In the emergency room, the beeping alarms of the cardiac monitor seemed never-ending, as if they were about to explode on the spot.
Nurses ran back and forth between the pharmacy and the emergency room with syringes full of medication.
A physician inside was performing chest compressions on a patient, as sweat poured like a waterfall from his forehead.
This was the situation in internal medicine. Surgery was equally on the brink of collapse from busyness.
On the long bench outside the clinic, several patients were seated, all waiting for surgical wound cleaning and suturing. Some of the family members couldn't stand waiting, got up and angrily shouted at the doctor, "Is there only one doctor stitching wounds? How long do we have to wait?"
Patients either do not come, or they like to gather in crowds, and the doctors can't help it.
Doctors, busy to the point of exhaustion, can only hold their temper and avoid arguing with the patient's family.