webnovel

When the Doctor Uses A Hack

You're a struggling young doctor, barely making ends meet with a measly $2000 monthly income. Life's pressures and trials weigh heavily upon you! But lo and behold! One fine morning, you wake up to find yourself equipped with some sort of cheat codes... You're scheduled for an appendectomy, so you roll up your sleeves and get ready to explore the abdominal terrain: You touch the cecum: "Cecum: Healthy!" You palpate the colon: "Colon: All clear!" You reach the appendix: "Appendix: It's an inflamed, pus-filled appendix monster, level 15, rare creature. Recommendation: Perform an appendectomy!" With a decisive hand, you wield your scalpel and skillfully remove the troublesome appendix. "Ding! Rare appendix monster eliminated! Rewards: +100 experience in appendectomy, +$100, and a shiny white suture needle!" And thus, your journey begins as an emergency surgeon. But remember, with great healing powers comes great responsibility!

Holding an inch ruler · Urbain
Pas assez d’évaluations
738 Chs

Chapter 505: Advanced Barehanded Hemostasis! (Subscribe please!)

In a hospital, unlike in other places, saying "I can" is much more difficult than saying "I don't know how"!

From medical students to professors and experts in medicine,

no one would claim they "can" do something they are not confident about!

That statement "I can" carries a substantial weight.

It implies that others will trust you, support you, and assist you in doing the upcoming rescue work.

To tell a patient "I can" means the patient will place unconditional trust in you.

All this, simply because your profession is "doctor"!

So, when Chen Cang said "I can," whether it was Fan Tai from the emergency department or Yue Wenqing from hepatobiliary surgery, both felt a wave of delight!

It was as if, in a moment of life-threatening crisis when one felt helpless, suddenly someone reached out a helping hand.

Of course, this could not have happened without Wang Xiangjun's recognition of Chen Cang!

They hurriedly took the patient into the operating room.