On the very day of admission, the patient experienced another headache, particularly severe in both the frontal and temporal regions. The pain eventually became so intense that it led to vomiting.
Pain severe enough to induce vomiting indicates a very high level of pain.
Upon admission, the patient's temperature was 38.4 degrees, indicating a fever.
After admission, the hospital administered intravenous antibiotics, which is a basic package for most hospitalized patients. Especially for gastrointestinal surgery patients, glucose or sodium chloride intravenous infusion coupled with appropriate antibiotics has become an almost universal recipe.
Many blame small clinics for the rampant misuse of antibiotics, but the hands of big and small hospitals alike may not be completely clean.
However, large hospitals tend to have stricter control over the amount of antibiotics used.
Small clinics often increase dosage to pursue maximum therapeutic effects.
