I didn't expect to meet a syphilis patient just after entering the joint surgery
The thing is like this.
Ever since I had a needlestick injury in the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, I have developed a habit¡ªthat is, as long as the pda is in my hand and I am fine, I will open the pda and check the blood test results of each patient in the ward.
Because old patients are discharged and new patients are admitted every day, the information on the pda will be updated frequently, so this also requires me to check frequently if I want to know which patients in the ward have infectious diseases.
Although doing this is a bit of a peep at other people's privacy, but in order to ensure my own safety, I think it's okay to look at the pda, and I'm an intern in a hospital, so I won't talk about their privacy everywhere.
What's more, as long as the medical staff of this department can check the patient's specific information with a computer or PDA, the blood test result is not a relatively private secret.
In fact, I often look at the pda, I just want to let myself know the number, and then let myself know which patients in the ward must be careful when operating.
However, after looking at the PDA and knowing which patients in the ward have infectious diseases, it is not so good.
Because when you know that a patient you are close to has contagious bacteria or viruses, you will instinctively feel fear or even fear in your heart.
Not to mention that I just left a huge shadow in my heart because of the needle stick injury.
So when I just found out on pda that a hospitalized grandmother had syphilis, and there was a sign (¡À) in the item of human immunodeficiency virus, I became very scared.
Because I was afraid that I was not infected with syphilis by the syphilis patient in the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, but was infected by this old lady in the Department of Joint Surgery.
So I want to try my best to stay away from her
And in her blood test results, there is a (¡À) in the item of human immunodeficiency virus. Does this mean that she may be an AIDS patient?
After guessing like this, I was even more afraid.
Then I have to stay away from her!
I think so.
did the same.
Coincidentally, no matter whether it is my first teaching teacher or my second teaching teacher, the areas of the day shift are the fixed groups every time, and it just happens to include the ward where the old lady is.
So when I go to work with my second teacher, I can always see that old lady, and I often go to her ward to help her or other patients change medicines and pull out needles
In fact, when I just found out that the old lady was a syphilis patient, I didn't even want to enter the ward where she was.
But helpless!
Doing morning care in the morning, going to the ward where she is
The morning is the peak time for infusion, so I have to go to the ward where she is to change the dressing, because I can't just stand there waiting for the teacher to go when the bell rings!
If I really do that, it may not take long for my reputation to spread among the teachers in the department, I'm sure of this.
So even though I was scared, I still had to go in and out of that ward to deal with patients' problems.
It is precisely because of this that during that time, even if I didn't want to see her, I couldn't do it!
But maybe because of this, after a long time, the fear of her in my heart has gradually eased.
It's just that when I do morning care in the morning, I still don't touch her bed
When her bed number was called in the aisle of the ward, as long as there were other people around, I deliberately reacted slowly, and then did not give myself a chance to get in close contact with her.
But no matter how careful I am, it still doesn't work (Remember the website URL: www.hlnovel.com