Chapter 182. 179. Defeating Magic with Magic
Chapter 182 179. Defeat Magic with Magic
In Kawei's eyes, Fernan was just a loyal butcher. He was a little tired of work, but the money he earned was enough to make enough food and clothing.
The cancer of gao pills caused by a series of changes in the body made him feel a little ashamed. In addition, he was very proud of his face, so he was in a bad mood. But that was limited to this, because most men had less gao pills and breast hyperplasia, and they had more or less this kind of thought.
Who would have thought that things would eventually evolve to this point
Kawei followed the patrol officers around Weit to the police station and needed to submit all medical records since Fernan's first hospitalization, and also needed to show his relationship with Fernan.
Witt was going to Hoinz Street to join his patrol team and take down Fernan. Although he was still a suspect in law and had no conviction, all clues were collected on him alone. No matter what the final facts were, they needed to be arrested to ask clearly.
Time flies by, and after explaining all the details, Kawei hurriedly leaves the police station.
Fernan is just his patient. Years of surgical work have allowed Kawei to see the warmth and warmth of human nature, and also made him develop a more indifferent mentality. "Saving the murderer led to the death of other innocent people in vain" This kind of entanglement that only new people can have will never exist in his mind.
But when leaving the police station and meeting Fernan who had just been arrested, Kavey was still a little sad.
He was also wearing the dirty black leather skirt, with minced meat from somewhere. He wore a greasy shirt covered in blood and sweat. It seemed that he hadn't changed for a few days. He could smell the odor it emitted just after he leaned up.
The mask that was originally betrayed was torn off, and there were no evil spirits underneath, but only a familiar but somewhat yellowed and haggard face.
Edward's fear was well passed to the patrol team through Witter's oral statement, but Fernan was far from as strong as they thought. After a group of patrolmen rushed into the basement, they easily took down the murderer without any fierce conflict.
"Doctor Kavey." Fernan didn't see anyone for several days, and he didn't change much. When he saw Kavey, he forced a smile, "Why are you here too."
After not seeing each other for many days, Fernan's eyes were yellow and his stomach was a little bulging. Considering the previous diagnosis of gao pill cancer and the palpation of the liver, Kawei speculated that his liver might not be just cirrhosis but more serious tumor metastasis.
He originally wanted to ask about the incision and Fernan's recent situation, but he didn't know how to speak at the same time.
Witt asked Fernan to take him to the interrogation room, then walked to Kawei and said, "He has recruited them all! A total of 11 died, including the two girls in the restaurant, the clerk, the old marshal's son Albert and his wife. Some were hidden in the ice cellar in the basement, some were thrown into the Danube River by him, and some were buried."
Kavey sighed: "Did he tell the motive for the crime?"
Looking at Fernan who was leaving, Witt sighed: "The reason is quite complicated. It can be understood temporarily that his wife met Albert by chance. The two hit it off and it was easy to get along. Fernan himself had problems and couldn't do that, so he made up his mind in the end."
After saying that, Witt made a neck wiping: "The problem is that he is still not satisfied with killing his wife, and he cut the man and woman into pieces and took it out to show off. Now the old marshal's house can be divided into half of the corpses. The most important thing is that he has to make up for what he lacks. It doesn't matter if he can make up for it. He wants to eat cows and sheep, but he insists on eating people."
After hearing this, Kawei explained: "It should be that he wants to use the pleasure of insulting others to fill the spiritual gap left by himself after being insulted."
Witt couldn't understand it, and after a while, he automatically skipped the sentence: "It's both hateful and pitiful."
Kavi sighed again: "Thank you for your hard work, sheriff."
"Oh, thank you for your hard work, it's just annoying. I have to interrogate all the crimes. It seems that I don't have to sleep tonight." Witt patted his shoulder and said, "By the way, you still have to go to St. Mary's Hospital, why don't you let the police carriage take you there?"
"No need." Kawei shook his head, "I can just go there myself."
All doctors hope that the patients in their hands will be healthy and not come to see them again. However, birth, old age, sickness and death are impermanent, and many patients will end up with their own endings. In most cases, doctors can only send them away from the side and cannot be stopped.
It is rare for people like Fernan to make trouble. Even Kavi, who is used to the wind and waves, couldn't help but think carefully in the carriage.
The death penalty is inevitable. Even if Austria is more inclined to not be executed today, it has taken the lives of two people, the clerk of the French Embassy and the old marshal's son, and the entire case is closely linked by "cannibalism" behavior, and the plot is extremely bad, so Fernan must die.
Judging from the crime briefly described by Witt, Fernan should have done this after bladder stones.
The ability caused by pain was reduced, and the hyperplasia of both breasts was criticized. In the end, my wife was cuckolded. There may be various stimulation and cold violence behind it. Fernan's nerves were like a steel wire, which was thin enough, and had to be bent repeatedly by others, and finally slid step by step from the edge of collapse into the abyss.
Although Kawei is indifferent, it is the patient's business that the doctor will definitely not take the blame. But he also inevitably wants to learn some lessons from it and minimize the occurrence of such things from a medical perspective.
Sitting in the carriage, he began to reflect on his diagnosis and treatment process.
The treatment part itself is not a problem. The surgical treatment of bladder stones, breast hyperplasia and gao pill cancer is all good. In today's surgical environment, it is already better than 40% of doctors.
The reason for 40% is that these 40% of the surgeries cannot relieve the pain. If the pain cannot be relieved, Fernan could only stay at home and die of depression and had no chance to take action.
The remaining 60% will cause Fernan to die directly on the operating table. As long as the person dies, there is no possibility of committing a crime, and the case can be fundamentally prevented from happening. So from the results, their handling method may be better than Kawei's.
But Kawei is a surgeon, and all measures must be based on the success of the operation.
In fact, if you look into it in depth, it would be a relatively obvious flaw that Fernan's family members had not been waiting for. Although there was a reason for inconvenience in communication in the 19th century, Kawei still felt that there was still a part that medical treatment could improve in this small matter.
The best choice is to be with the doctor to help the patient recover from health. If the family members don’t come, they need to consider the family’s discord, and at this time they need to pay attention to the patient’s mental state.
The second is the lack of health management after surgery.
Fernan believed that what to eat to supplement it is not outrageous, because many people would have the illusion. If he gave him professional advice in advance, he might be able to pull him at the last moment.
Thinking of this, Kawei rubbed his forehead gently with his hands and couldn't help but shake his head.
The more I thought about it, I seemed to be trapped in the cracks after the overlap between modern medicine and 19th century medicine. In fact, now that medicine has not yet developed, there is really not much room for dealing with humanistic care.
Wouldn't it be better if I took him to a church in the hospital?
Unfortunately, all of this is Kawei's assumption. Even if some regulations and measures can be made, it will be difficult to implement in municipal general hospitals with insufficient staff. Instead, it will increase the burden on the doctors themselves and risk reducing the quality of medical services.
Kawei felt it was a pity, but the reality gave him a very limited time to reflect. In less than half an hour, the carriage arrived at St. Mary's Hospital.
He had to change his mood and focus all his attention on the next patient.
The main reason I came here was that after the Countess's surgery, I responded to the invitation of a St. Mary's doctor and decided to take time to discuss the surgical treatment plan of a breast cancer patient with the surgeon here.
The discussion was in Masimov's office. In addition to Masimov and Kavi, there were six surgeons participating in the discussion.
Four of them are surgical assistants, and the other two are Masimov's students, and they are also excellent surgeons who can do surgery. Judging from the staffing structure, it is similar to the previous Municipal General Hospital.
Breast cancer removal is still unfamiliar to Kawei, and there are many places that can be fine-tuned in operation, but the operation itself is not dangerous.
He was confident that he could teach Masimov and other doctors the main points of attention of the surgery. After all, the surgery itself is already very mature, and the difference is to confirm the tumor spread boundary and the range of cutting.
So at first, Kawei thought this was just a "flying knife" after a clear diagnosis.
But after seeing the medical record, he was really surprised by the complexity of the patient's condition.
"The patient's left breast cancer has been progressing for a year." Masimov sat at the desk, holding a pipe in his hand, and his tone showed helplessness. "Considering the postoperative recurrence and mortality rate, and in order to continue working, she has always refused surgery."
"Refusing the surgery?" Kawei took the medical history from him, "Why are he still admitted to the hospital if he refuses the surgery?"
"She was not hospitalized because of breast cancer," said a doctor on Masimov's left hand. "I originally had a headache, so I went to the internal medicine department to dispense medicine. I fell down and had a fracture in my left arm and then I was admitted to the surgical ward."
Just one sentence made Kavi tense up.
Patients who can palliate breast cancer for one year naturally have much better endurance than ordinary people. But she went to the internal medicine department for headaches, which shows that the pain has exceeded her endurance. In addition, the fracture of her left arm
The more Kawei thought about it, the more outrageous he became, and he always felt very bad.
But for the other doctors present, it seemed that they had to solve the problem of simple breast cancer: "We used splints and casts on her arm, and then repeatedly persuaded her to cut off the cancerous breasts when she couldn't work now."
"So she agreed?"
"I did agree." Masimov replied, "but the size of the tumor exceeded my expectations, and I have been unable to accurately determine the range of the resection. It happened that I had a breast cancer removal for the Countess before, so I wanted you to come and discuss it."
"It's a pity that Teacher Masimov was not present at the scene at that time."
"You're so embarrassed to say?" Masimov was so angry that he was so angry that he came. "You announced the time the day before the operation. I happened to have a surgery that day and I couldn't go there even if I wanted to."
"The patient's condition is special, and I can't do anything about it." Kawei explained briefly, and immediately brought the topic back to the new patient. "Now that I'm here, I will naturally help with the surgery. But before clarifying the surgical plan, I have a different view on the patient's condition."
"What do you think?" Masimov was a little curious.
Instead of expressing his opinion directly, Kawei looked at the medical history and raised his own question step by step: "The patient has a severe headache, right?"
"It's really amazing. Sometimes I can't even suppress ya tablets." An assistant replied.
“Where is the headache?”
Another assistant covered a position above the right temple with his palm: "When it hurts so much, she usually presses on the right half of her head."
"Narrhea? Vomiting?"
“It has been, but not serious.”
Kavi sighed, then nodded, as if she had her own diagnosis: "It's not just breast cancer that needs treatment, but her headache also needs treatment, and it will be very dangerous if it is allowed to develop."
"Don't worry about this." Masimov picked up his pipe and took a sip. "For the evil spirits in the skull, our hospital's internal medicine department is authoritative and has been treated."
Evil spirit?
Kawei thought he had heard it wrong: "Internal Medicine? How to treat internal medicine?"
"Bao meat patch + shock therapy." Masimov said a very strange set of terms, "If it is invalid, they will also try hypnosis and detoxification. Anyway, we don't need to worry about headaches, and the doctors will do it."
It doesn’t matter if you don’t say it, this statement made Kawei even more curious: “Bao meat patch? Shock therapy?”
"Wrap a whole piece of bacon with garlic, apply it to the painful area, and then tie it with a bandage." Masimov took a piece of paper and pressed it tightly on his scalp. "After doing this, let the patient lie on the ground, put his head in a large iron pot, and use an iron hammer to hit it. This method can force the evil spirit in the skull to run out, if this evil spirit is not powerful."
Kavi: "."
"The development of internal medicine is also changing with each passing day. I wanted to introduce an electric bathtub to treat headaches, but unfortunately the hospital had insufficient funds and had to give up." Masimov said with emotion, "Compared to our simple and unpretentious cutting of flesh, their treatment methods always seem so magical."
Everyone agreed: "Yes."
It's a p!!!
Kawei wanted to use modern neurosurgery theories to refute it, but he felt it was too difficult. After all, the span from "Theory of Evil Spirit" to "The metastasis of breast cancer tumors pressurizes brain tissue, causing increased intracranial pressure, causing severe headaches", is really a bit larger.
After thinking about it, he decided to defeat magic with magic: "The internal medicine's method of exorcising spirits seems to be clever, but in the face of the 'precise skull drilling technique', there are just a bunch of tricks for children to play with each other, which is not worth mentioning at all."
Chapter completed!