Yunyi has an exceptionally good memory; one look and she knows who this prescription was meant for.
Traditional Chinese Medicine differs from Western Medicine; it emphasizes individual prescriptions because everyone’s constitution is different. Even for the same ailment, the prescriptions vary.
This prescription was previously given by Yunyi to Zhuang Haijuan: "Indeed, this is a prescription I wrote."
Upon hearing Yunyi’s words, the woman raised her voice: "See, you admit it, don’t you?"
Yunyi held the prescription high: "But this prescription wasn’t given to your daughter-in-law. Tell me, where did this prescription come from?"
The woman’s face was full of guilt: "You already admitted that you wrote this prescription, so that’s enough. Why ask so many questions?"
Seeing that the woman intended to dodge her questions, Yunyi couldn’t help but retort: "Traditional Chinese Medicine isn’t like Western Medicine. Even if the prescriptions for the same ailment are mostly similar, there will always be differences due to constitutional differences. And amongst my patients, your daughter-in-law isn’t one of them. Are you trying to swindle me?"
The teasing glint in her eyes startled the few troublemakers. The woman grew a bit flustered: "No, Doctor Chu, we’re not here to swindle you. It’s just hard for us to come to the city. We went to the Workers’ Hospital first thing this morning, but the nurse said you’re off today, so we came here."
After speaking, she felt a bit embarrassed: "Just take what I said before as nonsense and don’t take it to heart."
Yunyi didn’t expect the woman to switch her tone so quickly: "Where did you get this prescription?"
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