How do I see an emergency room or an outpatient clinic?

  Urgent care and outpatient clinics are available in general hospitals.  Urgent care is for patients who need urgent care. Outpatient clinics are for less urgent patients.  Emergency clinics are set up to get patients out of danger in a short period of time, so they are equipped with emergency, quick-acting drugs and basic tests that allow for quick judgment.  So if you have a less urgent disease, or even a chronic disease, even in the emergency room, there are no drugs with good efficacy and few side effects for your disease, and the laboratory tests are not very complete, and not all the equipment for auxiliary tests can be done.  Don’t go to the emergency room at night simply because you work during the day and it’s not a good idea to take time off. You won’t get the best medications to complete the best lab tests and ancillary exams. Your body is your own, your job is the state’s or your boss’s. By going to the emergency room at night just to not take time off work, you are doing a disservice to yourself by giving up giving yourself the best diagnosis and treatment in order to save a day’s pay, and by encroaching on the medical resources allocated to acute patients.  Diseases that need to be seen in the emergency room: 1. A disease that has just occurred A disease that you have had for three days and still run to the emergency room, I would have a good attitude and berate in my heart.  2, the disease may cause irreversible damage to the function of the organ within 8 hours Strictly speaking, the only eye diseases that require emergency care are: central retinal artery blockage (which needs to be saved within 10 minutes), eye rupture injury, and acute attack of acute angle-closure glaucoma. (To add to this, there are also chemical injuries, burns, etc.) Sudden onset of abdominal pain, chest pain, eye pain, headache, or you should go to the emergency room to see first.