Watch the full movie, or say it's bland. It's the whole process of a doctor's self-redemption, but it's just a coincidence, perhaps to suit the taste of the movie. But this is already unrealistic in some respects. It is a bit strange to ask a person with a photo, while exercising the power of a doctor.
I am also a medical student, so the question of medical ethics should be clearly understood before starting to study medicine. However, this so-called medical ethics should not be inherent and formalized. Is there a so-called standard of high medical ethics? When did morality become a science? But having said that, even though foreign medicine is very different from our country's medicine, it must be too incompatible with humanism to require medical ethics to have national boundaries.
In the past two days, I have watched movies involving doctors. Yesterday's movie "April, Three Weeks and Two Days" and today's "Five Girls" doctors are not the same subject, but I use doctors to answer many questions. But the medical ethics inside are completely different. After watching today's movie, I thought of Bian Que's brothers, which seemed to be like that. She obviously could have prevented it, but she didn't do it. She felt guilty, which is understandable, but it shouldn't be like sinking. The doctor's heart can't say how strong he needs to be, but he shouldn't throw others out for the unexpected. In the end, if the father died at her house, I think she must have given up her career as a doctor.
Write what you see.
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