"Dear Life" uses too much force and the character logic is wrong. Is this hospital really okay?

" Dear Life " starring Song Qian , Wang Xiaochen , Yin Fang, Myolie Hu , and Wang Sen is launched. This time, it focuses on obstetrician and gynecologist , which highlights the preference for sons over women in the plot. It is not easy for women to work in the workplace and other social hotspots that are more common in obstetrics and gynecology, and in terms of setting, this drama should be a story of two female protagonists, each experiencing a growth story. Song Qian plays Du Di, a person with strong professional skills but not good at communication and a sense of justice, while Wu Congrui played by Wang Xiaochen is smooth and has strong communication skills but weak professional skills. The two of them have been friends for ten years. Their personalities and professions are very complementary, and they are strong competitors for the chief resident physician, and the plot unfolds from this.

According to the setting of "Dear Life", Du Di and Wu Congrui are the only candidates for the hospitalization, which is enough to see the excellence of the two. However, in order to highlight the complementarity of the two people, the plot is somewhat powerful. Too aggressive, causing the plot to be inconsistent with the character setting logic, and the two heroines each have their own problems, of which Du Di has a big problem. The first is Wu Congrui. In terms of setting, she should be weaker than Du Di in her professional ability, but she is not so weak that she even needs to call her instructor to give medicine to patients, right? Is Wu Congrui enough to compete for the overall hospitalization setting? Is this the level of medical skills? If she only has communication skills, then she is more suitable for administration...

is followed by Du Di. Du Di's character is highly skilled in medicine, but he is not very good at communicating with patients. It should be that Du Di can't communicate with everyone, but from the plot Looking at Du Di, she doesn't know how to communicate. As a doctor, doesn't she even know medical privacy? Isn't this a basic requirement of a doctor? The first time was when I was working as an assistant in the outpatient clinic. Du Di met a little girl with an ectopic pregnancy to get an abortion. The little girl was rude and the other party refused to pay extra medical expenses. Du Di, who had a strong sense of justice, did not ask. Is it reasonable to know who accompanies the patient to see the doctor, ask who knows the patient outside the clinic, and shout that Li Qiaoer wants to have an abortion?

This is the second time that Du Di is responsible for a full-term woman. She has a stump uterus and needs surgery. Before the operation, her family members need to confirm and sign. Du Di thinks her husband is very irresponsible and can't get through to her husband's phone. Du Di had to Direct communication with the mother, but the problem is that the mother and the mother-in-law live in the same ward. Du Di repeatedly mentioned about the mother's illness, and the mother repeatedly interrupted to tell Du Di to stop talking, but Du Di lost his temper instead, and directly said it so that the pregnant elderly mother-in-law heard it, causing the mother-in-law who was about to give birth to be frightened and feverish. Du Di's practice is really popular. Is it really appropriate for her to do this when the patient clearly tells her not to say it?

This is the third time that the mother-in-law and daughter-in-law gave birth together. The mother-in-law went to the delivery room to accompany the father-in-law, and the daughter-in-law went to another operating room to prepare for delivery and surgery. Her husband was late, and Du Di was waiting in the hospital lobby. The mother’s husband came to sign, but Du Di received a husband who vomited blood. She first sent him to the emergency room, then ran to her mother-in-law’s delivery room and pulled her father-in-law over to ask him if he knew his son’s medical history. His son was being rescued in the emergency room. The mother-in-law who gave birth next to her was exhausted and had a bad birth. After hearing it, she fainted. Couldn't Du Di pull the person out of the delivery room and ask again?

Du Di's repeated behavior is no longer just a problem of low emotional intelligence. She even has a terrifyingly low basic quality of doctors. For many doctors, medical privacy should be emphasized again and again, but she doesn't seem to have This kind of concept, in addition, stimulates the elderly mother who is giving birth. She is also very unprofessional in doing so. Is it reasonable for a person who can compete for the total hospitalization to behave like a newcomer? Speaking of which, both candidates are acting like interns, is there really no problem with this hospital? It's not that there can't be a growing protagonist, but at least it must conform to the logic of human design!