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I propose that this year's graduates of the medical school be sent abroad to support the front line of the fight against the epidemic. Do you agree?

I propose that this year's graduates of the medical school be sent abroad to support the front line of the fight against the epidemic. Do you agree?

Isn't it the student's decision whether to fight the epidemic or not? Don't you think it's ridiculous that you're here deciding someone else's graduation path with a stroke of your keyboard? And you're "sending" them? Medical students are neither employees of the school nor soldiers, so what qualifications do you have to "send" them to the front line of the epidemic?

This question, and all the respondents, express ideas that are simply outrageous, discussing whether they should be sent or not, without asking if others want to go. These views are like some parents, and capitalists. They don't ask their children about their interests and talents, they are there to figure out whether they should take extracurricular art classes or extracurricular piano classes, and they don't intend to give their employees wage increases and extra compensation, they are there to make them work overtime to improve the company's performance.

If, on the other hand, you want students to go to the front line to fight against the epidemic, you can encourage it and you can carry out relevant dispatch programs, but at the same time, you have to offer appropriate salary packages, and after they weigh up the salary packages, some of them will decide to go and some of them will decide not to go, and this is a choice made by the graduates themselves.

If people want to go, you are not qualified to stop them; if they don't want to go, you are not qualified to insist on dispatching them.

Why do you send your own trained talents abroad to support them? They're a bunch of novices, just starting out in life, with little practical experience, so you're asking them to go abroad to send people's heads off?

Tell you what, you go. You may not be a medical student, but you can help carry the bodies and move the sick.

I was actually going to say something a little harder, thought about it for a second, forget it, it's not worth making me spit in my mouth first thing in the morning.

Who are you to suggest this? If you are a medical school graduate you can apply to go abroad to fight the epidemic, if your child is you can contact him to go. But I don't understand in what capacity and for what reason you are making this suggestion? Graduates first need internship, not graduates can welfare disposal of patients, this situation to go to the epidemic area, or foreign infected areas can play what role?

I suggest you take an umbrella when it rains! Fresh graduates without any clinical experience, going to let them deal with such a powerful virus is like letting them be cannon fodder! It's good enough to mind their own business, taking money from cabbage sellers and worrying about selling white flour! China is not obligated to be in charge of the world's affairs!

I suggest you go. Learn by doing.

I don't agree.

Medicine requires clinical experience, and the medical rescue teams in China are all screened backbones. This year's graduates have not yet been through the experience of clinical practice, and the epidemic has delayed a lot of time, the course is not yet finished not to mention that this year's internship can not say when it will be carried out, it is not appropriate to let a group of children with no practical experience to go to the front line of the fight against the epidemic in foreign countries, what can they do? The most important thing is that they are not qualified to practice medicine!

Do you agree with my suggestion to send this year's graduates of the medical school abroad to support the front line of the fight against the epidemic?

In response to this suggestion of yours, I just want to ask: if your family's children, or your relatives' children, were among this year's medical school graduates, would you still suggest that the graduates be sent abroad to support the front line of the fight against the epidemic?

1. Continued outbreaks abroad

The current domestic outbreak is relatively stable, while the foreign outbreak is exceptionally severe. The outbreak is still ongoing. As of today, the cumulative number of confirmed cases is 5.85 million, and there are 2.88 million existing confirmed cases.

Nowadays, many foreign students want to go back to their home countries, and even some people from other countries want to come to China. Airline tickets from abroad to China are hard to come by. This shows how serious the situation is abroad.

2. Inexperience of graduates

Recent graduates may have strong theoretical knowledge, but their practical skills are poor and they don't have a lot of experience. Let these graduates go directly into contact with the most powerful virus of the year. This is not an exercise. It is clearly a "sheep into the tiger's mouth" ah!

And in the face of an epidemic, there is simply no time for novices to learn any more. In the event of a patient emergency, intubation time is measured in seconds. The chances of contagion during this process are high, and graduates simply don't have this sense of protection against infection.

3. It is not easy for the country to produce talents

This virus this year is really powerful and super contagious. And if the infection is more serious, the chances of resuscitation are less. Because of this infection. Dr. Li Wenliang from Wuhan, after being diagnosed with the new virus, although he was desperately trying to save his life, he finally died.

Do you think these medical students can be more professional than Dr. Li Wenliang or what?

Then it is a dangerous thing for our country to train a talented person and send him abroad before he has practiced and gained experience. The country won't do that.

It's conditional, it's complicated to say you don't understand. It's that simple and straightforward to let your own countrymen's lives lick foreigners? Why don't you go? Why don't you let your family go?

Train you up and send you to the front line of the domestic fight against the epidemic to forge and train, okay?

Regarding the subject's proposal, I think it's a totally bad idea. Is it still too much for China to be hacked? Shoot some freshly graduated medical students out there. If something goes wrong then. Then there's really no way to defend ourselves. Maybe we'll have to lose money again. We haven't solved the problem with the masks and the medical supplies. They're going to use ours again, and they're going to blackball us and call us names. And now you're going to go out on fresh graduates. Purely looking for a fight and a hack.

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