The biggest problem that patients face during endoscopy, whether it is gastroscopy or colonoscopy, is the growth of polyps in the digestive tract, and the doctor asks what do you think? In fact, you have never thought about the problem of polyps growing in your body, in fact, you have never heard of this word, you do not know what is a polyp? So you are often at a loss, the doctor will let you make a decision immediately, polyps removed or not, because the endoscope is still in the body, stay longer will bring you more discomfort, how to do the removal surgery and what risks you do not know at all, you will be more frightened, how to do? There is nothing to do. So, to avoid this, it becomes important to think about how to answer this question if you encounter it before you do the endoscopy. First of all, let’s talk about polyps. It is a morphologic description, not a term that ultimately confirms the diagnosis. It is like a bulge on a flat surface, you can’t be sure exactly what it is (it can be a rock, dirt bag, wallet, garbage, etc.). You need to pick it up and examine it carefully to be sure. Therefore, whenever a polyp is present, it is recommended to take a pathology and look at it carefully under a microscope to determine the nature. Since many endoscopists have been doing this work for a long time, they will slowly gain experience and by carefully looking at the shape of the polyp, they will be able to figure out what kind of lesion it might be under the microscope, so he will have a prognosis. His prognosis will determine the next step, (prognosis is not 100% accurate, the disease is complex, the human body is complex, medicine is not 100%). At this stage, the conflict between doctors and patients is very deep, many doctors dare not, cannot, are not, and do not want to prejudge anymore, directly to the patient and family, so that disputes can be avoided. You set it, you will not cause disputes because of his pre-judgment errors, but your distress immediately. You do not have a little experience, or even never heard of this thing, let you prejudge, the error rate is certainly much higher than the doctor, but the doctor at this stage generally will not make the decision for you, because as long as you backtrack, he will be in trouble, medical malpractice, disputes, identification, etc., time-consuming, laborious, of course, no one wants to find trouble. What to do? In fact, trusting the doctor is the best and easiest way. You say we trust you, you just follow the way and steps you feel most appropriate, as long as you try your best, in case something goes wrong we won’t bother you. A word that conveys trust, in fact, solves all problems. The doctor has put aside his worries and will open his mind to choose the best solution to treat you or your family, he must not want to disappoint your trust. You don’t have to specialize in learning about medicine and make yourself look like a mess. Just wait quietly for the good news. In most cases, the doctor’s judgment is right. Trusting him is the wisest choice you can make. If an accident does occur, no one can actually avoid it, the doctor will be more upset and blame himself than you. Now back to that earlier question, which is actually a pseudo-question now. The doctor will diagnose and treat the polyp according to its possible nature, you save time and anxiety, he has no more worries and focuses on the diagnosis and treatment, and the patient and the patient’s family are of course the ones who benefit.