My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points Chapter 1199 - 473: A Matter of Life and Death—Listening to the New Comrade’s Opinion (Part 3)

Previously on My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points...
In a tense high-level meeting at Tuya Hospital, Dean Zhu reveals the Third Hospital's aggressive poaching of 24 key doctors and nurse practitioners from the Cardiothoracic Surgery department, marking the hospital's worst loss in fifty years. Attendees express outrage and propose varied countermeasures, from restricting job mobility to enhancing compensation, while underscoring the distinct roles of clinical, administrative, and logistics departments in hospital operations. Zhou Can listens attentively as Dean Zhu turns to him, the new colleague credited with effective strategies, urging him to share his opinion freely.

Dean Zhu's eyes immediately fixed on Zhou Can in the rear seats.

This prompted a bitter smile from him.

Occasionally, gaining excessive attention from superiors can turn out to be a mixed blessing!

For a person such as himself, who favored staying under the radar, he had no plans to draw attention to himself.

With Dean Zhu calling him out in front of everyone, it became clear to all but the most oblivious that he was the source of the Cardiothoracic Surgery department's retaliation plan.

Banning electronic gadgets and promoting free-flowing talks had truly ignited the group's eagerness to contribute. In the recent exchange, even the typically quiet high-ranking officials showed great zeal in voicing their ideas.

"I'm just a newbie, a junior doctor, and simply absorbing the wisdom from my elders is already very rewarding."

Zhou Can replied as he rose to his feet, though somewhat hesitantly.

"Xiao Zhou, that's hardly the proper mindset! Your presence in this meeting room means the hospital values your input. We're all on the same team here, and holding back valuable ideas would be such a shame, wouldn't it? Moreover, safeguarding the hospital's success and keeping competitors at bay is a duty we all share."

Vice Director Ye urged him to boldly express his views.

Director Lou himself had recently offered several valuable proposals.

"Fine, then I'll share a few ideas to kick off the conversation."

Having been thrust into the limelight, Zhou Can realized that staying quiet would make him seem standoffish and too withdrawn.

"I see the Third Hospital's poaching of key personnel from our Cardiothoracic Surgery department as a curse and a blessing. In today's cutthroat hospital landscape, places resort to every tactic to expand. The Third Hospital pioneered these ruthless, sneaky moves against us, but they won't be the only ones. Striking back forcefully today could deter countless future threats. This is our moment to strike them where it hurts."

The audience was stunned by the youth's words.

Possessing such wide-ranging insight, strategic foresight, and bold, resolute approaches, he clearly possessed the qualities of a natural leader.

Numerous veterans dedicate decades to developing that kind of outlook and plans.

At just over twenty, Zhou Can displayed such prowess, a truly exceptional trait.

"The Third Hospital lured those staff with much better pay and perks. Our department's initial counterstrike has already hit home, leaving the Third Hospital under heavy public backlash and massive fallout. I'm certain their Cardiothoracic Surgery clinics and ER visits will plummet sharply. Right now, the new arrivals there are likely regretting boarding a doomed vessel."

"We should fan the flames further, perhaps by boldly proclaiming that the Third Hospital's Cardiothoracic Surgery will shrink back or outright fail. Such dire warnings will heighten the anxiety of those who defected. Furthermore, given that General Surgery and Respiratory Medicine are the Third Hospital's strong suits, we can exploit this to target those fields and snatch their clients."

"If we're able to subtly rally other hospitals into the fray, that would be ideal. Still, it's wiser to build these partnerships quietly, ensuring no one pegs us as the puppet masters. That secrecy would serve us best."

The reputation of a hospital holds immense value.

Particularly its favorable standing.

Should rival institutions discover that a leading provincial facility like Tu Ya resorts to hounding the Third Hospital so aggressively, it would come across as undignified.

This could slightly tarnish Tu Ya's prestige.

"Catching the Third Hospital off-guard in their turmoil to take over their General Surgery and Respiratory Medicine operations would also help other hospitals, so I'm sure they'll jump at the chance."

Zhou Can stated with composure.