Associate Chief Physician Yao gazed at the patient on the operating table with a solemn expression. The scalpel felt so heavy, and he felt like a disloyal married man with four girlfriends who was holding the keys to the first girlfriend's house.
Every single surgeon was familiar with bleeding control, and as an associate chief physician, Associate Chief Physician Yao did it all the time.
That was exactly why he knew how hard it was to deal with this patient's hemorrhage.
Of course, it was easy to make an incision on the patient's abdominal wall. But if he was unable to quickly and accurately find the bleeding point, the patient's blood would flow out like a broken dam, until all his blood vessels were drained. It would be to the point that the blood would not be able to be replaced quickly enough even if blood was transfused into the veins of both his hands.