Chapter 6 Crossing can't be too lofty to ask for collections

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"Jason, Dr. Jason, what are you thinking?" Countess Isabel's beautiful face leaned over and asked with concern, Zhu Jishi only then realized that his hand holding the wine glass was actually tilted, and the wine was spilled on the table, and he was distracted for an unknown amount of time. The Countess and Dr. Blomstein, as well as the servant who served the meal, looked at him with curiosity.

Will. Hemming had gone, and had gone back to the barracks to report that he had wounded Major Churchill in the duel and was ready to be punished. Zhu Jishi and Dr. Blomsteain were left by the countess to have dinner together to thank them for saving the fat man's life - this solved the problem of Zhu Jishi's first dinner after the crossing, but how to solve the problem of eating in the future?

It seems that Ye Yiren never said how the traverser solved the problem of eating? and the Daoguang Emperor Aixin Jueluo, who opposed the Qing Dynasty. Compared with Minning and saving 40,000 Chinese people in dire straits, solving the problem of eating is the top priority that Zhu Jishi needs to face at present. I don't know how the protagonists in Miss Ye's favorite time-traveling novels solve this problem?

Being a doctor seems like a good business, but when you think about it, it doesn't seem that simple. First of all, you are in the United Kingdom, or the glorious British Empire in the Victorian era! Will an illegal immigrant from the 21st century be caught and deported to China by an officer of the British Immigration Department, well, the Qing Dynasty? The passport issued by the Chinese government in the 21st century and the entry visa issued by the European Union should be invalid in Britain in 1842, right?

Secondly, even if the issue of passports and entry visas is solved. Can you become a doctor in England in 1842? It doesn't seem to be the case. Because he now has neither a medical school diploma nor a medical licenseโ€”even though he has more medical knowledge than the greatest medical scientists of his time, how can he prove it without a diploma?

Thirdly, the issue of racial discrimination cannot be ignored. Not to mention Britain in 1842, even white Europeans in the 21st century still look down on yellow-skinned Chinese from the bottom of their hearts, but they don't show it much...... Therefore, even if he obtained a medical license in England in 1842, it is estimated that no patient will come to the door.

But if Britain can't stay, where should I go? It's definitely not okay to go back to China, I don't have braids, I heard that the rule of the Qing Dynasty is to cut off your head without braids! And my own Western medicine skills may not be able to play in China!

Or don't you want to go to the United States? I don't know what the immigration access conditions in the United States are now? Will you accept that you ran out of Europe like this...... Tatars?

These problems don't seem to be easy to solve, so thinking about it makes Zhu Jishi distracted.

Countess Isabel looked at Zhu Jishi with a smile, and suddenly three Chinese words came out: "visa, passport, diploma...... What do they all mean (it's in English)? What Chinese language is it? โ€

"This, this, this is my hometown dialect."

Hearing the countess speak Chinese in a straight voice, Zhu Jishi was really shocked, and thought that this woman had been to China and had seen through her own details - now the Opium War does not know if it is over? If the British were to be arrested as the Manchu underground party, they would be put on the gallows! However, when he heard the other party ask a question in English, Dr. Zhu let out a sigh.

"Tatar?"

"That's right, it's Tatar, good wine, it's good wine." Zhu Jishi smiled at the countess with a weak heart, and drank the red wine with a tilt of his neck.

"Oh, it's Tatar." The Countess was obviously very interested in this Tatar, who could perform caesarean sections on the living, but had not yet killed people, and then inquired: "Doctor Jason, where did you learn your medical skills?" Is it Russia? โ€

"It's Germany," Zhu Jishi didn't say where Germany was, mainly because he was afraid of revealing his stuffing.

"The German Confederation?" Blomstein suddenly interjected in German: "I also came to England from there, I graduated from the University of Heidelberg in Basson, which university did you graduate from?" โ€

"Mannheim, I studied medicine in Mannheim." Zhu Jishi replied in German. In fact, he was an alumnus of Dr. Blomsteain, and the Mannheim Medical School, where he studied in Germany, was also affiliated with the University of Heidelberg, but it certainly did not exist in 1842.

"Medical science at the University of Mannheim?" Bronstein frowned, not getting to the bottom of it. Although he doesn't remember that the University of Mannheim had a medical department, he graduated from the University of Heidelberg more than 40 years ago, and then went to England to eat and never returned to Germany, so he doesn't know what happened to the University of Mannheim in recent years. But then he asked about blood types and blood transfusions, "Dr. Jason, what did you learn about blood types and transfusion therapy from the University of Mannheim?" โ€

"This is what I researched." Zhu Jishi has also spent more than a year in Germany in the 21st century, and he knows that Europeans have more respect for scientists, so he does not plan to adopt a low-key attitude in the field of science. "Actually, I came to the UK this time to publish my findings in The Lancet."

The Lancet is the most authoritative medical journal in Europe, and Zhu Jishi often read this journal in Germany more than 100 years later, and he also knows that this journal has a very long history, and it must have existed in 1842.

"To publish an article in The Lancet?" Dr. Blomstein looked at Zhu Jishi for a moment, then nodded slowly, "Dr. Jason, your achievements in blood typing and blood transfusion therapy are indeed ...... Indeed, it should be shared with the medical community of Shijie through The Lancet. I think you will be the first Oriental to receive the Copley Medal and the Grand French Prize for Science. โ€

"The Copley Medal and the Grand French Prize for Science? How important is a blood transfusion? The countess also showed a surprised expression, these two scientific prizes in the 19th century were about the same status as the Nobel Prizes in later generations! Scientists who can win both awards at the same time will surely go down in history.

After all, the countess is a layman, of course she doesn't know what it means for Zhu Jishi to perform the same operation on Qiu Fatzi just now that seems to be no different from killing pigs?

But in the eyes of Blomsteain, an insider, the surgical skills of the three-legged cat that Zhu Jishi revealed just now can definitely make European medicine take a big step forward! No, not a big step, but a big leap! You must know that historically, those perverted murderers in Europe did not understand until 1852 that they had to wash their hands before performing surgery, and it was in 1886 that the problem of surgical disinfection was completely solved. Figuring out blood types and solving the big problem of blood transfusion was at the beginning of the 20th century - before that, these perverted killer doctors either transfused animal blood or indiscriminately transfused human blood regardless of blood type, and as a result, they succeeded in killing countless patients!

However, in the process of operating on Qiu Fatzi this afternoon, Zhu Jishi seems to have overcome the two major problems of surgery - infection and blood transfusion. If the jishu he used to heal the fat man of Qiu could be published in The Lancet magazine, the fame and wealth he could bring would definitely make every doctor in this era blush.

"Of course!" Dr. Blomstein looked at Zhu Jishi with extremely envious eyes and said with emotion: "This is probably the most important medical research achievement in the first half of the 19th century!" He paused for a moment, and then said, "Doctor Jason, I take the liberty of asking, is there a blood transfusion treatment in your Tatar traditional medicine?" โ€

Looking at this 19th-century old doctor with twinkling eyes, Zhu Jishi was silent for a moment, and said with a slight smile: "I, like many great scientists in history, stand on the shoulders of my predecessors to conduct research. โ€

The old doctor nodded, and seemed to agree with Zhu Jishi's statement, or one of his conjectures was confirmed - although the British Empire had smashed open the closed gate of the Qing Dynasty with strong ships and cannons, but the Westerners of this era were still hazy about the affairs of the East, although they knew that Western science and technology were ahead of the East, but after all, the East had a glorious history of civilization for thousands of years, and there were many civilizations that were annihilated, maybe they would be ahead in some places?