An attending physician from the General Surgery Department, an attending physician from the Orthopedics Department, and a resident doctor from the Neurosurgery Department came—one after another—to the operating theater in the Emergency Medical Center. They stood in their positions, read their scans, and quietly analyzed the situation.
Among them, the resident doctor from the Neurosurgery Department looked the calmest, while the attending physician from the General Surgery and the attending physician from the Orthopedics Department looked very serious.
Under normal inter-departmental consultations, specialist departments normally sent out resident doctors. Most of the emergency cases were not serious, after all, there were patients who had their heads hit a clock, legs hit a clock, or an*ses hitting a clock, and all of them came for consultation. During those times, resident doctors were enough to treat them.