It's bittersweet ending :) Thanks to all actors and production crew for bringing this drama to us! They all deserve a big applause! They depicted ALS so well and to those people who suffers from ALS or other incurable illnesses, don't give up on living!
The doctor's patience is on another level, having to explain/repeat the same thing multiple times. I guess doctors…
Doctors are professionals and they are trained to handle stressful situations just like any other health professionals. We have the duty to help patients but not sharing patient's info to other members of the family because in North America, that's breaking the privacy law.
I'm also a healthcare professional. So for every patients I see, I will not share it with other people including my colleagues unless we're working with the same patient(s). Everything I see, hear will remain confidential. Unless the patient agrees, then we'll share the info (to other professionals like lawyers/police officers...) otherwise... everything has to remain confidential. Even if terrible diagnosis, without patient's consent, we cannot share that info to their family members.
It's part of the job so maybe difference country have different laws. But every doctors are expected to be patient and caring towards patients, with family members, and friends of the patients. It's a hard job and sometimes it can be mentally draining.
in Canada, we cannot share patient's info to their family members or friends because of PIPEDA (Canada's version…
it's probably different in China because this is not the first Chinese drama where the doctor will literally tell their patient's diagnosis to the patient's family members...
I don't know if China has any privacy law for the doctors... but I guess it's different in Asian countries.
Survived the daily cry fest ✌️ Ep 16/17 were particularly hard to watch. Everybody is trying to accept the…
in Canada, we cannot share patient's info to their family members or friends because of PIPEDA (Canada's version of HIPAA/privacy law). Otherwise we will break the law unless the patient allows us to share otherwise we can't.
I do too. He’s going to need to start telling people.
Long story short, this nearly happened to me but it was different. This happened a few years ago
I work as a registered acupuncturist (healthcare professional in my area) in a clinic. I wore my medical gloves when I started treating a patient with HIV in his medical history. I followed every safety procedures but at the end, I got poked by the needle accidently and obviously, my finger bled. I had to go to a nearby clinic to get my bloodwork checked. I thought to myself, what if I get HIV? How will I tell my parents? My boss? My colleagues? I nearly broke down. Ended up telling the truth about what happened, ...My parents were supportive even though they did treat me very harshly when I was high school more than 10 years ago. Thankfully, I'm alright. No HIV at the end.
life lesson: even if it's hard to digest, tell the truth.
Ep 11 got me all up in my feelings,I felt so sad for Lin tuo that I started crying 😭, he is so young and had…
It saddens me, to be honest. Never mind about getting ALS that young but the fact, that his parents ....just makes me want to punch my laptop. His parents reminded me of my parents when I was in high school.
They will be saddened, shocked, for sure. But I'm sure they'll be close to each other again near the end.
Thanks to all actors and production crew for bringing this drama to us!
They all deserve a big applause!
They depicted ALS so well and to those people who suffers from ALS or other incurable illnesses, don't give up on living!
Gramps TAT
I'm also a healthcare professional.
So for every patients I see, I will not share it with other people including my colleagues unless we're working with the same patient(s). Everything I see, hear will remain confidential. Unless the patient agrees, then we'll share the info (to other professionals like lawyers/police officers...) otherwise... everything has to remain confidential. Even if terrible diagnosis, without patient's consent, we cannot share that info to their family members.
It's part of the job so maybe difference country have different laws. But every doctors are expected to be patient and caring towards patients, with family members, and friends of the patients. It's a hard job and sometimes it can be mentally draining.
I don't know if China has any privacy law for the doctors... but I guess it's different in Asian countries.
I work as a registered acupuncturist (healthcare professional in my area) in a clinic. I wore my medical gloves when I started treating a patient with HIV in his medical history. I followed every safety procedures but at the end, I got poked by the needle accidently and obviously, my finger bled. I had to go to a nearby clinic to get my bloodwork checked. I thought to myself, what if I get HIV? How will I tell my parents? My boss? My colleagues? I nearly broke down. Ended up telling the truth about what happened, ...My parents were supportive even though they did treat me very harshly when I was high school more than 10 years ago. Thankfully, I'm alright. No HIV at the end.
life lesson: even if it's hard to digest, tell the truth.
They will be saddened, shocked, for sure. But I'm sure they'll be close to each other again near the end.
This drama reminds me too much Boku no Ita Jikan...
bucket of tears, here we come
***PTSD from boku no ita jikan.... ALS is not a joke... it's a scary disease to live with.***