Merchant and doctor

Chapter 1490 Seeking Difference and Innovation, and then Seeking Survival

Chapter 1490 Seeking Difference and Innovation, and then Seeking Survival
To this day, Bian Mu has always been vague about what kind of doctor the Chinese Medical Clinic should have. If the recruitment standards are set too high, it will be impossible to recruit anyone. If someone has that ability, they will either be in charge of an important department in a hospital or work alone, making their own decisions and living a free and easy life.

Anyway, people always have to get something out of it.

People come to work for you, so they must be looking for something, right?! In the first few years of the Chinese Medicine Clinic, what practical benefits can Bian Mu provide to them?! Talk about ideals?! Talk about feelings?! It seems a bit off topic...

Well, if the recruitment requirements are lowered a few levels, ordinary patients will definitely have complaints over time. Making trouble on the spot is a small matter, but the complaint rate will soar all of a sudden.

Bian Mu was very clear about this.

This kind of thing is somewhat similar to queuing at a bank. VIP customers can skip the queue, and over time, people get used to it.

How big is the Chinese Medical Clinic? How come VIPs and ordinary customers are treated differently?!

Let people slowly accept it?!

difficult!
Ordinary patients usually suffer from headaches and fevers. Even if the newly hired doctors are of average level, diagnosing and treating headaches and fevers is naturally a piece of cake. Ordinary patients will not complain as it costs little and the treatment effect is good.

What if something goes wrong?!

It is not difficult to imagine that some patients will immediately hold on to the situation and call all the complaint hotlines they can. The psychological imbalance that has accumulated in their hearts will suddenly explode! If you are unlucky, someone with ulterior motives will take advantage of you and use the power of online media, especially self-media, to exaggerate the situation. That will be a big problem.

All new and old accounts were settled together. As the legal representative of the clinic, Bian Mu immediately became the target of public criticism. Bian Mu always took this as a warning and never dared to be careless.

What if we take a step back?!
Why not just stop talking big and run the Chinese Medical Clinic into an upgraded version of the "Bian's Clinic". If you feel the consultation fee is affordable, then you can come in and have your pulse taken; if you feel you don't have any serious illness and it can be solved by spending a little money in a public hospital, then just don't enter and do as you please.

If you feel that the fees charged by the Chinese Medical Clinic are simply exorbitant, then don't even look at it. Just seek help from elsewhere based on your specific circumstances.

One of the main reasons why Wang Yating's thesis was so clumsy and incoherent was that the relevant clinical frontline data for ordinary patients was too light. In the future, Bian Mu must not be like her and narrow his medical path.

The five books that Mu Yali brought mentioned famous doctors of all dynasties who had almost no clear "imperial physician" background, so they all eventually became famous doctors.

From ancient times to the present, we have rarely heard of famous doctors who spent most of their lives in the "Imperial Hospital". Bian Mu always believed that the masters of traditional Chinese medicine who are not down-to-earth will have limited cultivation throughout their lives and will ultimately fail to achieve great things.

Therefore, Bian Mu had made up his mind long ago that he must open up a "channel for civilian medical treatment" in the National Medical Clinic no matter what. He did not talk about ideals or lofty sentiments of saving the world. The only practical thing was: to have wider and more in-depth contact with as many patients as possible, and to expand the breadth and depth of clinical medicine. This is also the basic foundation for every Chinese medicine doctor to seek further development of his career.

Everything depends on human efforts. No matter how difficult it is, Bian Mu has to patiently assess every colleague who comes to apply for the job.

Not only that, Bian Mu also secretly warned himself that when conducting a specific examination, he should try to reduce his own likes and dislikes to the minimum and make sure to recruit a colleague who has a certain degree of complementarity with himself.

When he was in college, many of his teachers admired Bian Mu. Among them, a full professor named Li had been encouraging Bian Mu to apply to be a graduate student of a professor at Beiqi University of Chinese Medicine. When Bian Mu asked the reason, Professor Li said that academic "inbreeding" is actually quite taboo in academic development.

The so-called academic "inbreeding" refers to the fact that mentors and students have too many similarities, to the point where the ratio of homology is as high as 80% to 90%. As a result, it is difficult to inspire new ideas, which are naturally passed down from generation to generation, easily leading to academic atrophy, degeneration, self-weakening... and eventually being completely eliminated by another new academic system.

Bian Mu felt that what the old man said was very reasonable. Only by seeking difference can we seek innovation, and only by seeking innovation can we be more energetic, and then better seek survival, development, and transcendence...

When Bian Mu heard that Nurse Ye looked down on the man, he naturally had the idea of ​​seeking novelty. Besides, it was winter, and the other person came sincerely, which showed that he respected him. He had to show all the courtesy no matter what. The word "doctor" cannot be written twice with one stroke. Broadly speaking, everyone is actually a "family" and they should treat each other as well as possible.

Bianmu's situation is quietly rising.

The man walked in, smiled at Bian Mu, bowed slightly, and followed Nurse Ye to a corner to wait for tea.

……

After seeing off the brother and sister, Bian Mu received another young female patient.

After politely seeing the female patient out, he turned around and exchanged a few polite words with the male doctor who came to apply for the job at the tea stall.

The man looked quite young. Judging from his expression, Bian Mu roughly judged that he was over 35 years old, the most embarrassing age line in the workplace, and that man had already crossed it.

The man looked quite gentle, with good hair quality and normal amount of hair. There were no wrinkles on his face, his eyes were small and long, his eyebrows were a little light, probably due to genetics, and his nose was a little flat, which somewhat reduced his sharpness.

His clothes are okay, but the whole outfit must have cost a lot of money.

"It's not easy to work at the Chinese Medical Clinic! You should know that, right?" Bian Mu said with a smile.

"I know a little. With my level and age, it would be quite embarrassing to go there. But... your and Teacher Liang's medical skills are there! I'll consider it as learning from you. I'm not afraid of making a fool of myself. When I retire in the future, at least I'll have something real under my control. I can rent a house near my home, hire a nurse, give injections and sell medicine. At least I can supplement the family income. At least I don't have to age as quickly as the elderly in other industries who do nothing all day long!" The man spoke quite honestly.

but……

Bian Mu also heard that the colleague in front of him seemed to be a little unmotivated.

"Did you take a special leave to come here today? Or..."

"I only work three shifts a week, and I don't work very often on weekdays. At most, I go to the hospital to attend business training or something, and then I say hello to my supervisor and leave."

"Oh... it sounds like they are less strict than Huikang. Well... I'm asking a question, which is also considered as part of the interview. If something I say is not appropriate, please don't mind!"

"No, you're the boss! Please excuse me!"

"A few days ago, I saw several medical reports saying that the growth and development of cancer depends to a large extent on the oxygen supply. In other words, more than 90% of cancer patients, especially those in the middle and late stages, suffer from cellular hypoxia. This conclusion should have been recognized by the industry all over the world. So... could you please compile this view from the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine, that is, give it an approximate translation, and restate it using the basic concepts and terms of our traditional Chinese medicine? Would that be convenient?" Bian Mu said very politely.

After hearing this, the man was stunned.


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