”Was Mr. Wang’s examination, treatment and surgery performed with his and his family’s consent, and did I violate his right to informed consent?” “Was Ms. Li covered with a screen when examining her body, and did I violate her right to privacy?” Recently, Liaoning Provincial People’s Hospital held the first humanities training course for young physicians, and Hou Aijie, vice president of the hospital, asked these questions to the young physicians attending the training in a lecture entitled “Humanities: The Soul of Medicine. Hou Aijie from the Western medical pioneer Hippocrates’ oath to the ancient medical sage Sun Simiao’s wise teachings; from the “father of liver surgery” Professor Wu Mengchao, who moved China with his medical skills and love, to Professor Li Zhanquan, who is still seriously ill and still insists on aid to Xinjiang and Tibet; in-depth interpretation of the dialectical unity of medicine and humanism The lecture was recognized and resonated with the young physicians. Hou Aijie said, every night before going to sleep, to do an “ethics check” on their own mind: think about today, whether I called the patient’s bed number, did not give him due respect; whether I use difficult medical terms, so that patients and families confused? The essence of medicine is humanistic care, and doctors cannot become good doctors if they do not have a deep cultural heritage and lack the belief of fraternity and benevolence. Hou Aijie suggested that people use their spare time to read more humanities books. Hou Aijie introduced that the hospital hopes to create a strong cultural atmosphere, enhance the personal taste and cultivation of young doctors, inspire young doctors to think about what is a meaningful life and establish a good value system by carrying out a forum for young doctors and humanistic training for young doctors. The hospital will use special lectures, good book recommendations, beautiful essay recommendations, essays, speeches and other ways to carry out training. In order not to interfere with work, the special lectures are arranged before the bi-weekly Young Physicians Forum, and the contents include how to dress, physician etiquette, effective communication, the art of informing bad news, etc.