Adams did not experience any significant side effects after the treatment. He is no longer worried about whether this ordinary medication works. He understood Yang Ping's words: don't challenge a professional doctor with your humble medical knowledge.
Some cells collected from biopsied tumors were examined pathologically and found to be in various stages of apoptosis. This is good news; K Therapy has already started working for him, which excites Adams. He began sharing his daily changes on social media. Although there is not much change in the macro view, the micro view, the results of various tests, is improving at a visible speed.
Data don't lie. As a mathematician, Adams firmly believes in this theory.
His weekend posts on social media attracted a large number of people from the United Kingdom and then spread to the entire English-speaking world. The word-of-mouth spread on the internet is very fast; within a few days, the number of people following his social media grew to millions and is still increasing.
Many tumor patients left him messages hoping to get his guidance and help. He was willing to help these people, but there were too many inquiries for him to handle, so he could only introduce Sanbo Hospital and the Institute.
Initially, it was tumor patients who followed him, but gradually, people with other diseases and their families also began to pay attention. In short, these patients were dissatisfied with the treatment they received in their own countries.
Previously, they never had other thoughts; without comparison, there's no gap. Under Adams' daily sharing, they gained a general understanding of the medical experience in China and were surprised at how advanced Chinese medicine is.
Adams stated that after recovering, he would donate money to establish a website dedicated to helping people from other countries come to China for medical treatment, where the costs are cheap and efficiency is very high. Most importantly, the medical skills are world-class. He urged everyone to change their mindset and start looking towards the East.
Phase I and II experiments of K Therapy are proceeding simultaneously. The approval process for this scheme is extraordinarily fast, whether in the United States or Europe, giving a feeling of smooth passage.
According to past experience, it was impossible for Chinese drugs to conduct Phase I and II clinical trials in developed countries, as the review departments directly refused approval. This time, they unexpectedly showed great kindness and suddenly changed their attitude.
In fact, it wasn't out of kindness. Each country is composed of individuals, and those top wealthy individuals have influence beyond imagination. Their lobbying skills make the clinical approval of a drug seem like a piece of cake.
This proved a saying: when a street lamp breaks here, years may pass with countless kids getting hurt without anyone noticing, but if a politician's kid trips here one day, the lamp would be fixed the next day.
Though it's just a story, it illustrates that everyone's influence is different. This is the reason why Yang Ping's K Therapy received approval so quickly in Europe and America.
Yang Ping hasn't visited Adams for several days as he took some doctors to visit the International Medical Center. Meanwhile, Adams is doing very well; he sits on the sofa with a laptop on the coffee table, studying the algorithm for a website he's building for Sanbo Hospital—a site to bridge the gap between patients and Sanbo Hospital, available in the five major United Nations languages.
He made some of Sanbo Hospital's public information, such as doctors' outpatient hours, accessible and linked them with several Chinese travel sites. This way, patients can book appointments, hotels, and flights, and arrange other matters based on their visa duration all in one go with the click of a button.
Adams is not doing this work alone. He's assembled a group of experts online who are all passionate and willing to volunteer. This website is also envisioned as an open community in the future, embracing the spirit of sharing and mutual assistance.
Adams shared this idea with Yang Ping, who was quite surprised. Adams was not just talking; he had already started working on it, taking charge of the algorithm while others handled the website building, each taking responsibility for their roles.
This is a good thing, as it can help many people. The internet has changed the world; it can connect patients worldwide to Sanbo Hospital and the Institute. This could be a big deal, potentially changing the model of healthcare.
"If possible, in the future we can also build a bridge between patients worldwide and some top hospitals in China," Adams said confidently as he put away his laptop.
However, Yang Ping thinks it's both a good and a bad thing. The ratio of Chinese doctors to patients is already lower than in developed countries. It's challenging for Chinese citizens themselves to receive medical care; large hospitals are overcrowded, beds are in short supply, and doctors are overworked. If even more foreign patients come, it could exacerbate these contradictions.
It's not that Yang Ping is being selfish; who wouldn't want excellent medical resources to be used first by their own country's people, with the excess going to foreigners?
But, from another perspective, if there really is an increase in international patients, economically, it can increase hospital and doctor income, forming a positive cycle. Should international patients indeed increase, the hospital can consider expansion.
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