The incomplete version of the Eye of Bole is simply a divine skill for Chen Cang at the mont!
Thinking of this, Chen Cang didn’t hesitate any longer and automatically tuned out the lovey-dovey old couple next to him.
He couldn’t care less even if his blood sugar spiked!
He started filtering through the information on the hospital director candidates, fearing this unreliable skill might suddenly stop working.
If that happened, he’d be dood!
With this in mind, Chen Cang quickly grabbed a blank piece of paper to take notes.
He wrote down the scores for each person, which gave him a rough understanding.
The scores serve as a very important reference point.
But Chen Cang doesn’t plan to make scores the sole factor.
Sotis, when choosing soone, subjective factors like values and personality are also very important.
This ti, five people participated in the director evaluation.
They were Qin Xiaoyuan, Mr. Zhong, Tan Liguo, Chen Cang, and Mr. Fang!
Mr. Fang’s condition has improved a lot recently. His health is much better than before. It can be seen that the surgery Chen Cang perford when he was just starting out was very successful!
Mr. Fang is a founding elder of the Provincial Second Hospital. With his years of experience, even Mr. Zhong has to respectfully call him Teacher Fang.
Five people were to participate in an open interview, get scored, and the director would be selected based on the ranking.
Needless to say, there were many applications for this director position.
Even internationally, many overseas Chinese and foreigners applied.
Chen Cang reviewed the information very quickly!
He trusted the system’s judgnt.
[Chen Xiaoli: Comprehensive score: 76, research ability...]
[Xu Kuang: Comprehensive score: 65, research ability...]
...
The resus of those who could reach the level of a hospital director were indeed very substantial, with several pages just on honors, not to ntion research achievents, theses, and other information.
Therefore, for Chen Cang to understand each one and rember these people would indeed take a lot of ti.
Yet, Chen Cang had faith in the system’s capabilities.
The scores of most applicants hovered around 70 points, give or take.
Occasionally, one or two scored above 80. Chen Cang had already recorded those.
He also picked out so with five-star abilities in specific fields.
After all, these are rare talents!
If he could recruit them to his team, it would be a great choice.
As Chen Cang browsed through the last ten or so resus, he suddenly froze for a mont!
[Zhu Qian, male, born in 1975, forr director of Beihe Province Traditional Chinese dicine Hospital...]
Upon seeing this na, Chen Cang’s eyes narrowed!
Director Zhu has been released from prison???
Chen Cang was suddenly excited, quickly taking Zhu Qian’s docunts out and looking at them carefully!
He hoped he wasn’t mistaken!
Zhu Qian was sentenced to eight years in prison five years ago for several cris. He shouldn’t be out yet, right?
However, the docunts clearly showed Zhu Qian, no mistake about it.
After all, it’s impossible for there to be two people nad Zhu Qian who held the position of director at the Beihe Province Traditional Chinese dicine Hospital, right?
It should be noted, when Chen Cang was still in college, Director Zhu had already been selected as a Changjiang Scholar heavyweight, awarded as one of the "Top 100 Dostic Directors," and was a consecutive recipient of the "Bethune Doctor" award for three tis.
But what truly made Zhu Qian famous wasn’t these honors.
Most people remained incredibly unfamiliar with the na.
The real sensation occurred in 2016, during a major dical malpractice case.
This was also a rare case in the country where a director was convicted and sentenced.
At that ti, Zhu Qian was very young, only 41 years old, but he was already a prominent chief and director at a provincial hospital, brimming with ambition. However, what was truly comndable was Zhu Qian’s peak achievents in thoracic surgery, being the leading figure in the North China thoracic field, and where he innovatively perfected lung cancer resection surgeries to their utmost level.
His lung cancer radical resection surgery also attracted significant attention in the world’s leading oncology journal.
But!
Just when Zhu Qian was at the pinnacle of his career, he faced a major turning point in his life.
Beihe Province is not far from Shanxi and Inner Mongolia, where the prevalence of coal mining brings along a common disease, silicosis.
Silicosis, perhaps not widely known, is also referred to as pneumoconiosis.
It’s primarily a lung disease featuring fibrotic changes caused by prolonged inhalation of dust containing free silica during production processes.
In earlier tis, due to issues like lack of protective asures, most coal miners had varying degrees of silicosis after years of exposure.
In early stages, silicosis wasn’t serious, and patients typically showed no symptoms.
But, as ti went on, the condition worsened, and in late-stage silicosis, patients faced difficulty breathing, coughing up blood, chest tightness, and even systemic issues, jeopardizing their lives.
Perhaps it’s fair to say tis produce heroes, and in such an environnt, Zhu Qian honed his skills.
However, coming from a coal miner family himself, Zhu Qian could deeply empathize with these patients.
Between 2010 and 2016, during his research on silicosis, he discovered with alarmingly high incidence in a certain area of Beihe Province, and crucially, the transition from silicosis to lung cancer was significantly high!
This research discovery, initially ant for simply studying patient groups and conducting a census, greatly stirred Zhu Qian!
Consequently, after further investigation, he found that several coal mines in the area had a special kind of dust that could irritate bronchial epithelium, thereby inducing cancer!
Ard with this information, Zhu Qian embarked on various initiatives - publicizing, educating, conducting research, and more...
He even pushed for these coal mines to compensate because there was a direct link.
Yet a re director challenging a group’s interests beca a target.
Zhu Qian was targeted.
But he didn’t give up, continuing to make all sorts of efforts to seek justice for local patients whose silicosis turned into lung cancer, fighting for compensations.
Young and fiery, Zhu Qian endured many hardships for this cause.
At that ti, dust pollution was not yet given significant attention dostically, with research being a relatively blank area.
For this reason, Zhu Qian even paid out of his own pocket to fight lawsuits.
However...
At the critical mont, these patients switched sides.
They all didn’t want to anger the big boss but instead... hoped the big boss could provide their children with a job.
After all, many rural folks couldn’t even get a job in the coal mines.
Moreover, such jobs were well-paid.
Annual earnings of over a hundred thousand were considered high in rural areas, enough to change their destiny.
Zhu Qian privately collected data in the mines but encountered an accident, though fortunately, it wasn’t serious. However, upon discovery, he was sued by the coal mine in court.
After all, Zhu Qian wasn’t a coal miner, and his entry was illegal.
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