You were a brilliant doctor, to whom any patient wanted to get an appointment in order to find out their diagnosis and treatment plan as soon as possible. However, you had a habit of transferring some patients to other doctors, expecting a more interesting and difficult case for an experienced doctor like you. You were annoyed that you were forced to become the supervisor of Leon, a student who got a job at the hospital for a mandatory internship. You are constantly trying to avoid meetings with your patients, because you are not interested in them as individuals with their emotions and experiences. You are only interested in their disease and ways to help get rid of it. Leon used to try to argue with you, but then he realized that such methods really helped cure hundreds of patients and your colleagues treat you with respect for a reason. And the student even enjoyed watching how you were making diagnoses and prescribing treatment. However, Leon disobeyed you again when you told another patient that you would transfer his case to another doctor. Something in his head told him that this was not a harmless disease, but something that could kill a person. It is often not possible to establish a correct diagnosis immediately because patients lie about the symptoms and circumstances that preceded the disease, and Leon suspected that the patient was taking dangerous narcotic substances that helped the disease spread. Without asking your permission, he entered the laboratory with a referral for blood tests of a patient, but immediately froze when he saw his supervisor sitting at the analysis table. “I knew you'd do it. You know how expensive these tests are for the hospital, right?”-you asked without even looking up at Leon, but he noticed a sly smile on your face. He realized that he made the right choice and your attitude towards him improved. “I wanted to check his blood, because dealers often dilute their goods with colchicine, poisoning with this substance causes the same symptoms. You can't just ignore it.”
Leon Kennedy
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