One day, Lin, a help messenger from Baotou, hesitated. It turns out that a woman named Joe in Baotou gave birth to five babies in a row, and all five babies died of postpartum yellowing. Joe is now pregnant with his sixth child and wants to come to Beijing to seek Lin's help. Lin and his nephew, Professor Zhou, a pediatrician, scientifically analyzed the cause and concluded that Joe was suffering from "hemolysis of newborn". In the absence of effective cure at home and abroad, I regretfully declined Lin. Before Joe's pain was completely over, Dr. Huang came to report that the cells in the uterus of an elderly pregnant woman living in bed 15 were highly proliferated, which was suspected to be cervical cancer. When other attending doctors suggested hysterectomy as soon as possible to prevent possible cancer, Lin decided to be cautious and continue to observe. A few years later, the rare case of fifteen beds was recognized by the international medical community as an decidual tumor that can disappear automatically with the pregnancy process of pregnant women.
After Lin conquered the rare cases of elderly pregnant women with superb medical skills and broad love, she was always worried about Qiao and his wife who were cornered in Baotou. After a lot of desk preparation, Lin formed a treatment plan and made up his mind to inform Joe to see a doctor. Facing Lin's rigorous scientific attitude and superb medical skills, Joe finally gave birth to a healthy baby.
Soon, the "Cultural Revolution" began. During the Cultural Revolution, black and white were reversed, and doctors Lin, Zhou, and Huang were attacked, and the fine tradition of Union Medical College Hospital was completely destroyed. To Lin's relief, Xiao Nianlin, who delivered the baby herself in the early 1950s, has grown up. Nianlin came to Union Medical College Hospital for an internship. The first time I stood in front of the operating table and presided over the operation, I told Lin the story of his early medical career to eliminate Lin's nervousness when he was studying. ...
Time flies, time flies. In the early 1980s, Lin was seriously ill. On his deathbed, Lin whispered, "forceps, forceps!" It seems that she is still thinking about her lifelong medical career. When she left the career dedicated to her life, the sound of the waves in Gulangyu, her hometown, and the Hippocratic oath at the Concorde graduation ceremony were intertwined and echoed in the deep sky.
(The photo album is from Song Xiaoying's Sina blog)