Hearing that Ye Nai had such experience, the captain imdiately instructed the team mbers to move the patients, while Ye Nai took out a long sink matched with the health clinic for them to wash their hands and rest.
She led the two team doctors to the entrance of the operating room, opened a cabinet specifically installed there, and took out three pairs of disposable slippers.
The three of them continued inside, where a row of wheeled beds lined the corridor, the first room being the changing room where they shed their outerwear and donned sterile gowns.
Heading back to the corridor and moving further in, they saw a sink for surgical personnel to wash and clean their hands, with soap that was a common brand in hospitals.
Inside, they prepared, as Ye Nai took out disposable surgical instrunts and dical consumables from the Space, set up the operating table, and moved the mobile X-ray and ultrasound machines to the side of the operating table.
At the entrance of the operating room hallway, two more team mbers removed their clothes, trousers, and shoes, put on disposable slippers from the cabinet, went to the changing room to put on lab coats, and took the wheeled beds from the corridor, placing the first patient who was carried up from the valley floor on the bed naked, and pushed him into the operating room.
During their spare ti, they also took out bags and packed the bodies from the four vehicles, arranging them neatly in a row on the ground.
The pressure then fell on Ye Nai and the two team doctors.
There was no anesthesia.
The three of them were not professional anesthetists, and could not administer general anesthesia, so they could only fix the patient's limbs, forcibly cut open, and locate the bleeding points inside the chest and abdon to stop the bleeding.
This was certainly risky, but it was legally supported, akin to field surgery, employing the equipnt available; taking the chance might save a life, not taking it ant certain death.
Ye Nai released spores onto the patient, supporting his life, and continued to keep him unconscious, not wanting him to wake up midway.
The X-ray machine was pushed over the patient's chest and abdon and started scanning; the results quickly appeared on the screen, and naturally, the abdominal cavity couldn't be seen, only the fractures in the limbs were clearly scanned.
An ultrasound was also perford, but interpreting this type of imaging required training, and the three of them were not skilled in it, only managing to vaguely ascertain that the abdominal cavity was filled with blood.
Then, the three of them looked at each other, and finally, Ye Nai picked up the scalpel.
A cut was made, and fresh blood surged from the stomach.
The two team doctors imdiately cooperated, taking turns to drop gauze to soak up the blood, while Ye Nai, with the help of spores, probed the wound, and seeing a reduction in blood inside the abdon allowed her to see the organs clearly, she reached straight in without hesitation and clutched the spleen.
"Found it, the spleen is ruptured, see here, the wound is here," she said.
"Is it serious? If it's bad, we have to cut it off," one asked.
"It's manageable, we can save the spleen," she replied.
Ye Nai slowly explored the human spleen, feeling quite intrigued, but her assessnt was correct – the man was indeed lucky that it wasn't necessary to remove it.
One team doctor imdiately acted as an assistant, handing over the suitable suture material. Watching Ye Nai's movents were not very practiced, but her hands were steady; though slow, she successfully completed the procedure.
After cleaning the blood inside the abdon and checking to ensure no instrunts or gauze were left behind, they sutured up the abdominal skin, hooked up the IV, and the surgery concluded.
Fractures were not dealt with and would be attended to back at the main camp.
Opening the operation room door, they allowed outside team mbers to take the patient out to the corridor and brought in a new one.
Afterward, the three of them washed their hands, changed clothes, washed their hands again, and entered the operating room to start the second operation.
Thus, several hours later, Ye Nai, performing surgery throughout, completed internal surgeries on six patients, addressed the external wounds that could be cleaned and sutured; fractures were not possible, including the two with open fractures, all just received bandaging and stabilization.
Exiting the operating room for the last ti, all three were a bit stiff-legged, stiff-waisted, and had heavy necks.
After washing their hands thoroughly, checking that the patients with IVs were alright, the first to undergo surgery had already finished his IV and was sleeping soundly on a wheeled bed.
Ye Nai asked the other team mbers to help look after the IV patients while she changed shoes, stepped outside, and took out a bathroom and laundry facility.
The vending machines in the laundromat sells disposable underwear, compression T-shirts, and socks.
Thus, the entire team took turns washing themselves. They had moved the wounded around, and inevitably got so blood on their clothes. Ye Nai took out the dical waste bag and had them pack up their dirty clothes to be washed back at the main camp. For now, they wore white coats and slippers.
The clothes taken off the wounded were also packed into separate bags to be claid by them once awake.
The operating room was also briefly cleaned, used instrunts were placed in a special bag, and trash was put in garbage bags.
But a thorough cleaning to the standard of an operating room had to be done outside the Secret Realm.
When she was buying dical supplies, vendors disclosed information only known within the industry to her.
Locally, there are specialized services for cleaning dical supplies, derived from businesses providing supplentary services to hospitals.
In such a large city with a large population and developed service industry, competition was fierce to make money.
The continuous dical demands within the Secret Realm, along with the vast amount of dical equipnt and supplies that had been used, required reliable cleaning and disinfection. However, the necessary equipnt was large and expensive, not sothing an individual could just buy—creating a business opportunity.
She worried about too many wastewater tanks and the ti-consuming task of disposing of the wastewater, but she got suggestions from a wastewater treatnt plant, which was a natural part of their business.
The municipal water plant not only deals in bottled water but also sells filtered, clean water by the ton.
Making money was not embarrassing, and since they were professionals in the field, difficulties that could be solved with money weren't really problems.
After everything was cleaned up and the last of the wounded was hydrated, a blanket was placed over each. The seats in the transport vehicle were lifted up, and the space that was freed was just right for the wounded.
Wounded soldiers were transported this way on the battlefield as well.
However, there was nothing laid on the floor of the vehicle's cabin to cushion it, making it uncertain how the injuries would fare during the rough ride back.
"Wait a minute, wait a minute, are we just going to transport them back like this? Aren't we afraid they might be jolted to death? What was all our effort for these past few hours? Just practice?"
Ye Nai imdiately intervened, such handling was unacceptable in front of her. The people just rescued would definitely bleed profusely if jolted all the way back. If this had to be done, at least not in front of her eyes.
The people ready to move the wounded actually stopped and looked at Ye Nai thoughtfully.
"Right, how did East Ridge Secret Realm transport wounded before?"
Ye Nai smacked her lips twice, "Why do I feel like you are setting a trap for ?"
"How could we?"
"Impossible, impossible."
"No no, don't talk nonsense."
The mbers of the small team quickly denied it.
Ye Nai: "..."
Fine, no need to argue about it anymore.
Ye Nai was not being sentintal; she simply waved her hand and brought out a wheeled tractor and a large trailer for transporting the wounded on the empty ground.
"Wow!!!!"
The team mbers, who considered themselves well-experienced, were taken aback by soone carrying around a tractor and trailer.
The surprises didn't stop there, Ye Nai also presented six stretcher carts at the entrance of the operating room, common models seen on ambulances.
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