In fact, at the beginning, the doctor's handwriting was not so sloppy, because when he first entered the enterprise, there were fewer patients, so the doctor had relatively enough time and could spend more time writing medical records. But with more and more patients, doctors have been unable to cope. Many specialties only hang fifty or sixty numbers every day. According to sitting for eight hours and checking for eight hours every day, the average time allocated to patients is only ten minutes. In addition, the hospital clearly stipulates that the first consultation of patients must be completed within 24 hours, and special and emergency cases must be completed within 6 hours. In order to save time, the doctor's handwriting will naturally become scrawled.
The patient's condition can't be described in a few simple words. In addition to recording the onset and main symptoms, if the patient needs to be examined, the doctor should also record the whole process of examination and treatment measures. There is too much content. If the doctor writes word by word, it will make people exhausted. Of course, there are also some experts in small clinics who deliberately scribble, so that patients can't understand and avoid prescribing drugs.
This also creates a strange image. Many patients will think that only doctors with scrawled handwriting are famous doctors. The more skilled the doctor is, the more difficult it is to recognize the handwriting. If one day he encounters a normal writing situation, he will think that doctors are novices or interns, which will lead to distrust. However, with the development of science and technology, this kind of handwritten case may gradually become history, because many hospitals have gradually promoted computer-printed cases, and other doctors will bring an intern to see a doctor and let the intern work for them when writing medical records. This will not only save more time and make doctors pay more attention to the treatment, but also make the written medical records and prescriptions clearer and make patients feel more at ease.