CHAPTER 13: ANOTHER COLLEGE ENTRANCE EXAMINATION APPROACHES

Educational Values Across Generations

Throughout Chinese history, education has held central position within family and societal values—tradition maintained despite dramatic transformations in educational content, methods, and purposes across tumultuous century. My own family's educational journey across four generations illustrates both remarkable continuity in commitment to learning and extraordinary adaptation to changing educational environments spanning traditional imperial scholarship through contemporary international education.

My grandfather received classical Confucian education typical of late imperial period, focusing on Four Books, Five Classics, calligraphy, and traditional poetry composition. This education emphasized character development alongside scholarly achievement, with memorization of classical texts providing foundation for moral reasoning and literary expression. Despite limited practical application in modernizing China, this traditional education instilled enduring values regarding learning's importance and scholar's social responsibilities that would influence subsequent generations.

My father's education represented transitional generation bridging imperial and republican periods. While maintaining significant classical component, his studies incorporated "new learning" including mathematics, modern Chinese language, and introductory science—educational hybrid reflecting China's early modernization efforts. This educational synthesis created distinctive perspective integrating traditional scholarly values with emerging appreciation for scientific knowledge and practical application.

My own education reflected early People's Republic priorities emphasizing technical training addressing urgent national development needs. The health school curriculum focused primarily on practical skills rather than theoretical foundations or broader intellectual development. This utilitarian approach, while limiting certain educational dimensions, successfully developed capabilities addressing immediate healthcare shortages during critical national reconstruction period. Throughout subsequent career, I supplemented this practical foundation through continuous self-education across multiple domains beyond technical medicine.

My children's education during 1970s and 1980s demonstrated further educational evolution reflecting changing national priorities and opportunities. Despite Cultural Revolution disruptions during their early schooling, both eventually accessed university education during restoration of academic standards in post-Mao period. Their educational experiences balanced scientific-technical emphasis with broader knowledge foundations, while maintaining traditional Chinese educational values regarding discipline, persistence, and achievement orientation.

My grandchildren's contemporary education incorporates dimensions unimaginable in previous generations: international perspectives, digital technologies, creativity emphasis, and preparation for global rather than merely national participation. While maintaining core achievement orientation characteristic of Chinese educational tradition, their learning encompasses far broader content domains, methodological approaches, and potential applications than any previous family generation experienced.

Throughout these remarkable transformations across five generations, certain core educational values have demonstrated surprising persistence: belief in education's transformative potential, commitment to diligent study regardless of circumstances, recognition of learning as lifelong rather than merely institutional process, and understanding that education serves both individual development and broader social purposes. These enduring values have enabled each generation to navigate changing educational environments while maintaining fundamental commitment to learning as essential life dimension.

This educational continuity across dramatic historical discontinuity represents perhaps our family's most significant cultural achievement—maintaining core values regarding knowledge and learning while adapting their expression to radically different historical circumstances. The capacity to preserve essential educational commitments while transforming their specific manifestations has enabled generational advancement despite historical disruptions that might otherwise have severed cultural transmission.

For contemporary young people navigating rapidly changing educational environment, this multigenerational perspective offers several insights: educational forms and content inevitably transform across time while core learning commitments transcend particular historical manifestations; formal education provides foundation requiring supplementation through lifelong self-directed learning; and educational achievement serves both individual development and broader social contribution rather than either dimension alone. These insights, developed through five generations' educational experience across extraordinary historical transitions, retain relevance despite continuing educational transformation.

The Examination System Through Time

The examination system has profoundly influenced Chinese education throughout its history, with imperial civil service examinations establishing pattern later transformed but never entirely abandoned through subsequent revolutionary changes. My family's experience across four generations illuminates how this examination tradition both persisted and transformed throughout modern Chinese history, creating distinctive educational patterns that continue influencing contemporary approaches despite dramatic contextual changes.

My grandfather's generation faced imperial examination system in its final manifestation before 1905 abolition. This elaborate testing structure—with county, provincial, and metropolitan examination levels—determined access to government positions representing primary advancement path for educated classes. The examination content emphasized classical texts, literary composition, and calligraphy rather than practical knowledge or administrative skills. While ostensibly meritocratic, this system favored those with family resources supporting extended preparation and reflected particular cultural-literary tradition rather than broader capabilities.

My father's education occurred during transitional period following imperial examination abolition but preceding establishment of standardized modern educational assessment. This interim period featured inconsistent evaluation methods across different institutions, with traditional literary assessments gradually yielding to more diverse testing incorporating scientific knowledge, mathematics, and modern language skills. This transitional generation navigated uncertain evaluation standards during educational system undergoing fundamental reorganization.

My own educational assessment during 1950s reflected early People's Republic emphasis on practical skills and political reliability alongside academic capability. The entrance examination for health school emphasized basic scientific knowledge, mathematical computation, and language proficiency while supplementing these academic measures with political background assessment and physical health evaluation. This multidimensional selection process reflected both practical workforce development needs and ideological priorities characteristic of early revolutionary period.

My children experienced perhaps the most dramatic examination system transformation following Cultural Revolution disruptions. After period when university admission relied primarily on political recommendation and class background rather than academic assessment, the restored national college entrance examination (gaokao) in 1977 reestablished academic meritocracy as primary university selection mechanism. This examination revival, while reintroducing genuine academic competition, created extraordinary pressure on students competing for limited university positions after educational disruption period.

My grandchildren's generation faces contemporary examination system maintaining gaokao's basic structure while incorporating significant modifications addressing changing educational priorities. Their assessment experiences include greater emphasis on application rather than memorization, incorporation of continuous evaluation alongside culminating examinations, consideration of diverse capabilities beyond traditional academic subjects, and supplementary assessment methods reducing single-examination determination of educational opportunity. While maintaining examination's central role, these modifications attempt addressing limitations observed in previous assessment iterations.

Throughout these transformations across generations, certain patterns demonstrate remarkable persistence: examination success remains primary legitimate advancement mechanism despite changing content; preparation intensity creates significant childhood and adolescent stress regardless of specific assessment content; examination outcomes significantly influence life trajectory despite varying predictive validity for actual performance; and preparation strategies develop rapidly in response to each assessment system iteration regardless of intended educational purposes.

The examination emphasis within Chinese educational tradition offers both significant advantages and persistent challenges that transcend specific historical manifestations. The meritocratic principle—advancement based on demonstrated capability rather than inherited privilege—represents enduring positive contribution despite implementation limitations during various historical periods. The shared cultural commitment to educational achievement creates motivation sustaining effort through challenges that might otherwise discourage persistent engagement. The objective assessment emphasis, while sometimes narrowing educational focus, provides transparency regarding advancement criteria often lacking in more subjective evaluation systems.

Simultaneously, examination emphasis creates persistent challenges across generations: excessive focus on assessable content at the expense of broader educational development; psychological pressure potentially undermining intrinsic learning motivation; strategic preparation sometimes replacing genuine understanding; and inevitable advantages for students from families providing enhanced preparation resources despite ostensibly equal competitive conditions.

My family's multigenerational perspective suggests neither uncritical embrace nor wholesale rejection of examination tradition serves optimal educational purposes. Rather, thoughtful engagement recognizing both genuine meritocratic contributions and persistent limitations offers most productive approach. Each generation necessarily adapts this educational tension to contemporary circumstances while maintaining awareness of both examination benefits and limitations revealed through historical experience.

For contemporary students and families navigating current examination pressures, this historical perspective offers several insights: examination success represents genuine achievement deserving recognition while remaining imperfect measure of broader capabilities; preparation strategies balancing assessment requirements with genuine learning serve long-term development better than narrowly instrumental approaches; and examination outcomes influence but need not determine life meaning or personal value. These balanced perspectives, developed through multiple generations' examination experiences across dramatically different historical contexts, provide wisdom transcending particular assessment manifestation.

Family Stories of Educational Struggle and Triumph

Beyond abstract educational principles, specific family experiences across generations illuminate how education functions within actual lives amid historical circumstances sometimes supporting and sometimes hindering learning pursuits. These family educational narratives, passed between generations, provide concrete manifestation of values otherwise remaining abstract and demonstrate how educational commitment operates within actual rather than idealized conditions.

My grandfather's educational journey illustrates determination overcoming economic limitations during late imperial period. As youngest son in merchant family with modest resources, his classical education required significant sacrifice including reduced diet, minimal material possessions, and extended study hours by oil lamp after completing household responsibilities. His persistence through eight examination attempts before achieving xiucai degree demonstrated commitment transcending initial disappointment. This example of perseverance despite repeated setbacks became frequently referenced family story encouraging persistence through educational challenges in subsequent generations.

My father's educational transition between classical and modern learning demonstrates adaptation to changing knowledge requirements during early Republican period. Initially trained exclusively in classical texts, he independently pursued "new learning" through self-study groups with like-minded students supplementing traditional education with mathematics, science, and foreign language exposure. This educational entrepreneurship—creating learning opportunities beyond institutional frameworks—established pattern of self-directed education extending beyond formal schooling that influenced subsequent generations' approaches to knowledge acquisition.

My own educational experience during revolutionary period reflects different manifestation of similar persistence amid limited options. When university education proved inaccessible due to family background and limited educational opportunity during tumultuous historical period, the health school technical training provided alternative educational path despite not representing ideal academic aspiration. This pragmatic adaptation to available educational opportunities rather than abandonment of learning altogether demonstrated flexibility within persistent educational commitment that proved valuable lesson for subsequent generations facing their own educational constraints.

My daughter's educational journey illustrates determination through Cultural Revolution disruptions and subsequent opportunity restoration. Her early education occurred during period when traditional academic learning faced significant curtailment, with political study and physical labor replacing substantial academic content. Despite these limitations, she maintained learning commitment through self-study beyond school requirements, preparing independently for educational opportunity restoration that eventually materialized with university entrance examination reinstatement in 1977. Her eventual medical school admission and subsequent physician career demonstrated how persistent educational commitment sometimes requires patience through adverse historical periods before finding appropriate expression.

My grandson's contemporary international education represents dramatically different manifestation of family educational tradition incorporating global rather than merely national perspective. His studies across multiple countries and educational systems—combining Chinese fundamental education with American university training—represent educational cosmopolitanism unimaginable in previous generations yet maintaining core family commitment to learning as life priority. This educational internationalization demonstrates how enduring values find expression appropriate to changed historical circumstances rather than merely replicating previous generational patterns.

Throughout these diverse educational narratives across five generations, certain thematic elements demonstrate remarkable consistency: education remains priority deserving sacrifice when necessary; learning transcends institutional frameworks requiring initiative beyond formal structures; temporary limitations or setbacks warrant persistence rather than abandonment; and educational purposes serve both individual development and broader social contribution rather than either dimension alone.

These family educational narratives serve multiple functions across generations: they transmit specific educational strategies proven effective through actual experience; they provide encouragement during inevitable challenging periods by demonstrating previous generational success despite difficulties; they establish normative expectations regarding educational commitment appropriate within family tradition; and they connect individual educational experiences to broader family identity extending beyond particular generation.

For contemporary young people navigating their own educational journeys, these multigenerational narratives offer perspective transcending immediate challenges or opportunities. They demonstrate how educational experiences gain meaning within longer personal and family developmental trajectory rather than merely through immediate outcomes or recognition. They illustrate how persistence through difficulty often proves more developmental valuable than smooth progression through unchallenging educational paths. Perhaps most importantly, they connect individual educational experiences to intergenerational continuity extending beyond individual lifespan.

Educational Reflections for Contemporary Youth

Based on educational observation across nine decades spanning imperial examination system through contemporary international education, certain reflections may prove valuable for young people currently navigating their own educational journeys amid rapidly changing knowledge environment. While specific educational content necessarily transforms across generations, certain principles regarding effective learning engagement maintain relevance despite contextual evolution.

Perhaps most fundamental insight involves distinguishing between educational credentials and actual learning development—related but distinct objectives sometimes confused in examination-oriented educational cultures. While credentials obviously matter within competitive opportunity structures, their purpose ultimately involves certifying capabilities actually developed rather than constituting goal themselves. This distinction between certification and development helps maintain focus on genuine learning rather than merely pursuing credentials potentially disconnected from substantive capability.

A second insight concerns effective knowledge integration within educational process. Throughout my career, I repeatedly observed how practitioners integrating knowledge across domains functioned more effectively than those maintaining rigid compartmentalization despite similar formal qualifications. This integration requires deliberate effort beyond institutional requirements, as educational systems typically organize knowledge into separate subjects without sufficiently emphasizing interconnections essential for effective application. The most successful professionals typically develop personal knowledge organization systems transcending institutional classifications.

The relationship between theory and practice represents third area where multigenerational perspective offers valuable insight. Each educational generation encountered different theory-practice balance, from imperial examination's abstract focus through revolutionary period's practical emphasis to contemporary attempts at integration. This varied experience demonstrates that neither pure theory nor mere practice serves optimal development; rather, continuous movement between conceptual understanding and practical application creates dynamic learning process where each dimension enriches the other through ongoing interaction.

Fourth insight involves balancing individual educational objectives with broader social purposes—tension present throughout Chinese educational history from Confucian scholar-official ideal through revolutionary collective emphasis to contemporary entrepreneurial focus. While specific manifestation necessarily varies across historical periods, education consistently serves both individual development and social contribution purposes. The most meaningful educational journeys integrate these dimensions rather than emphasizing either exclusively, recognizing how personal development enables social contribution while meaningful social engagement enriches individual development.

The role of struggle and challenge within effective education offers fifth observation transcending specific historical manifestations. Throughout multiple generations' educational experiences, developmental value emerged more reliably from challenging engagement requiring persistent effort than from effortless achievement. This observation contradicts some contemporary educational approaches emphasizing exclusive positive reinforcement and difficulty minimization. While excessive challenge obviously proves counterproductive, appropriate developmental challenge represents essential component of meaningful educational experience rather than unfortunate condition to be eliminated.

A sixth insight concerns technology's role within education—particularly relevant amid rapid digital transformation. Throughout my lifetime, I've witnessed multiple technological revolutions affecting knowledge acquisition: from limited manuscript access through printed textbook availability to current unlimited digital information accessibility. Each technological transition created both genuine advancement opportunities and potential superficiality risks. The consistent pattern suggests thoughtful technology integration serves learning effectively while uncritical technological enthusiasm often produces ephemeral benefits without substantive educational advancement.

The final observation involves lifelong learning necessity transcending any formal educational period. Throughout nine decades, I've observed how individuals maintaining active learning engagement throughout adulthood consistently outperformed those considering education complete upon institutional graduation—pattern increasingly relevant amid accelerating knowledge development. This continuity between formal education and subsequent self-directed learning represents perhaps the most significant educational principle emerging from multigenerational observation spanning dramatically different historical contexts.

For contemporary young people navigating educational journeys amid unprecedented information availability, technological transformation, and global integration, these perspectives from nine decades of educational observation offer contextual understanding extending beyond immediate circumstances. While specific manifestations necessarily differ from previous generations' experiences, these underlying principles regarding meaningful educational engagement maintain relevance despite contextual evolution.

The examination preparations, academic pressures, and credential pursuits dominating contemporary young people's immediate experience gain meaning within broader perspective recognizing education as fundamental human development process extending throughout lifelong journey rather than merely institutional requirement or credential acquisition. This extended perspective transforms educational experience from competitive sorting mechanism into meaningful developmental engagement serving both individual fulfillment and broader social contribution.## CHAPTER 12: WHEN THE GARDENIA BLOOMS AGAIN

Seasons of Life and Renewal

The gardenia has held special significance throughout my life. These delicate white flowers with their intoxicating fragrance marked important moments from childhood through late career, becoming personal symbols of renewal and continuity across life's changing seasons. Their recurring blooms provide metaphor for life's cycles of challenge and regeneration that has proven particularly meaningful in later years.

My first memory of gardenias dates to early childhood in the 1930s, when a bush grew in our family courtyard. Even amid wartime hardships, my mother maintained this plant with particular care, explaining that its blooms reminded her of life's persistent beauty despite surrounding difficulties. During spring flowering season, she would place a single blossom in a shallow dish, filling our modest home with fragrance that transcended material limitations.

Years later, during medical school, I encountered a massive gardenia hedge surrounding the hospital dormitory. During examination periods, I would sometimes study near these plants, finding their scent both calming and stimulating during long hours of memorization and practice. When particularly challenging exams approached, classmates and I developed tradition of placing gardenia blossoms on our desks for good fortune—minor superstition that nevertheless provided psychological comfort during stressful periods.

Throughout my surgical career, I maintained gardenia plants at each home, regardless of housing limitations or relocation disruptions. During difficult professional periods—particularly the Cultural Revolution years when medical practice faced significant constraints—tending these plants provided meaningful connection to continuing natural cycles beyond temporary political circumstances. Their reliable blooming despite neglect during overwhelming work periods demonstrated resilience that paralleled values important in medical practice.

In later career years, gardenia cultivation became more deliberate hobby rather than incidental pleasure. After partial retirement, I expanded from single plants to small collection featuring different gardenia varieties with varying bloom characteristics, fragrances, and growth habits. This horticultural interest provided structured yet flexible activity during transition from full professional engagement to more balanced later life—offering satisfaction of cultivating beauty while accommodating changing energy levels and interests.

The metaphorical significance of these flowers has deepened with age and experience. The gardenia's cycle—the quiet dormancy followed by exuberant blooming, then periods of apparent inactivity preceding renewed flowering—parallels how life itself proceeds through active and contemplative phases, each with distinct character and purpose. Their ability to withstand neglect during demanding periods yet respond vigorously to renewed attention reflects resilience particularly meaningful after experiencing historical disruptions throughout tumultuous Chinese century.

Perhaps most significantly, gardenias embody integration of apparent contradictions: delicate appearance with surprising hardiness, simple flower structure producing complex fragrance, brief individual blooms contributing to continuing lifecycle. This reconciliation of seeming opposites resonates with life wisdom developed through long medical career balancing scientific precision with human compassion, technical intervention with natural healing, individual mortality with continuing human endeavor.

In recent years, sharing gardenia cultivation with grandchildren has created intergenerational connection through activity engaging both youthful curiosity and elder experience. Teaching propagation techniques, optimal growing conditions, and appreciation for natural beauty provides vehicle for transmitting not merely horticultural knowledge but broader life values: patience, attentiveness to subtle changes, appreciation for beauty, and respect for natural processes beyond human control.

The gardenia thus symbolizes personal philosophy developed across nine decades: life proceeds through recurring cycles rather than linear progression alone, periods of apparent dormancy often precede renewal, beauty and meaning persist despite temporary disruptions, and careful tending of what we value yields continuing though sometimes unpredictable rewards. These insights, developed through observation of both plant cycles and human experiences, inform approach to later life stages with appreciation for their distinctive character and contribution.

Family Relationships Across Time

While professional narrative necessarily dominates much of this autobiography, family relationships have provided essential foundation throughout life's journey—though not without challenges, transitions, and reconciliations mirroring broader historical developments throughout tumultuous century. These relationships, evolving across decades, reveal how personal connections both shape and reflect larger social transformations.

My marriage to Lin Shuying in 1960 has provided life's central partnership across more than six decades. Our relationship began during professional association at county health department where she worked as nurse and I as administrator before transitioning to clinical practice. The partnership commenced during relatively stable period before Cultural Revolution disruptions, establishing foundation that would weather subsequent historical turbulence.

Early married years featured adjustments typical for professional couples of that era, with workplace responsibilities often extending into personal time through emergency calls, extended shifts, and community health campaigns. Housing limitations—two basic rooms with shared facilities—necessitated close coordination of daily activities and mutual accommodation. Despite these constraints, we established functional partnership balancing professional commitments with family development.

The arrival of children—daughter in 1962 and son in 1965—created both joy and challenge as parenting responsibilities coincided with increasing professional demands. Traditional gender expectations placed disproportionate domestic responsibility on my wife despite her own nursing career, arrangement that contemporary perspective recognizes as inequitable but that reflected normative patterns of that historical period. Her capacity to maintain both professional work and primary household management demonstrated remarkable capability that supported family functioning throughout critical developmental years.

The Cultural Revolution period (1966-1976) created distinctive family challenges as political expectations sometimes infringed upon domestic life. Children's participation in revolutionary activities through schools occasionally created tension when political pronouncements contradicted family values or historical understanding. Navigating these situations required careful balance between supporting children's necessary social participation while maintaining family integrity and core values despite external pressures.

Our family approach emphasized education regardless of changing political circumstances. Despite period when intellectual pursuits faced criticism, we maintained home environment valuing knowledge, reading, and academic development. Evening discussions often involved mathematical puzzles, scientific explanations of natural phenomena, or historical stories—intellectual engagement continuing family scholarly tradition despite external constraints.

Family transitions during reform era brought both opportunities and adaptations. My daughter's university admission in 1978 represented significant achievement during early restoration of academic meritocracy, followed by medical career development paralleling broader expansion of professional opportunities for women during this period. My son's technical education and subsequent transportation sector employment reflected emerging economic diversification beyond previous narrow occupational channels.

Geographic separations eventually emerged as professional opportunities led family members to different locations—common pattern in modernizing China but adjustment for family previously located within single community. These separations necessitated new approaches to maintaining connection despite physical distance, initially through letters and occasional telephone calls, later through evolving communication technologies that progressively reduced practical impact of geographic dispersal.

Grandparenthood beginning in the 1990s introduced new relationship dimension now extending across three decades. This role has evolved from traditional Chinese grandparent model emphasizing authority and continuity toward more interactive relationship balancing traditional values with recognition of changing childhood experiences in contemporary China. Relationships with grandchildren provide both personal fulfillment and opportunity for transmitting family values while accommodating inevitable generational differences in perspective and experience.In the mid-1970s, a 42-year-old woman presented with massive upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage secondary to previously undiagnosed peptic ulcer disease. Endoscopic capabilities were unavailable at our facility during this period, limiting both diagnostic precision and non-operative management options. The patient required emergency surgery to control hemorrhage that had already resulted in profound anemia and early shock manifestations.

The clinical situation was further complicated by the patient's religious beliefs, which prohibited blood transfusion under any circumstances. While such religious restrictions were uncommon in rural China during this era, this particular patient belonged to a small Christian sect with strict prohibitions against receiving blood products. Despite her critical condition, she remained adamant about this restriction, with family members reinforcing her decision.

This situation created profound ethical dilemma balancing respect for patient autonomy against the clear medical necessity for transfusion. Proceeding with surgery without blood product support carried extremely high mortality risk given her already compromised hemodynamic status and anticipated additional operative blood loss. However, proceeding with forced transfusion against explicit refusal would violate both personal and religious autonomy—ethical violation particularly significant during an era when individual rights were already compromised in many societal domains.

After careful consideration and discussion with surgical colleagues, I determined to proceed with surgery without transfusion while implementing every available blood conservation strategy. These included: careful positioning to minimize venous pressure at the surgical site, meticulous surgical technique with immediate control of bleeding points, judicious fluid management balancing perfusion requirements against hemodilution risks, maintained normothermia to preserve coagulation function, and intraoperative blood salvage through manual collection and filtration for autotransfusion (a rudimentary version of cell salvage techniques that would later become standardized).

The operation revealed large posterior duodenal ulcer with erosion into gastroduodenal artery—findings explaining the massive hemorrhage. Definitive control required vessel ligation, ulcer oversewing, truncal vagotomy, and pyloroplasty—standard approach for that era before effective pharmacological acid suppression became available. Throughout the procedure, the patient maintained tenuous but adequate perfusion despite hemoglobin level that would ordinarily mandate transfusion under standard protocols.

Postoperatively, we continued aggressive measures to support recovery without transfusion: supplemental oxygen to maximize hemoglobin utilization efficiency, careful iron supplementation, erythropoiesis support through available nutritional means, and vigilant monitoring for complications. The patient experienced prolonged but steady recovery, with gradual resolution of anemia through endogenous erythropoiesis over subsequent weeks.

This case profoundly influenced my approach to patient autonomy throughout subsequent practice. While transfusion would have simplified management and reduced risk, respecting this patient's deeply held belief demonstrated that alternative approaches could sometimes succeed even in apparently desperate situations. The experience reinforced principle that technical medical considerations, while critically important, must sometimes yield to broader human values when genuine autonomous choice exists—a perspective that would gain greater acceptance in Chinese medicine in subsequent decades.

From technical perspective, this case also demonstrated how constraint sometimes drives innovation. The necessity of managing without transfusion led to implementing blood conservation strategies that would later become standard even for patients without transfusion restrictions. This experience of "doing more with less" characterized much of rural medical practice during that era, often leading to approaches that maintained effectiveness while reducing resource intensity.

Medical Diplomacy: The Foreign Delegation Emergency

In spring 1982, I encountered situation where medical emergency intersected with political sensitivity—circumstances requiring both technical expertise and diplomatic finesse. A Japanese industrial delegation visiting local factory development project included elderly executive who collapsed during formal banquet, presenting with symptoms suggesting acute myocardial infarction: crushing chest pain, diaphoresis, nausea, and left arm pain.

The political circumstances created immediate complications beyond clinical considerations. This visit represented significant international cooperation during early reform and opening period when such relationships remained both economically important and politically sensitive. Local officials immediately suggested transferring the patient to provincial capital for treatment, fearing international incident if complications occurred at county-level facility. However, the patient's clinical instability made extended transport hazardous given limited monitoring and intervention capabilities during transfer.

After rapid assessment confirming probable acute myocardial infarction, I advocated for immediate stabilization at our facility before considering transfer. This recommendation encountered resistance from local officials concerned about potential diplomatic consequences of adverse outcome at county-level hospital. The Japanese delegation's interpreter conveyed their own medical consultant's preference for immediate treatment rather than risking transport, creating tension between medical recommendation and political concerns.

The situation required careful navigation of both clinical and diplomatic considerations. Rather than directly opposing officials' transfer preference, I suggested brief stabilization period with thrombolytic therapy (newly available at our hospital) while transport arrangements were prepared. This compromise acknowledged political concerns while prioritizing immediate clinical intervention during the critical early infarction period when treatment efficacy is highest.

Implementation proceeded with heightened attention to both clinical excellence and communication considerations. The Japanese delegation's physician observed treatment, with each intervention explained through interpreter. Local officials remained present throughout, receiving regular updates in terms understandable to non-medical personnel. This transparent approach reduced anxiety among all parties while ensuring appropriate medical care proceeded without political interference.

Thrombolytic therapy administration produced prompt clinical improvement, with resolution of chest pain and improvement in vital parameters. This positive response reduced transfer urgency, eventually leading to consensus decision for continued management at our facility rather than potentially destabilizing transport. The patient remained hospitalized for ten days, recovering sufficiently to return to Japan with medical escort arranged by his company.

This incident illustrated how medical judgment sometimes requires defense against non-medical considerations, whether political, economic, or social. The responsibility to advocate for optimal patient care regardless of external pressures represents core professional obligation transcending cultural and political contexts. However, the manner of this advocacy requires diplomatic sensitivity to legitimate concerns of various stakeholders, seeking solutions addressing both clinical and contextual considerations rather than dismissing non-medical factors entirely.

The case also demonstrated value of transparent communication during politically sensitive situations. By maintaining openness about the patient's condition, treatment rationale, and honest assessment of risks with all parties—patient, family, delegation members, and local officials—we established trust that ultimately enabled medical recommendations to prevail despite initial resistance. This communication approach proved useful in numerous subsequent situations where clinical decisions carried potential political implications.

From personal perspective, this incident provided valuable experience in balancing professional obligations against external pressures—skill particularly important during China's transition period when economic development priorities sometimes competed with healthcare considerations. The successful navigation of both clinical and political dimensions reinforced confidence in maintaining professional integrity while acknowledging legitimate concerns beyond purely medical factors.

The Iatrogenic Crisis: When Treatment Causes Harm

Among the most challenging clinical scenarios are those where medical intervention itself creates life-threatening complications. In 1990, I confronted particularly difficult case illustrating this category of iatrogenic crisis, requiring both technical intervention and ethical navigation of situation involving potential colleague error.

A 58-year-old male had undergone routine cholecystectomy at neighboring county hospital for symptomatic cholelithiasis. The operation appeared uncomplicated initially, but the patient developed progressive jaundice, abdominal pain, and fever beginning approximately 36 hours postoperatively. After several days of deterioration despite antibiotic therapy, he was transferred to our hospital with diagnosis of suspected bile leak and peritonitis.

Upon transfer, the patient presented with severe sepsis, marked hyperbilirubinemia, and worsening renal function indicating developing multiple organ failure. Urgent imaging with recently acquired CT technology revealed extensive intra-abdominal fluid collections containing both bile and purulent material. The clinical picture strongly suggested major biliary tree injury during the original cholecystectomy—a serious technical complication requiring immediate intervention.

The case presented multiple complexities beyond technical surgical management. The referring surgeon, a capable clinician with generally good outcomes, had failed to recognize the complication promptly and appeared reluctant to acknowledge potential technical error in operative notes. Local medical relationships and professional courtesy considerations complicated the situation, as directly attributing the problem to surgical error might damage both professional reputation and collegial relationships.

After stabilizing the patient with aggressive fluid resuscitation, antibiotics, and supportive care, I proceeded with reoperation. Exploration confirmed our suspicion of major bile duct injury, specifically complete transection and ligation of the common hepatic duct mistaken for the cystic duct during cholecystectomy—recognized complication but one representing significant technical error. Extensive intra-abdominal contamination with infected bile necessitated thorough irrigation alongside definitive biliary reconstruction.

The reconstructive procedure involved Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy to reestablish biliary drainage—challenging operation under emergency conditions in severely septic patient with inflamed tissues. The technical aspects proceeded successfully despite difficult circumstances, with restoration of biliary continuity and placement of multiple drains to manage ongoing contamination. The patient required extended intensive support postoperatively but eventually recovered after prolonged hospitalization.

The ethical dimensions of this case proved as challenging as technical aspects. The patient and family naturally questioned what had occurred and why reoperation was necessary. Without assigning explicit blame, I explained the nature of the injury in factual terms while emphasizing that such complications can occur despite appropriate care, particularly during the original hospital's transition to more complex surgical procedures. This explanation acknowledged the reality of complication without unnecessary destruction of patient's confidence in healthcare system or direct colleague criticism.

Communication with the referring surgeon required similar careful balance. Rather than accusatory approach, I framed discussion around educational opportunity, reviewing imaging findings and intraoperative observations as learning experience. This colleague ultimately acknowledged the error and participated constructively in the patient's follow-up care, maintaining professional dignity while accepting responsibility appropriately. This outcome preserved both professional relationship and, more importantly, continuity of patient care.

This case reinforced important principle regarding complications: their occurrence, while sometimes representing genuine error, requires management focused primarily on patient recovery rather than assignation of blame. The patient's welfare must remain central priority, with professional relationships and reputational concerns, while legitimate, remaining secondary considerations. Finding appropriate balance that neither ignores error nor creates unnecessarily adversarial relationships represents essential professional skill particularly relevant in interconnected medical communities.

From educational perspective, this case subsequently served as valuable teaching example (with appropriate anonymization) regarding both technical aspects of preventing bile duct injury and ethical dimensions of managing complications. By transforming difficult situation into learning opportunity without unnecessary colleague humiliation, we established departmental culture where complications could be discussed openly for educational benefit—approach that ultimately improves patient safety more effectively than blame-oriented responses.

Complex Decision-Making: The Inoperable Finding

A particularly challenging category of surgical crisis involves intraoperative discovery that planned intervention cannot proceed as intended due to unexpected findings. Such situations require rapid adaptation, creative problem-solving, and difficult intraoperative decisions balancing various suboptimal alternatives. A case from 1997 illustrates these challenges particularly well.

A 63-year-old male presented with progressive jaundice, weight loss, and intermittent right upper quadrant pain. Imaging studies available at that time, including ultrasound and CT, revealed apparent pancreatic head mass with biliary obstruction highly suspicious for pancreatic adenocarcinoma. After appropriate staging workup suggesting resectable disease, we planned Whipple procedure (pancreaticoduodenectomy) with curative intent—major operation but one offering only realistic chance for long-term survival.

Upon laparotomy and initial exploration, however, we encountered unexpected findings contradicting preoperative imaging assessment. Rather than discrete pancreatic head tumor, we found extensive retroperitoneal tumor extension with vascular encasement of superior mesenteric vessels and evidence of hepatic metastases not visible on preoperative imaging. These findings rendered curative resection impossible, creating intraoperative dilemma regarding appropriate next steps.

This situation required rapid reassessment and decision-making under anesthesia with family waiting anxiously for surgical outcome. Several options presented themselves, each with significant disadvantages: (1) abort procedure entirely, leaving patient with unrelieved biliary obstruction and jaundice; (2) perform palliative biliary bypass alone to relieve jaundice; (3) perform more extensive palliative procedure addressing both biliary and potential future gastric outlet obstruction; or (4) attempt cytoreductive debulking despite inability to achieve complete resection.

After rapid assessment considering patient's preoperative functional status, expressed goals of care, and nature of findings, I selected double bypass procedure (cholecystojejunostomy and gastrojejunostomy) providing palliation for both current biliary obstruction and potential future gastric outlet obstruction commonly developing with pancreatic head malignancies. This approach balanced intervention extent against realistic outcome expectations, providing meaningful symptom palliation without excessive operative morbidity.

Intraoperatively, I also obtained detailed tissue sampling for definitive diagnosis and potential guidance of subsequent non-surgical therapies. The palliative bypass procedures proceeded without complication, with successful relief of biliary obstruction evidenced by resolving jaundice postoperatively. The patient recovered appropriately from surgery and proceeded to palliative chemotherapy based on tissue diagnosis confirming pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

The most challenging aspect of this case involved postoperative discussion with the patient and family. They had anticipated possibility of curative procedure based on preoperative assessments and now required adjustment to significantly different prognosis. This conversation demanded balance between honesty about poor long-term prognosis and maintenance of appropriate hope for meaningful remaining life with symptom control. Through series of conversations rather than single disclosure, we gradually helped the family adjust expectations while identifying meaningful goals for the patient's remaining time.

This case exemplifies how surgical crisis sometimes involves reconciling preoperative expectations with intraoperative realities that fundamentally change treatment paradigm. The technical aspects of alternative procedure presented minimal challenge compared to rapid intraoperative decision-making and subsequent communication challenges. The ability to pivot from curative to palliative approach without requiring second operation represented genuine benefit to the patient despite disappointing primary finding.

From educational perspective, this case demonstrates importance of developing both primary and contingency plans before major operations. While specific intraoperative findings may prove surprising, comprehensive preoperative consideration of possible scenarios allows more organized response to unexpected developments. This contingency planning represents essential element of surgical judgment extending beyond technical operative skills—mental preparation allowing appropriate adaptation when original plans prove unfeasible.

Modern Crisis: Technology Failure During Minimally Invasive Surgery

As surgical practice increasingly incorporated advanced technology, new categories of potential crisis emerged involving equipment dependency and failure contingencies. A case from 2004 illustrates these modern challenges that would have been inconceivable during my early career decades.

A 49-year-old female underwent elective laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication for medically refractory gastroesophageal reflux disease. The procedure began routinely with pneumoperitoneum establishment, laparoscopic port placement, and initial dissection of the gastroesophageal junction. Approximately 30 minutes into the procedure, during critical hiatal dissection, complete failure of the video system occurred, with monitor displaying only electronic static rather than laparoscopic image.

This equipment failure created immediate crisis, as the operation had reached point where significant dissection had occurred but definitive repair remained incomplete. Several anatomical structures stood at risk from unvisualized instrumentation, including the esophagus, vagus nerves, and short gastric vessels. The pneumoperitoneum continued distending the abdomen while visualization was lost, creating time-sensitive decision requirement.

Initial response involved standard troubleshooting protocols—checking connections, power cycling equipment, and attempting backup camera—all proving unsuccessful in restoring visualization. The decision point required choosing between three suboptimal options: (1) maintain pneumoperitoneum while awaiting technical support and equipment replacement; (2) convert immediately to open procedure through standard upper midline incision; or (3) attempt controlled partial desufflation and placement of additional ports allowing alternative visualization angles with secondary equipment.

After rapid assessment, I selected immediate conversion to open procedure as safest option given the particular dissection stage and specific equipment limitations at our institution. The conversion proceeded in organized fashion through upper midline laparotomy, with careful attention to structures already partially mobilized laparoscopically. The open Nissen fundoplication was completed without further incident, though with expected increased postoperative pain and longer recovery compared to laparoscopic approach.

The equipment failure investigation subsequently revealed power supply component failure in video processor—malfunction that could not have been predicted or prevented through standard maintenance protocols. This understanding proved important for both institutional quality improvement and appropriate discussion with the patient, who understandably questioned why conversion to open procedure became necessary during planned minimally invasive operation.

This case illustrates how technology dependency creates new vulnerability categories requiring specific preparation and contingency planning. While equipment failure remains statistically uncommon, its occurrence requires immediate organized response to prevent patient harm. The preparation for such contingencies must extend beyond technical planning to include appropriate consent discussions with patients, ensuring understanding that conversion to open procedure may become necessary despite best preparations.

From systems perspective, this experience led to specific institutional improvements: development of rapid-access backup video systems, standardized conversion protocols for various minimally invasive procedures, and enhanced maintenance schedules for critical equipment. These systematic responses transformed individual adverse event into institutional learning opportunity with potential to prevent similar occurrences or improve management of unavoidable failures.

This technology crisis differs fundamentally from challenges characteristic of my early career, where resource limitations represented expected backdrop for all clinical care rather than unexpected failure. Yet despite these contextual differences, the core principles remain consistent across eras: maintaining focus on patient safety above other considerations, implementing orderly response to unexpected developments, and systematically learning from adverse events to improve future care.

Rural Ingenuity: The Improvised Equipment Case

While many clinical crises involve unexpected patient developments or complications, some arise from resource limitations requiring creative adaptation of available materials to meet clinical needs. A particularly memorable example from 1975 demonstrates how rural medical practice sometimes required improvisational approaches unimaginable in well-equipped modern facilities.

A 7-year-old boy presented to our county hospital after falling from significant height onto outstretched hand, resulting in severely displaced supracondylar humerus fracture with vascular compromise. The hand appeared pale with diminished pulses, indicating arterial compression or injury requiring urgent reduction to prevent permanent ischemic damage to the extremity.

The optimal management would normally involve closed reduction under general anesthesia with fluoroscopic guidance to ensure adequate alignment, followed by percutaneous pinning or appropriate immobilization. However, our facility at that time lacked both fluoroscopy capabilities and proper Kirschner wires for percutaneous fixation. The anesthesia options were also limited, with no dedicated pediatric equipment available.

The situation required immediate intervention despite suboptimal resources, as delay risking forearm ischemia would likely result in permanent disability or potential amputation. After brief consideration of transfer options—deemed excessively time-consuming given vascular compromise—we proceeded with creative adaptation of available resources to address the emergency.

For adequate visualization during reduction without fluoroscopy, we positioned two basic X-ray machines at perpendicular angles, allowing serial static images during reduction maneuvers—crude but functional substitute for real-time fluoroscopy. For fixation material in absence of proper Kirschner wires, we sterilized bicycle wheel spokes obtained from hospital maintenance worker who repaired staff bicycles. These stainless steel spokes, appropriately cut and shaped, provided adequate substitutes for commercial fixation devices.

The anesthesia challenge required particularly careful approach given pediatric considerations. Working with limited medication options and monitoring capabilities, our anesthetist colleague administered ketamine sedation supplemented with local field block—approach providing adequate anesthesia while minimizing respiratory depression risks without sophisticated monitoring.

Using this improvised setup, we successfully reduced the fracture with restoration of vascular flow confirmed by returning pulses and improved perfusion. The bicycle spoke "pins" maintained reduction adequately when placed through small incisions and driven into bone using hand drill. Post-reduction X-rays confirmed acceptable alignment, and the child maintained good vascular status throughout recovery period.

Follow-up extending several months confirmed appropriate healing without growth disturbance, neurovascular compromise, or functional limitation. The bicycle spoke pins were removed after four weeks once radiographic healing appeared adequate, with subsequent complete functional recovery. Years later, this patient (by then a young adult) returned to the hospital for unrelated reason and demonstrated normal elbow function with minimal visible evidence of previous serious injury.

This case exemplifies how resource limitations sometimes necessitate creative adaptations that—while diverging from textbook approaches—can achieve satisfactory outcomes when guided by sound understanding of underlying principles. The bicycle spoke substitution for commercial Kirschner wires represented not random improvisation but carefully considered adaptation based on understanding of required material properties: appropriate stainless steel composition, adequate rigidity, smooth surface for insertion, and biocompatibility for temporary implantation.

From ethical perspective, this approach required careful consideration of alternatives. The improvised solution carried certain additional risks compared to standard equipment but presented significantly lower risk than either non-intervention or excessive delay pursuing transfer to distant facility with appropriate equipment. This risk-benefit analysis, conducted rapidly but systematically, supported proceeding with adaptation rather than accepting poor outcome through inaction or dangerous delay.

For contemporary practitioners working in well-equipped facilities, such improvisations may seem alien or even inappropriate. However, understanding the principles guiding such adaptations remains valuable preparation for disasters, remote medical practice, or resource-limited settings where standard equipment may be unavailable. The fundamental principle transcending specific techniques involves focusing on essential treatment requirements rather than specific implementations when circumstances demand flexibility.

End-of-Life Decisions: The Futility Boundary

Among the most philosophically challenging crises in medical practice are situations involving potential futility—cases where continued intervention appears unlikely to achieve meaningful benefit despite technical capacity to continue treatment. A case from 2008 illustrates the complex ethical dimensions of such situations, particularly within Chinese cultural context where traditional family expectations sometimes conflict with medical realities.

An 87-year-old male with multiple pre-existing conditions including advanced heart failure, diabetes with end-organ damage, and moderate dementia suffered massive hemorrhagic stroke with intraventricular extension and midline shift. Upon presentation, he demonstrated minimal neurological responsiveness with abnormal brainstem reflexes and required mechanical ventilation. Neurosurgical evaluation deemed intervention inappropriate given extensive nature of hemorrhage, pre-existing comorbidities, and poor neurological prognosis.

The medical recommendation for palliative approach rather than aggressive intervention encountered strong resistance from the patient's son, who insisted on "doing everything possible" despite minimal chance of meaningful recovery. This family response reflected traditional Chinese values emphasizing filial responsibility and exhausting all options for elder family members regardless of likely outcome. The son specifically requested surgical intervention despite clear neurosurgical assessment of futility.

This situation created ethical crisis requiring balance between respecting family wishes within their cultural context and avoiding non-beneficial interventions potentially prolonging suffering. Complicating factors included absence of patient's own expressed preferences due to pre-existing cognitive impairment and the emotional intensity of family response that limited rational discussion of medical realities.

Rather than direct confrontation regarding futility, I approached the situation through series of educational conversations with the entire family, gradually establishing trust before addressing difficult prognostic realities. These discussions included detailed explanation of neurological findings with imaging review, specific description of intervention limitations, and honest assessment of potential outcomes even with maximal intervention. Throughout these conversations, I acknowledged and respected the son's filial devotion while gently redirecting focus toward patient-centered considerations.

After several such discussions over 48-hour period, we achieved tentative consensus supporting limited trial of conservative management while establishing clear parameters for reevaluation. These parameters included specific neurological assessments and timeline for reassessment, creating structure for subsequent decision-making rather than indefinite continuation of unsustainable intervention. This approach acknowledged family's need for demonstrable effort while establishing reasonable boundaries.

When subsequent assessments confirmed continued deterioration despite maximal medical management, the groundwork laid through earlier discussions enabled family acceptance of transition to comfort-focused care. The patient received appropriate palliation including extubation with comfort measures, and died peacefully with family present approximately 36 hours later. Follow-up conversation with the son several weeks afterward confirmed his acceptance of outcome and appreciation for approach that respected both medical realities and family values.

This case illustrates how apparent conflicts between medical assessment and family expectations sometimes reflect communication failures rather than genuine value disagreements. By approaching the situation through educational dialogue rather than ethical confrontation, we identified common ground centered on patient welfare rather than categorical intervention. The gradual, staged decision-making process provided family emotional space to adjust expectations while maintaining dignity.

From broader perspective, this case demonstrates how cultural competence requires more than superficial knowledge of cultural patterns—it demands understanding how specific values manifest in particular situations and flexibility in addressing these manifestations. The traditional Chinese emphasis on exhausting all options for elders represents not obstacle to appropriate care but contextual factor requiring specific communication approaches and decision frameworks that accommodate these values while maintaining medical integrity.

Throughout my career spanning Cultural Revolution through contemporary era, end-of-life decision approaches have evolved dramatically from primarily physician-determined to increasingly shared decision models. This evolution reflects broader societal changes regarding autonomy, information transparency, and decision-making authority. Navigating these changing expectations while maintaining focus on patient welfare has required continuous adaptation in communication approaches and ethical frameworks throughout seven decades of practice.

Reflections on Crisis Management

Throughout this chronicle of life-and-death experiences spanning seven decades, certain principles emerge that transcend specific clinical situations, technological contexts, and historical periods. These enduring approaches to crisis management represent distilled wisdom from thousands of critical situations encountered throughout unusually extended surgical career.

The foundational principle governing all crisis management involves maintaining calm, methodical approach despite situational urgency. Genuine emergencies require rapid response but rarely benefit from rushed or chaotic reaction. Throughout my practice, I've observed that composed, systematic assessment followed by deliberate intervention typically achieves better outcomes than reactive, disorganized response even when time pressures seem overwhelming. This disciplined approach requires practice to establish as default response pattern during crisis.

Second key principle involves appropriate delegation and team utilization during emergencies. The surgeon or physician leading crisis response cannot personally perform all necessary functions simultaneously. Effective leaders rapidly assess team capabilities, assign responsibilities matching individual skills, and maintain oversight ensuring coordination without micromanaging. This leadership approach transforms potential chaos into coordinated response leveraging collective capabilities beyond what any individual could accomplish alone.

Communication clarity during crisis represents third essential element transcending specific clinical scenarios. Under pressure, communication often deteriorates into assumptions, unclear directives, and incomplete information transfer. Effective crisis management requires deliberate communication discipline: clear, specific instructions; closed-loop confirmation of critical information; periodic situation summaries establishing shared understanding; and appropriate explanation to patients and families calibrated to their needs and emotional state.

Flexibility and adaptability constitute fourth critical principle applicable across diverse crisis situations. Predetermined algorithms and protocols provide valuable starting frameworks but rarely address all aspects of complex emergencies. The capacity to adapt standard approaches to specific circumstances, improvise when necessary, and revise plans as situations evolve distinguishes truly effective crisis management from rigid protocol application. This adaptive capacity develops through experience across diverse scenarios rather than from procedure memorization alone.

Maintaining perspective on intervention limitations represents fifth principle emerging from these collective experiences. In some situations, technical intervention reaches fundamental limits against overwhelming pathology. Recognizing these boundaries—neither abandoning potentially effective intervention nor pursuing futile measures—requires both technical knowledge and ethical wisdom. This balanced perspective develops gradually through witnessing both remarkable recoveries and inevitable failures throughout clinical practice.

The sixth principle involves systematic learning from crisis experiences, transforming even adverse outcomes into future improvement opportunities. Throughout my career, I've maintained practice of detailed post-event analysis examining decision processes, technical execution, team function, and system factors affecting outcomes. This reflective practice, initially personal but later formalized within institutional quality improvement, creates continuous learning cycle where even unfortunate outcomes contribute to future performance improvement.

Finally, self-care and emotional processing after crisis situations represent essential components of sustainable crisis management capacity. The cumulative psychological impact of multiple life-and-death scenarios creates potential for both acute stress reactions and long-term emotional consequences if inadequately processed. Throughout my career, I've developed increasingly deliberate approaches to post-crisis emotional integration, ranging from early-career informal discussions with colleagues to more structured debriefing practices in later professional years.

As I reflect on thousands of critical situations managed throughout seven decades, I recognize that technical capabilities, available resources, and specific interventions changed dramatically across this timespan. Yet these fundamental principles of crisis management—calm methodical approach, effective delegation, clear communication, appropriate adaptability, recognition of limitations, systematic learning, and emotional processing—remain remarkably consistent across eras, settings, and specific clinical scenarios.

For younger practitioners reading these experiences, I hope these principles provide framework extending beyond specific techniques that will inevitably evolve throughout their own careers. The capacity to function effectively during crisis—maintaining technical precision, ethical clarity, and human compassion amid challenging circumstances—represents perhaps the most enduring aspect of the physician's art across changing technological landscapes and healthcare systems.

from《李老夫子遗墨》电子版

发布者

立委

立委博士,出门问问大模型团队前工程副总裁,聚焦大模型及其AIGC应用。Netbase前首席科学家10年,期间指挥研发了18种语言的理解和应用系统,鲁棒、线速,scale up to 社会媒体大数据,语义落地到舆情挖掘产品,成为美国NLP工业落地的领跑者。Cymfony前研发副总八年,曾荣获第一届问答系统第一名(TREC-8 QA Track),并赢得17个小企业创新研究的信息抽取项目(PI for 17 SBIRs)。

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