Over the past 10 years, China has provided standardized training to 1.1 million physicians, including resident physicians
CCTV News: In order to cultivate qualified clinical doctors, China has established a standardized training system for resident physicians, with a cumulative standardized training of 1.1 million physicians over the past 10 years. The girl on the screen is named Yu Shuting, a master's student from the First Clinical College of Wuhan University. After 5 years of undergraduate studies and 3 years of standardized training for resident physicians, she officially became a pediatrician this year. Today, let's learn about her work and growth together.
At 10:30 am, in the ward of the Pediatric Second Ward of Yichang Central People's Hospital in Hubei Province, 26 year old resident physician Yu Shuting was performing bone marrow puncture surgery on a sick child. She comforted and skillfully operated, and the surgery was successfully completed. The parents who had always stood by the bed also breathed a sigh of relief.
Starting from the shift handover at 7:55 am, Yu Shuting was busy in the ward until noon when she had time to take a sip of water.
The standardized training system for resident physicians refers to the requirement for new clinical physicians to receive systematic and standardized training for three years in large urban hospitals before participating in clinical work.
During her 8-year medical education, Yu Shuting spent 3 years providing standardized training for resident physicians in the pediatrics department of Wuhan University People's Hospital. Medical students do not have winter and summer vacations, and internships and research almost occupy all of their spare time. Yu Shuting's mother had previously disagreed with this path of studying medicine.
Yu Shuting's mother: I said this is a thankless task for you. Your salary for studying pediatrics is not high, and you are tired and hardworking. She said I just enjoy interacting with children. I asked her and I said you don't regret it, never regret it.
In April this year, Yu Shuting received a call from the China Bone Marrow Bank, hoping that she could donate hematopoietic stem cells to save the patient's life. And at this moment, it was her busiest time, with graduation thesis defense, employment destination selection, and standardized training for resident physicians, one thing after another, sometimes busy until three or four in the morning.
On the eve of graduation, Yu Shuting successfully donated 200 milliliters of hematopoietic stem cell suspension. From a medical student to a doctor, she can't remember how many nights she stayed up and how many tears she shed, but she always remembers the happy smiles of the children who were cured and discharged.
Yu Shuting, a resident pediatrician at Yichang Central People's Hospital in Hubei Province, said: Even if I am just a grassroots doctor or a doctor in a county, I can cure my current patients, and I am also achieving my own significance. With a sincere heart, I hope I won't lose it.