There's something a little monastery about Xining's Tibetan Hospital |
I had a 9:30 unofficial appointment with the lady doctor at Xining's Tibetan Medical Hospital.
As I was told not to eat anything or drink anything except some water, I was faint with hunger and caffeine withdrawal by the time I made it to the out patients building.
I was clutching a Kewpie mayonnaise jar filled with my early morning, mid-stream urine. It was a lurid orange, perhaps the hue of a wrinkled post-Christmas tangerine. It did not look healthy.
When you see the doctor put it on the floor between you and her, a friend had instructed me. It's protocol. I wondered if she was setting me up.
Xining's Tibetan Medical Hospital is a grand affair. Tibetan touches like rooftop motifs, slanted windows and golden temple rooftops give the place a grand feel. Inside it's calm, and clean, and modern. Monks swish past, mobile phone pressed against ears, doctors smile and nod and take the time to ask you where you are from, nomads in full regalia wander halls, opening doors at random to check what's inside, faces full of curiosity.
Unlike the rest of China it's nice and quiet and smoke free in the hospital |
Follow the monk for some out patient action |
Particulars on each doctor such as name, speciality, clinic times are broadcast on a TV in the front hall |
I was headed for the third floor.
I am hustled past the three or four families swarming around the lady doctor's consulting room, heads poking through whenever the door is opened, like chickens peeking through the wire mesh of their coop.
I wait. Nervously.
Suddenly it's my turn.
I sit on the stool next to the doctor. She has a kind and commanding air. She tells me not to be nervous and takes my pulse in both wrists.
There are 5 or 6 interns gathered around her desk. Several are nuns, their red robes poking through under their white coats. They are scribbling away on pads of paper.
Behind the doctor is a small glass bookcase full of Tibetan volumes. Above her head is a smallish Tangka.
"Have you ever had children?" she asks.
"No."
"Why not?"
"I've never been married?"
"Why not? How old are you?"
...deleted...
There's a why in her eyes.
"I'm not in any pain. I just felt a hard spot near where my uterus is and so I thought I was pregnant, so I went to the Red Cross Hospital last week but they said I had a tumor."
I show her my ultrasound.
Her eyebrows shoot up. "You thought you were pregnant? How could you be pregnant if you've never been married?"
I go beetroot as the nuns and the one male intern start tittering.
"Um... I had a boyfriend."
She smiles.
I had forgotten about my Kewpie jar of piss. It seems the moment for that has definitely passed.
She scribbles out my prescription in a Tibetan scrawl.
I have six different kinds of medications -- three types of pills, two packets of powders, and two packets of round pills the size of a mouse's eyeball that I am supposed to soak in hot water overnight. They prove stubbornly insoluble.
She tells me I cannot eat spicy food or sour food (that basically translates as savoury).
A friendly man doctor -- who is helping me negotiate me all this -- laughs and says that doesn't leave me with much to eat so I should just ignore that!
As I wait to collect my arsenal of pills and potions downstairs, a monk in tinted glasses comes and sits next to me.
I see he is impressed by my lengthy prescription. He has only three items on his.
On my way out I throw my Kewpie jar in the rubbish bin.