Chapter 1710 [1710] You need to enjoy life
When encountering an extra bed and a screen that shields the privacy of the mother in the extra bed, walk along the periphery of the screen. Looking into the screen, you can see the expectant mother who is so pale that she can't speak and cry, and the sound of fetal heart monitoring.
How painful it is to have a baby. Maybe every mother-to-be feels different when giving birth. Some will be in so much pain that they faint, and some can endure until they give birth smoothly.
In the classification of pain in medicine, it is not divided by disease type, but by clinical symptoms.
Different mothers have different pain sensations, which often leads to seemingly contradictory phenomena in clinical practice. The doctor thinks that she can give birth naturally by observing the complexion and vital signs of the expectant mother, but the expectant mother always thinks that she is in too much pain. It can only be said that pain can really torture people to death sometimes.
Because the medicine advocates natural birth, doctors will never give a pregnant woman a caesarean section casually. Under such circumstances, medical staff will always encourage the efforts of expectant mothers who have conditional vaginal delivery. However, the wails of the widow and the wounded soldiers all over the place are the same. Some medical staff will easily become numb like the medical staff on the battlefield when they see this kind of scene too much, and they can't tell whether the pain is really unbearable. Unless the vital signs of the mother and fetus drop down, it will be possible to react. In order to avoid this situation, a good hospital will send additional midwives to cross-evaluate the condition of the expectant mother and give feedback to the doctor in a timely manner. It is impossible for a small hospital to not have this funding condition.
Nursing staff has always been the first line of defense to guard the patient's condition changes. If this line of defense is not built well, one can expect terrible situations in the future. It is precisely for this reason that the nurses trained by the National Association do not allow themselves to flow out. Can't the doctor see it by himself? It's a question of money again. Doctors are paid a lot more than nurses.
The whole delivery room seems to be a shootout area in the downtown area. Is there a quieter place to give birth? Every mother wants to enjoy the best childbirth environment. Yes, some qualified hospitals provide such a superior environment. Like Beidusan, there are two single-person maternity rooms. Only this single-person labor room will not affect the privacy of other expectant mothers, and will allow a family member to come in to accompany the labor.
Things are rare and expensive, and the fees for a single-person maternity room must be very expensive. On the other hand, there are many rich people. In addition to not having enough money, if you want to enter the single-partum labor room, you need to have connections and a woman who is expecting to have this life to enjoy. The last point is the most terrible, not money can solve. Since there are so many people in line, if you happen to be giving birth and the one in front hasn't been born yet, you won't be able to get your turn. Or you just suddenly transferred or you were born earlier than the previous one during the waiting process, and you can't use it directly.
These are just a testament to the ever-changing nature of the delivery room. For this reason, clinical obstetricians have never dared to tell anyone how long it will take this patient to give birth to a child. Of course, medicine has regulations on how long the labor process must be transferred to a cesarean section.
Arrived in the multi-person waiting room, Mr. Zheng quickly found his department colleague Dr. Peng in the busy crowd.
Dr. Peng is a thin female doctor, in her thirties, without glasses, her long hair is covered in a surgical cap, she looks capable and competent. The obstetrics department, like doctors in other wards, is on duty 24 hours a day. Dr. Peng, who has been busy all day, is not without accident and deeply tired. He sweats on his forehead, and adjusts his breath intermittently to save himself the energy to work.
(end of this chapter)