he would not operate, most doctors, like ordinary people, think that his patient is hypocritical and capricious.

Seeing this situation, a group of bigwigs exchanged eye contact: Dr. Xie said what he saw when the patient was upset. It must be said that such problems should be solved by doctors using technology, rather than accusing patients of having personality problems.

The essence of medical treatment is not only to treat the patient's disease, but to meet the patient's physical and mental health needs, and must relieve the patient's pain.

(end of this chapter)