Zhou Can was only tasked with plastering this woman's cast; as for her son, no matter how unfilial, it wasn't for the doctor to intervene.
On Tu Ya's first day of internship, the mentoring physicians warned them that a doctor should only do what is required.
Don't overindulge in a sense of justice and meddle in the patient's family or personal affairs.
They were also told that while saving lives, doctors must learn how to protect themselves.
Zhou Can did not understand this advice from the mentors at that time.
He even wondered how such selfish people could become mentors.
Only after his personal experience did he realize that the mentors' words were pure gold. Zhou Can still remembered his first experience of meddling, when a young woman about twenty-six or twenty-seven years old was hospitalized due to injury.
It was obvious that she had been beaten.
But she claimed it was from a fall, and the treating physicians, nurses, and doctors did not pry further.