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Can medical workers order takeout in the hospital?
Doctors' take-away orders generally do not appear in the morning and noon, but in the afternoon, as long as the rider is near the hospital, he will definitely receive orders from the hospital.

Has been sent to internal medicine, surgery, brain, emergency, pediatrics. In internal medicine and surgery, patients are basically resting, and several doctors are talking about their work in the office. When I sent it, I still unpacked it while discussing it. The brain department sent more to the nurse station. Nurses' stations often have a lot of papers. I once took a cursory look and put them in order. When nurses eat, patients often have problems, so they should put down their meals. The emergency room sent the most milk tea, and five or six cups were sent. Only one doctor accepted it, but the emergency room next to the office was noisy. Pediatrics is full of children crying. I've been there so many times, but no nurse has received me. Just say, "Just put it there."

On the last day of part-time job, it happened to rain heavily and the bill exploded. At the same time, I received bills from five hospitals, all in one hospital, but belonging to several buildings, running back and forth. At one of the nurses' stations, I saw an unopened takeaway. Look at the time again. It has been delivered for at least three hours, and the meal is already cold. Yes, it's an emergency.

I can tell you clearly, at least in the list of hospitals I sent, no doctor or nurse is waiting leisurely, either finished or at work, and it is very rare for them to take time out to order takeout, let alone eat.

What impressed me the most was a takeaway in the operating room. When I brought it here, the patient had just been pushed out of the operating room, and the takeaway was given directly to the doctor who came out. The doctor is shouting, "Hurry up, hurry up, there is another one after eating." I was very sad.

You said it was not appropriate to take delivery in the hospital, because you were full and the doctors and nurses were still hungry. We have a tacit rule when delivering takeout food. If there is a list of hospitals, it should be sent to the hospital first, and there should always be food delivery personnel around the hospital. This is because doctors or nurses often choose nearby shops in order to catch up with time and have no time to eat in them.

I dare not talk about medical ethics, medical skills or vegetarianism in front of corpse drivers. But seriously, if they really have a problem, why not leave the hospital and eat comfortably, but stay at their desks and risk being disturbed all the time? I think this is the consideration of hospital humanization.