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Who are the pioneers of the era?

The 1.93-year-old Academician Hou Xianglin is a world-renowned petrochemical scientist, one of the pioneers of my country's petrochemical technology, an important founder of China's oil refining technology, and a veritable social activist. . He is currently a senior consultant of China National Petroleum Corporation, a senior consultant of China Petrochemical Corporation, honorary chairman of the China Petroleum Institute, honorary director of the Chinese National Committee of the World Petroleum Congress, academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering. Hou Xianglin said, "I have gone through this journey with my motherland. Throughout almost the entire course of the 20th century, as a Chinese, I am proud of my motherland today; as a Communist Party of China with more than 60 years of party experience, I have no regrets about my political beliefs throughout my life; as a member of the New China As a scientist, I have never doubted the power of science, and I feel gratified by the scientific work I have been engaged in throughout my life.”

The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is called a “life forbidden zone” by biologists, suffering from severe conditions such as high temperatures and hypoxia. The natural environment has always been the main cause of diseases in women and young children. Over the years, He Min has been like the warm spring water from the source of Qinghai's Sanjiang River, nourishing the hearts of women and children of all ethnic groups, conveying the party's care for women and children, making mothers bloom like flowers and children thrive like seedlings, and is known as the Snow Land Plateau "warm mother".

2. In the winter of 2007, He Min went with the medical team to a pastoral area with an altitude of more than 4,000 meters. Hearing that herder Gong Bao's wife had a difficult delivery and was in critical condition, He Min and two team members immediately drove to Gong Bao's house. At this time, it was freezing cold and the icy road was very slippery. The car He Min was riding in skidded at a corner and fell into a ditch on the roadside. He Min's left leg was injured and blood flowed freely. Climbing out of the car, He Min simply bandaged the wound and limped for more than three hours to Gong Bao's house. At that time, the mother's amniotic fluid had been contaminated, and the baby was pale and breathing weakly. He Min ignored her own injuries and immediately rescued the baby. The baby was rescued and cried loudly.

“Saving people first” is the belief that He Min has always adhered to since he started practicing medicine. In June 2008, while He Min was on a medical tour in Goluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, the baby born to a Tibetan mother, Lamao, had a mouth full of filth and had difficulty breathing, and was in critical condition. Without having time to prepare the equipment, He Min leaned down and sucked the dirt out of the child's mouth mouth-to-mouth. In the 16 years since he joined the army, He Min has been on plateau inspections 29 times, faced danger 5 times, treated more than 300 infants and young children in grassland pastoral areas, and restored thousands of women of childbearing age to health.

When encountering critically ill patients, He Min is always on call. He often rushes to the ward to rescue the patient after eating half of his meal. When he gets home from get off work, he cannot sit still, so he is called to the operating room again; at night Often as soon as I lay down, I would be called away to deal with emergency cases. In April 2007, He Min had just returned to Xining after more than half a month of medical rounds. Her husband and son were happily looking forward to her return at home. But as soon as the convoy entered the hospital gate, an anxious middle-aged man ran over for help. It turned out that his wife suffered a massive hemorrhage during labor and was dying. He Min heard the news and ran to the operating room. After two hours of emergency rescue, the mother's life was saved. It was already midnight by the time He Min returned home. Her husband and son, who couldn't wait for her return, curled up on the sofa and fell asleep.

There is a popular custom among the local Hui, Salar and other ethnic groups: after a newborn is born, a piece of brown sugar should be placed in its mouth, which means that the child will have a sweet future. He Min discovered in clinical practice that doing so can easily lead to suffocation of newborns and endanger life. So every time she encountered this situation, she tried her best to persuade him. One day in September 2002, Ma Yuzhen, a pregnant Hui ethnic group, gave birth to a 7-pound baby boy in the hospital. Her family was very happy. Ma Yuzhen's father-in-law brought a large bag of brown sugar from home and excitedly broke off a large piece and stuffed it into the baby's mouth. After a while, the baby's face turned purple and he was breathing rapidly. The nurse on duty hurriedly called for He Min. After more than half an hour of first aid, the baby was out of danger. He Min took this opportunity to once again explain to them the dangers of putting brown sugar in the baby's mouth, and the patient's family nodded repeatedly.

3. Over the years, He Min has built a monument in the hearts of patients with his snow-capped holiness, and has been called "the cleanest doctor", "the warmest doctor", and "the warmest doctor" by patients. The most conscientious doctor."

No matter whether she is rich or poor, she treats her patients with the same kindness.