Not everyone is willing to be diligent, willing to sacrifice some of their interests to serve the patients.
Some medical students, due to the influence of family upbringing, have been pampered and treated like emperors since childhood. They haven't really suffered any hardships, and in school, they are like princes and princesses locked in an ivory tower.
They simply have no understanding of the hardships of the world.
They don't know where the salt is salty, where the vinegar is sour.
Asking them to put themselves in the patient's shoes really is too difficult for them.
Just like the historical anecdote of Emperor Hui of Jin, who, upon learning from his ministers that many common people were starving, casually asked, "Why don't they eat meat porridge?"
This casual question made Emperor Hui of Jin a frequently cited negative example by later generations.
