Life-threatening Medical Treatment

Life-threatening Medical Treatment

by Lu Zheng

Length:
142Kwords67chapters
Latest:
Ch. 67Untitled
Activity:
Updated 7y agoScraped 13d ago
2Comments
346Favorites
27Fans
0QD Score

About This Novel

A young intern doctor was stabbed several times, and there is a lot of confusion about who the murderer was. Was it a villain or a deliberate revenge? Is it a conflict between doctor and patient or is there something else hidden? Is the deceased innocent or does he have other ulterior secrets? A major case of murder and medical corruption that was fully investigated by the public security economic investigation and criminal investigation personnel has begun. Family, friendship, and romance are entangled, and the cycle of desire and sin is presented one by one. [Tips from this book] Doctors want to get more commission by prescribing medicines to a cold patient. In addition to prescribing expensive medicines with the same efficacy, doctors will also use the trick of prescribing multiple medicines. For example, to cure a cold, you only need to prescribe three medicines: one anti-inflammatory, one antitussive, and one traditional Chinese medicine. When prescribing these three medicines, the doctor can deliberately prescribe two medicines with adverse reactions, and then prescribe two more to cure the adverse reactions. Based on this calculation, the patient will probably have to pay for five drugs in the end.

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Official(2)Scraped 11d ago

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The Unruly Jia Baoyu8mo ago

The tragedy of the system under the bloody scalpel

In the bloody narrative of "Deadly Medical Care", Lu Zheng uses the sharp eyes of an economic investigation policeman to uncover the cruel truth about the intertwining of medical corruption and doctor-patient conflicts. This novel is not a simple suspense reasoning, but a mirror that reflects the alienated doctor-patient relationship under the "medicine-based" system - when the scalpel becomes a money-making tool, and when the patient regards the doctor as an enemy, tragedy becomes an inevitable footnote. From "Police Academy" to "Deadly Medical Care", Lu Zheng has always been writing about "the collision of human nature and the system." The value of this novel lies not only in the exposure of medical shady stories, but also in the sharp question it raises: When the angels who treat illnesses and save lives are forced to walk a tightrope between profit and conscience, how can we rebuild trust in medical care? The answer may be hidden in the motto at the end of the novel: "Justice will always stand firm in the sun, and sin will never escape the punishment of conscience." This is not only a warning to the medical industry, but also a revelation to every ordinary reader.

US
User 53550036308055mo ago

Nice. . . . . .

1

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