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Wang Bei died of plastic surgery.
Wang Bei, the super girl, was originally unknown, but overnight, the "attention" turned out to be after Xiang Xiang's death. In 2005, Super Girl Wang Bei died on the operating table because of plastic surgery in Wuhan. Everyone loves beauty, and cosmetic surgery is becoming more and more common in modern society, but the price behind this beauty is too painful. As for Wang Bei's plastic surgery death, our reporter interviewed a psychologist yesterday. Experts believe that his choice of plastic surgery to pursue happiness may be too blind, and the star aura is too dazzling and attractive, which also makes many people who are eager to become famous take shortcuts and walk into a dead end, bringing bad consequences.

Yesterday afternoon, Wuhan Public Security Bureau confirmed the incident, saying that Wang Bei, the super girl, had indeed died of plastic surgery in 2005, and said that the incident was a medical malpractice dispute, and whether it was a medical malpractice in the end needed to be appraised by the Medical Malpractice Appraisal Committee.

Last night, Wang, the doctor in charge of Wang Bei's operation, exposed the accident for the first time and denied that Wang Bei died during the operation, saying that the operation was very smooth. The accident was caused two hours after the operation. After two days and one night of rescue, he finally died of respiratory and circulatory failure. How much responsibility should the hospital bear? The reporter asked a plastic surgeon about the situation yesterday. He said that before choosing plastic surgery, we must first understand the qualifications of this hospital, and secondly, we will sign the corresponding "informed consent form for surgery" before the operation. In the consent form, the possible limitations and risks are generally explained. "Fulfilling the obligation of medical risk notification cannot exempt the medical party from its responsibility for medical negligence." In other words, the surgeon still has the possibility of medical negligence and needs to further investigate the operation process.

Wu, a psychologist, told reporters yesterday: "People who participated in many talent shows and experienced in the stage didn't enter the entertainment circle in the end, but went to a bar as a resident singer, which inevitably made them feel a little entangled. They probably chose plastic surgery because they thought it was a minor operation and only considered the beautiful result afterwards, ignoring the process."