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Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s-Chapter 37 - : Emergency on Train【37】1
Chapter 37: Emergency on Train【37】1
This senior sister, Xie Wanying only saw the iciness hanging on the rims of her glasses as if she had caught a whiff of something. It seemed that Aunt Fang had spoken to this mother and daughter already.
Sun Rongfang explained to the other side, “My daughter is going to the Capital to study at a medical college.”
“We’ve heard. But the medical colleges in the Capital happen to be the universities with the highest enrollment scores across the nation, so which class of which grade is your daughter in? When my daughter took the college entrance exam, she attended the teacher training high school affiliated with the provincial capital. Which middle school did your daughter attend?” Mother Lin came out and said.
Obviously doubting her daughter’s grades, Sun Rongfang unhappily said, “My daughter is a student at Jin Qiao High School; she ranked first and is the top science student.”
“Jin Qiao High School, in which city?”
“Songyuan City.”
“A non-provincial capital school can have the top science student? You mean she was first in the whole school, right?” Mother Lin voiced strong skepticism.
Their children weren’t taking the college entrance exam that year so they didn’t care or even know who the current top scorers were.
Sun Rongfang became angry, “My daughter is the top science student; why would I lie to you about that?”
Mother Lin said, “Even if she were the top science student, your daughter is just a freshman. My daughter is a fourth-year medical student, entering her clinical internship. A freshman is just like someone who has never studied medicine; she knows nothing.”
“Not so,” Sun Rongfang defended her daughter, “My daughter had already read medical books at home before; she understands them.”
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“Does reading them on her own count as understanding?” Mother Lin asked with disdain in her voice as she lectured Sun Rongfang, “In the medical college, my daughter is your daughter’s senior, equivalent to her teacher and elder. Your daughter should respect my daughter, do you understand?”
A mere freshman, would she dare not to address her as a senior sister?
Sun Rongfang was taken aback, believing that medical students were supposed to be gentle and refined, yet here was talk of rank and hierarchy suddenly.
Her mother was unaware of this industry practice, but Xie Wanying, reborn, was already familiar with it, and she said to her mother, “Mom, it’s fine. In clinical practice, if the senior brothers and sisters have no real skill, nobody wants to address them as seniors.”
The medical field is a place where technical prowess is revered, similar to the hierarchy among martial artists.
“What do you mean by that?” Mother Lin’s eyes bulged with anger, ready to pop out. This girl in front of her had just dared to imply her daughter had no talent.
Xie Wanying didn’t fully understand whether this senior sister had any skill or not, but just this professional attitude alone would likely cause difficulty in being a doctor. Being a doctor required the utmost professionalism and fact-seeking. Xie Wanying bluntly said, “Uncle Fang’s condition is not just a possible cold. At his age, he is very likely to suffer from high blood pressure. Sudden changes in the weather can cause fluctuations in blood pressure, leading to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases.”
“What are you saying, my old man has high blood pressure? Impossible. His health is just fine, even better than mine,” Aunt Fang hurriedly said.
Xie Wanying looked at Uncle Fang’s complexion across from her, and her reborn abilities surfaced in her mind. She saw Uncle Fang’s blood pressure curve and heart rhythm, confirming her own guess. She suggested, “It would be best to get him off the train immediately and have his blood pressure checked at the hospital.”
“You’re talking nonsense; my old man doesn’t have high blood pressure. There’s nothing wrong,” Aunt Fang said to Mother Lin and her daughter, “My old man is perfectly healthy and has never needed to go to the hospital.”