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Dedicated doctor honored for six decades of service

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2018-02-22 09:34China Daily Editor: Zhang Shiyu ECNS App Download
Liao Meilin (right) reads CT scans with colleagues at the Shanghai Chest Hospital. (Photo provided to China Daily)

Liao Meilin (right) reads CT scans with colleagues at the Shanghai Chest Hospital. (Photo provided to China Daily)

Pioneering lung cancer specialist sees helping patients as her greatest reward

Liao Meilin has witnessed and directly contributed to the rapid development of lung cancer treatments in China over the past six decades.

The 84-year-old doctor, one of the most reputable experts in her field, said there is no greater reward than having seen lung cancer-once a near-certain death sentence in China-become more like a chronic disease.

Despite her age, she continues to work at the Shanghai Chest Hospital twice a week, and was recently presented with the Shanghai Magnolia Medical Women Achievement Award in recognition of her dedication.

The prize is given annually by the Shanghai Medical Women's Association to female doctors age 70 and older who are still active on the front line of medicine. Seven doctors won the award this year, and Liao was the oldest.

"Curiosity about medicine and the trust of patients make me keep on working," she said.

Liao holds a clinic every Monday and Tuesday. She insists on seeing no more than 10 patients in each session and encourages other doctors to do the same.

"If you don't fully understand a patient, you cannot find the most appropriate treatment," Liao said, adding that she believes communication offers patients psychotherapy, which is as important as medical treatment.

Liao sees her curiosity as her most important characteristic, as it has kept her exploring and studying new topics to contribute to lung cancer research.

She has worked at the same hospital for over 60 years and helped countless patients. Many have become her friends and rely on her emotionally. They come to the hospital and ask Liao for help on health problems that are not necessarily related to their lung cancer.

Liao said the best part of her job is seeing how much medical science has developed.

"We used to consider a five-year survival period for cancer patients to be good, but now every doctor has many patients who live more than 15 years," she said.

However, Liao said the morbidity rate for male lung cancer patients is showing a slightly decreasing trend, while that of women remains stable, which means there is a greater focus on females.

Liao's father was a professor of electrical engineering at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and she had planned to follow in his footsteps. But after his death from an unexpected stroke, she decided to study medicine.

After graduating from medical school in 1957, Liao was assigned to the Shanghai Chest Hospital to work for the department of internal medicine. In the decades that followed, she became interested in lung cancer, an increasingly prevalent yet relatively neglected disease in the country at that time.

Feeling her professional knowledge to be insufficient, in the early 1980s, Liao, then nearly 50, applied to the World Health Organization for funding to study respiratory medicine at McMaster University in Canada.

After 14 months of intensive study, Liao returned to China in 1984. With her newly gained knowledge and skills, she became the first doctor in the country to propose a multidisciplinary diagnosis and treatment strategy for small cell lung cancer, and pioneered the comprehensive diagnosis and treatment of the disease in China. Moreover, she has published more than 200 papers in China and overseas.

"Liao is a responsible and persistent person. Every day she insists on reading CT slices that she doesn't need to", such as those of former patients collected for research purposes, said Jian Hong, a colleague of Liao for more than 30 years. "She uses them as resources for research and teaching young doctors."

Because of Liao's great contribution to lung cancer diagnosis and treatment, she has gained many titles, including honorary chairman of the China Society for Clinical Oncology's collaborative professionals committee and deputy director of the China Anti-Cancer Association's lung cancer professionals committee.

Yet she said none of the honors compares with seeing and treating patients: "I'll keep on helping patients as long as my physical condition allows," she added.

 

  

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