【新唐人2014年12月24日讯】最近两年,一股“自拍风”席卷了中国大陆,中国自拍者们的身影和“留念照”遍布各处。然而不分场合的自拍,也会造极坏的影响甚至无法挽回的损失。近来,一组“医生手术台上玩自拍”的照片流传到网路后,引发了轩然大波。医德、医患矛盾等话题再次被抛出,甚至引发了医护人员和媒体之间的口水仗。
12月20号,一组医生在手术台上自拍,还摆出叉腰、V字手、勾肩搭背等各种姿势的照片在微博曝光,并迅速热传网路。
照片中可以明显看出,接受手术的病人仍躺在手术台上,裸露身体。图片的文字说明是:“作为一名医护人员我想说难怪医患关系这么紧张,手术同时你们在做什么?”
发图的网友“当维美不再唯美”称,这组照片来自西安某家医院,因为同学也在其中,所以不方便公开医院名字。
然而大概发图者自己也没想到,这组照片会引发一场医生、网友以及媒体之间的口水战。自拍者所在的医院也很快被曝光,是陕西省的西安凤城医院。
不少网民愤怒指问自拍医生:医德在哪里?职业操守哪去了?
湖南网友周先生:“不是缺少医德,医德本来就没有,没有这个意识,服务的意识,没有。纯粹就是为了工作而工作,没想到他自己的工作是这么的神圣。”
也有网民提出,未经病人同意就将病人的身体半裸入镜,算不算侵犯了病人的知情权和肖像权?对此,有网友回应:“手术台自拍”只是暴露出来的冰山一角,实际上,类似情况在大陆医院里极为常见。
湖南网友周先生:“以前有做医生的朋友,女孩子做手术,他们甚至明明不是做胸部的,他们也把人家胸部撩开来,之后去观赏,围着看。所以说他们停下来拍照片上传,这个好像在我们这里是司空见惯的。”
除了网民反应激烈,各大媒体的指责声也是铺天盖地,在微博上第一时间转载照片的《陕西都市快报》质问:“手术室里摆POSE,这样真的好吗?”《前瞻网》评论则质问:“难道拍照比人命还重要?”
荆楚:“那些医生可能把病人作为道具了,他根本就没有一种敬畏生命、尊重病人的意识。”
西安凤城医院医生郑晓菊在接受大陆媒体采访时解释说,8月15号照片拍摄那天,是老手术室的最后一台手术,手术没吃没喝7小时,终于为一位40多岁的农民工保住了左腿,心情很激动,以慰告别这个手术室,所以拍照留念。
一名微博认证为“浙江援疆外科副主任医师”的网友 “白衣山猫”认为,医生拍照没有错,错的是媒体“恶意挑拨”,并建议陕西警方追究发布者责任。
他的观点获得了众多医生群体的支持,并将矛头指向了媒体,声称媒体过度解读,加剧医患之间的分歧。
对此,媒体迅速回击称:首先医生在没有履行完自身职责的情况下就擅离职守私自拍照,其次带进手术室的手机无法保证是否经过消毒。
北京民间的公共卫生组织“益仁平中心”负责人陆军:“就我自己的就医经验,在医院里的一些区域,使用电子设备的区域,都要求不使用手机。我想在手术室呢,因为手机也是电子设备嘛,或许影响到一些医疗仪器的正常使用,干扰到一些精密仪器的功能,这个是非常成问题的。”
东南大学法学教授,医事法学研究所所长张赞宁认为,自1949年以后,中国大陆长期不重视对医生的人道主义教育,很多医疗教学机构,只重视知识的灌输,造成了医生普遍缺少医德教育和人文培养。
12月21号晚,西安市卫生局通报了对西安凤城医院的处理情况,对常务院长记过处分、留职察看一年,并免去分管副院长和一名麻醉科主任、护士长的行政职务,所有参拍人员要求写检查,记过,扣发三个月奖金等。
采访/田净 编辑/张天宇 后制/郭敬
Doctors’ Selfies at Operating Table Sparks Controversy
In the last two years, a surge of “selfies" swept
through China Mainland.
Chinese selfie photos are popular on all occasions.
But the selfie, regardless of the occasion, has also had
a very bad effect and caused even irreversible damage.
Recently, a group of photos of “doctors’ selfies
at the operating table" spread on the Internet,
which sparked a storm in a teacup.
Doctor’s ethics, the doctor-patient relationship
and other topics are being discussed again,
and this even led to bickering
between medical staff and the media.
On Dec 20, a group of selfies of doctors
at the operating table, which show them
hands on hips, stretching v-shape hands,
hanging off each others’ arms, were exposed on Weibo,
and then rapidly spread through the Internet.
From the photos, it can be clearly seen that the patient
undergoing surgery still lay on the operating table, naked.
But the doctors were playing selfies alongside him,
even the doctor responsible for stitches still did not forget
to look at the camera, and furthermore some doctors
took off gloves and masks for taking the pictures.
The caption for the group of photos is: “I would like to say
no wonder doctor-patient relationships become so tense.
As a paramedic professional, what are you doing
while carrying out surgery?"
The person who posted the photos said that these photos
were from a hospital in Xi’an, and the staff of this hospital
personally took the photos and then distributed them
among the circle of friends, and he reprinted the photos
from the Internet space of his schoolfellow.
Because his schoolfellow is also in the photos,
it is inconvenient to disclose the name of the hospital.
The purpose of exposing the photos is to inform the media
and crackdown on such bad conduct.
But probably the person who posted the photos did not
expect this to lead to a war of words among doctors,
netizens and the media.
The hospital on the selfie was quickly exposed.
It is Fengcheng Hospital in Xi’an, Shaanxi Province.
Many netizens angrily questioned the doctors:
where are the medical ethics?
Where are the professional ethics?
Netizen Mr Zhou from Hunan Province: “They do not
lack medical ethics. They actually have no medical ethics.
They do not have this awareness – awareness of service.
They have worked purely for work,
and they do not think their job is so sacred."
Some netizens also suggested:
will the patient’s body half-naked in the photos be
considered a violation on the patient’s right to know
and a portrait copyright without the patient’s consent?
In this regard, some netizens responded:
“Selfies at operating table" just expose
the tip of the iceberg. In fact, a similar situation
is very common in the hospitals in China mainland.
Hunan netizen Mr Zhou: “A friend of mine is a doctor
who used to look at her chest even if
when he did the operation on a girl
it had nothing to do with her chest.
So the fact that they stopped the operation and took pictures
for uploading seem to be commonplace here."
In addition to hot responses from netizens, the accusations
from the major media are also overwhelming.
Shaanxi City Express, which promptly reproduced the photos
on the microblog, put questions:
“Is this really good to cut poses in the operating room?"
The Qianzhang Network questions:
“Are photos more important than human life?"
Jing Chu: “Those doctors may regard the patient
as a theatrical prop. They did not have an awareness
of reverence for life, or respect for the patient."
Zheng Xiaoju is a doctor of Xi’an Fengcheng Hospital.
When she was interviewed by Chinese media,
she explained that the photo was taken on August 15
when it was the last surgery.
After seven hours without food or drink,
finally the operation saved the left leg
for a 40-year-old farmer.
They took the pictures because they felt very excited.
The photos were regarded as a farewell to the operating room.
A name “Lynx in white clothing" microblogging account
certified as “Deputy chief physician of surgery
of Zhejiang Province Assistance to Xinjiang"
also commented as below
“The first photo shows the key surgeon has stepped down,
two assistant are suturing the skin.
The second and third photos show the completeness
of the surgery, and the patient will be soon
returned to the ward.
The success of a highly challenging operation
and the safety of the patient make the doctors happier
than the patient’s family.
To take pictures at the operating table for reference is
originally a good matter…"
“Lynx in white clothing" believes that doctors
taking photographs is not wrong,
but the media’s “malicious provocation" is wrong,
and suggested that the Shaanxi police investigate
the liability of the publisher of the photos.
His view won the support of many groups of physicians,
and targeted the media, claiming that the media
over-interpreted the photos and exacerbated
the conflicts between doctors and patients.
In this regard, the media quickly hit back:
the hospital expressly stipulates that any person entering
the operating room is not allowed to bring
any personal items into the work area, or even to walk
around talking something unrelated to surgery.
First, in the absence of doctors fully performing their duties,
they are absent without leave for taking pictures.
Secondly, the phone brought into the operating room
cannot be guaranteed sterile.
Beijing non-government public health organization
“Yi Ren Ping Center" Director Mr Lu Jun:
“According to my own medical experience, in some areas
of the hospital in which electronic equipment is used,
it is required not to use the cell phone.
I think, in the operating room, because the cell phone
is an electronic device as well, perhaps it affects
the normal use of some medical equipment
and interferes with the function of precision instruments,
this is very problematic."
Mr Zhang Zangning is a professor of Law, and the Director
of Medical Jurisprudence Research Institute
of Southeast University.
He said that since 1949, China mainland has paid
no attention to the doctor’s humanitarian education
for long periods, and many medical teaching institutions
only emphasize imparting knowledge.
These result in a general phenomenon
that doctors lack medical ethics education
and a humane culture.
In the evening of Dec 21, Xi’an Municipal Health Bureau
iannounced the punishment on Xi’An Fengcheng Hospital.
The Executive Dean of the Hospital is punished
with demerit on probation for one year.
The administrative positions of the Deputy Dean
responsible for the operation,
one Anesthesia Branch Director,
and one head nurse are all dismissed.
All the staff involved in the photos were asked
to write repentance letters, demerit,
and withholding bonuses for three months.
Interview/TianJing Edit/Zhang Tianyu Post-production/GuoJing