Qi Fang: Affective interweave with patients

“ It is terribly wrong to make patients serve doctors, which means they are treated as sources of medical experience. Doctors should treat patients equally. Less educated and inarticulate patients need more help, care and love. Patients’ interest is always the priority, including, not to abuse doctors’ power for personal gains, or to gain anything directly or indirectly from patients. To win a patient’s trust, we have to understand him or her, his or her understanding about the illness.” Professor Qi Fang (方圻) always repeated those views, which have profound implications (Fang, 2002). Prof. Fang (1920–2018) has a distinguished career as member of Communist Party of China. He is a pioneer in the field of Chinese cardiovascular disease, First-Class Professor, honorary president of PUMCH, and representative of the 13th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (Chen et al., 2018) (Fig. 1). Prof. Fang was born in Beijing and studied at Nankai High School in Tianjin from 1931 to 1937. “I witnessed my younger brother’s suffering from hemophilia as a child. He sustained frequent bleeding ever since one year old. The only thing we could do was waiting for the doctor.” This painful experience impelled Prof. Fang to devote himself to medicine. In 1938, Fang was admitted to the Pre-medical Department, Yenching University in Beijing and then entered Peking Union Medical College (PUMC) in 1941. PUMC was compelled to close from early 1942 to 1948 due to the Japanese invasion. During this time, Prof. Fang studied at the Medical School of Saint John’s University in Shanghai, and then West China Union University in Chengdu. In 1946 he received his M.D. degree, earned one of the only two “Golden Key Award”. From 1946 to 1948, he worked at Tianjin Central Hospital. When PUMCH re-opened in 1948, he rejoined it as a chief resident of the Internal Medicine Department (PUMCH, 2018) (Fig. 2). One day in 1951, Dr. Fang and his colleague admitted two tuberculosis patients. Expecting learning less new skills and experiences from these common patients, Fang’s colleague sighed and complained. It suddenly struck Dr. Fang that doctors should serve patients unconditionally with best efforts, but not treat them solely as sources of medical practice. If patients serve doctors, doctors would be passionate about rare and challenging cases and apathetic to common and simple cases. Medical practice is not only about curing, but also comforting. Doctors should care and love their patients. Carrying this belief, Dr. Fang successively served as resident, attending physician, associate professor, professor, director of internal medicine, vice president, and honorary president of PUMCH (Wang et al., 2006) (Fig. 3). Prof. Fang was a founder and pioneer in many areas of cardiology. Since 1950s, he had engaged in the study of various cardiovascular diseases. He early advocated the clinical application of electrocardiography. Together with Prof. Yingkai Wu (吴英恺), Prof. Fang established Fuwai Hospital, China’s first special hospital of cardiovascular diseases in 1956, and was appointed Fuwai Hospital’s first director of Internal Medicine. Prof. Fang led China’s application of cardiac catheterization and pushed forward the diagnosis and treatment of congenital heart diseases. He was also the first to study blood stream dynamics for rheumatic heart diseases and laid the foundation for hemodynamic testing in China. From the 1970s on, Prof. Fang focused on the studies of coronary artery disease, arrhythmia, electrocardiogram and cardiovascular drugs (PUMCH, 2018). Prof. Fang became a member of medical team for state leaders in 1956. Since then, he attended many oversea medical tasks for foreign state leaders. From 1962 to 1965, he went to Indonesia five times to attend consultations for President Sukarno. In 1974, Prince Souvanna Phouma of Laos had a heart attack. Vientiane called for urgent help from Beijing, Washington, Moscow, Paris, Bangkok and Manila. Prof. Fang flew to Vientiane overnight under Premier Enlai Zhou’s command and contributed the most effective emergency treatment for Prince Souvanna Phouma with doctors from seven other countries (Guang, 2001) (Fig. 4). Prof. Fang painstakingly educated young doctors all through his life. He was one of the first group of doctoral tutors of PUMCH. He was chief editor of four books, one of which Modern Internal Medicine won the first prize of National Excellent Science and Technology Books Award

practice. If patients serve doctors, doctors would be passionate about rare and challenging cases and apathetic to common and simple cases. Medical practice is not only about curing, but also comforting. Doctors should care and love their patients. Carrying this belief, Dr. Fang successively served as resident, attending physician, associate professor, professor, director of internal medicine, vice president, and honorary president of PUMCH (Wang et al., 2006) (Fig. 3).
Prof. Fang was a founder and pioneer in many areas of cardiology. Since 1950s, he had engaged in the study of various cardiovascular diseases. He early advocated the clinical application of electrocardiography. Together with Prof. Yingkai Wu (吴英恺), Prof. Fang established Fuwai Hospital, China's first special hospital of cardiovascular diseases in 1956, and was appointed Fuwai Hospital's first director of Internal Medicine. Prof. Fang led China's application of cardiac catheterization and pushed forward the diagnosis and treatment of congenital heart diseases. He was also the first to study blood stream dynamics for rheumatic heart diseases and laid the foundation for hemodynamic testing in China. From the 1970s on, Prof. Fang focused on the studies of coronary artery disease, arrhythmia, electrocardiogram and cardiovascular drugs (PUMCH, 2018 (Guang, 2001) (Fig. 4).
Prof. Fang painstakingly educated young doctors all through his life. He was one of the first group of doctoral tutors of PUMCH. He was chief editor of four books, one of which Modern Internal Medicine won the first prize of National Excellent Science and Technology Books Award and second prize of National Science and Technology Progress Award. He gave instructive guidance to medical students and junior doctors with no thought for rewards. Sometimes, they would list Prof. Fang's name on academic literatures which he helped to plot or revise. However, Prof. Fang always firmly refused (Yan, 1992).
In Despite his fame, many titles and positions, putting on the doctor's white garment, Prof. Fang had nothing but his patients in mind. Once he had kept working 16 h to rescue a severe sepsis patient. Just when he was about to take a break, the ward admitted a little girl with rheumatic heart disease at death's door. Hearing about the girl's severe heart   failure, Prof. Fang immediately got up and went back to rescue her. In the next 3 days, he kept observing patient recovery without leaving the ward. Finally the girl got out of danger and recovered (Guang, 2001). Countless nights and mornings, the dog days of summer and the dead of winter, Prof. Fang was called from sound sleep, dinner table, bringing hope and consolation to patients and their families. One of his most common words to subordinate doctors was: "Please don't hesitate to call me if there is problem with patients, anytime!" In the winter, he always rubbed his hands to make them warm before palpation. Rich or poor, educated or illiterate, noble or disadvantaged, Prof. Fang treated his patients without discrimination. He strongly cherished the conviction that patients should receive equal treatment from doctors (Dai, 1985) (Fig. 6) (Ma, 1997).
On January 30th, 2018, Prof. Fang died of illness at the age of 98. Throughout his selfless life, Prof. Fang took little heed of fame and wealth, and was remembered for his genuine kindness and superb expertise (Chen et al., 2018).

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