This Doctor Is Too Wealthy

Chapter 872 - 646 Bad people start with small things_2

This Doctor Is Too Wealthy

Chapter 872 - 646 Bad people start with small things_2

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As Du Heng passed by this girl named Xiao Hao, he became a bit dazed as he saw her biting her lip and blinking her eyes incessantly.

Can mentally unstable people also join the Criminal Police Team?

As he came out of the hospital room, he bumped into Wu Shengnan who had just returned. Hearing Wu Shengnan call him husband, Doctor Ma tactfully left first.

Du Heng smiled and said, "Now you can rest assured. Stop looking so worried, or you'll age quickly."

Wu Shengnan giggled, "My husband is truly amazing."

Du Heng chuckled lightly. "Captain Tao left. Would you like to come to my office and sit for a while?"

Wu Shengnan really wanted to go, but she knew she had work to do. She could only suppress her excitement and shook her head, saying, "Forget it, I have to go back to the detachment."

"Alright then, come back early tonight."

"Mhm, husband, you should go and get busy too."

After the two parted ways to attend to their own matters, Du Heng turned and headed to the stroke ward. He had to inform Wu Buwei about the previous patient with breast nodules.

As soon as he entered the ward, he saw everyone gathered together, discussing something enthusiastically, completely unlike the resentful and uncooperative attitudes they had before.

This atmosphere made Du Heng very happy; it was the kind of team environment he had hoped for.

He immediately asked with a smile, "What are you all talking about that's making you so happy?"

Everyone turned their heads to see it was Du Heng, and one by one, they began to greet him. Wu Buwei laughed and said, "Dean, Doctor XX has been silenced. You know about this, right?"

Hearing Wu Buwei also address him as Dean, Du Heng wasn't surprised. This young man probably learned it from Li Shuxun and planned to stop calling him Senior Brother when others were present.

Du Heng looked around at everyone. "You're talking about that matter? I know about it, but what's there to discuss?"

Wu Buwei immediately said, "Dean, this account, and those related to it, are all Chinese medicine haters. They have all been silenced this time. Isn't this something to be happy about for us in traditional Chinese medicine?"

A doctor beside him quickly added, "It seems the country has also recognized the ulterior motives of these accounts and the people behind them, and is preparing to deal with them."

"Slandering traditional Chinese medicine, acting as vanguards for the Western Medicine Groups behind them to seize huge capital returns—they really should be dealt with thoroughly."

For a moment, everyone in the office became impassioned, beginning to condemn Doctor XX.

As traditional Chinese medicine practitioners, they had been significantly harmed by this 'organization' with a large number of followers.

However, Du Heng listened to their collective condemnation without rushing to join in the outrage or celebration. Instead, he casually pulled over a chair and asked softly, "Do you all think that Doctor XX's most malicious act is slandering traditional Chinese medicine?"

"Isn't it?" Wu Buwei blurted out in astonishment. "Calling traditional Chinese medicine pseudoscience, claiming that meridians and acupoints don't exist, and completely denying the efficacy of traditional Chinese medicine—they're extremely wicked."

Du Heng chuckled lightly and shook his head. "What you're saying isn't very solid evidence.

First, let's discuss the argument that traditional Chinese medicine is pseudoscience. If you search online, most of the data and information you'll find is almost a decade old. Any sensible person, seeing the numerous Chinese Medicine Hospitals and the Chinese Medicine Departments in every hospital nationwide, would realize that traditional Chinese medicine isn't pseudoscience. It simply hasn't yet found a common ground with current science.

Otherwise, the country wouldn't invest so much effort in supporting the development of traditional Chinese medicine."

He then held up two fingers. "The second issue is whether meridians and acupoints exist. In 2019, a research institution in M-country conducted an experiment by injecting fluorescent powder into a subject's body. They discovered that the fluorescent powder appeared in many locations within the human body.

These locations were not blood vessels, nerves, or other known anatomical structures, and they were all interconnected. They called this the 'Interstitial Space'.

Although it cannot yet fully prove that this 'Interstitial Space' is what we refer to as meridians and acupoints, it does suggest from another perspective that meridians and acupoints are not illusory. It's just that our current scientific methods are not yet capable of fully detecting them."

After speaking, Du Heng looked at everyone. "Everyone, although we are practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine and are distinct from Western medicine, we should still pay attention to the latest developments in physiology and anatomy when we have time. This will help elevate our understanding of traditional Chinese medicine to a new level.

Whether it's traditional Chinese medicine or Western medicine, they both exist to heal the sick and save lives, to reduce the suffering and harm that diseases inflict on humanity. They are merely tools.

We can consider traditional Chinese medicine our career, or even our spiritual belief, but we must not reject or be hostile towards Western medicine. The idiom 'learn by analogy' is more than just a saying."

Seeing everyone's expressions, Du Heng continued to elaborate, "We're in a Maternal and Child Hospital; you all should know how high the mortality rate from difficult labor is.

However, with the mature application of caesarean section surgery, what is that probability now? You should all have a figure in mind.

Although caesarean sections have many side effects—such as maternal hemorrhage during surgery, an increased risk of postoperative thrombosis, and a high probability of placenta previa and uterine rupture in subsequent pregnancies—there are also other concerns. These include abnormal respiratory system function in newborns, an increased risk of poor vision, lowered immunity, and even some unconfirmed adverse reports.

But the undeniable point is that the advent of caesarean section means that difficult labor and other obstetrical challenges are no longer a desperate gamble against Yan Wang to save lives."

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