2026年5月1日 星期五

醫療的大逃亡:讓標準化手術重獲自由



醫療的大逃亡:讓標準化手術重獲自由

現在的 NHS(英國國家醫療服務)就像是一座蓋在「在製品」(WIP)沼澤上的宏偉大教堂。我們把病人變成了某種神聖的遺物——一種用來永久保存、供在排隊名單上的東西,而不是真正要去修好的物件。從進化論的角度來看,人類這種動物的天性是解決問題、然後繼續前行:狩獵、進食、休息。但現代官僚國家發明了第四個階段:排隊。

這種低效率的核心在於一種偏執:國家必須擁有手術室、手術刀,甚至外科醫生的靈魂。為什麼像髖關節置換或白內障手術這種「標準維護工程」,必須跟複雜的神經外科或急診創傷塞在同一個物流噩夢裡?這在商業模式上是徹底的失敗。在任何其他產業,標準化作業都會外包給專業的小型工廠,以追求產能極大化。

我們應該積極鼓勵——說白了就是砸錢誘惑——外科醫生脫離 NHS 那令人窒息的行政枷鎖,去開設私人、高效率的診所。給他們創業資金,讓他們把痔瘡、盲腸和磨損的關節手術通通帶走。當這些「標準程序」從巨型醫院的結構中剥離出來,它們就不再是官僚體制的障礙,而是流暢的生產線。

人性是由激勵和對自主權的渴望驅動的。一個被困在國家體制裡的醫生,有 40% 的時間在填表,60% 的時間在等病床清空。而在私人診所,他重新成為一名工匠。人性中那抹幽暗的真相告訴我們:只有當一個人在遊戲中擁有「切身利害」(skin in the game)和所有權感時,他的表現才會達到巔峰。

讓 NHS 繼續當那座守護罕見病、災難性傷病和無利可圖項目的堡壘。至於其他的,別再自欺欺人地認為國家壟斷是更換膝關節的最佳方式。是時候停止把病人當成倉庫裡的庫存,開始把他們當作需要快速、高效維修的生物機器了。


The Great Escape: Outsourcing the Meat and Potatoes of Medicine

 

The Great Escape: Outsourcing the Meat and Potatoes of Medicine

The National Health Service (NHS) is currently a magnificent cathedral built on a swamp of "Work in Process" (WIP). We have turned the patient into a holy relic—something to be preserved in a state of perpetual waiting, rather than something to be actually fixed. From an evolutionary standpoint, the human animal is designed to solve problems and move on. We hunt, we eat, we rest. But the modern bureaucratic state has invented a fourth stage: we queue.

At the heart of this inefficiency is the insistence that the state must own the theater, the scalpel, and the surgeon’s soul. Why must a routine hip replacement or a cataract surgery—essentially the "meat and potatoes" of standard maintenance—be clogged up in the same logistical nightmare as complex neurosurgery or emergency trauma? It is a failure of the business model. In any other industry, standard operations are outsourced to specialized "boutiques" to maximize throughput.

We should be actively encouraging—no, bribing—surgeons to leave the crushing weight of NHS administration and set up private, high-efficiency clinics. Give them the seed money. Let them take the hemorrhoids, the appendices, and the worn-out joints with them. By stripping these "standard procedures" away from the monolithic hospital structures, we transform them from bureaucratic hurdles into streamlined tasks.

Human nature is driven by incentives and the desire for autonomy. A surgeon trapped in a state system spends 40% of their time filling out forms and 60% waiting for a bed to clear. In a private clinic, they are a craftsman again. The darker side of our nature suggests that people only work at peak performance when they have skin in the game and a sense of ownership.

Let the NHS remain the fortress for the rare, the catastrophic, and the unprofitable. For everything else, let’s stop pretending that a state-run monopoly is the best way to swap a knee joint. It’s time to stop treating patients like inventory in a warehouse and start treating them like biological machines that need a quick, efficient tune-up.



候診室裡的死亡藝術:關於「在製品」的修煉



候診室裡的死亡藝術:關於「在製品」的修煉

歡迎來到國家醫療體系的現代奇蹟。在這裡,「在製品」(Work in Process)不僅僅是一個工業生產術語,它是一種病人的生活方式。在那些鋪著塑膠地板、充滿消毒水味的官僚長廊裡,人體被當作蘇聯拖拉機廠裡加工到一半的螺栓,接受著最具「邏輯性」的排隊處理。

從進化論的角度來看,人類的天性不是「戰」就是「逃」。然而,我們的醫療體系成功研發出第三種生物狀態:無限懸停。我們坐在硬塑膠椅上,在官僚體制的煉獄中動彈不得。我們的祖先靠著對即時威脅的反應存活,但現代國民必須學會壓抑那種討厭的生存本能。如果你為了等六個小時才見到醫生而抱怨,那被視為缺乏教養。畢竟,醫療是「免費」的,而在國家的眼裡,一旦你進入檢傷分類的隊列,你的時間成本就自動歸零。

候診室有一條不成文的鐵律:沈默是美德,忍耐是義務。你只是一個「在製品」單位,一個等待蓋章的數據。如果你竟敢為了持續攀升的高燒,或是為了那塊已經變成詭異紫色的「輕傷」發牢騷,你就是個麻煩製造者。這種管理哲學源於人性幽暗處的本能——對秩序的迷戀遠勝於對個體痛苦的緩解。

不過,想插隊還是有一張金牌通行證:大失血例外條款。除非你正以驚人的血紅蛋白產量裝飾著地板磁磚,否則你的哀鳴都只是背景噪音。這個系統是為了應對「毀滅」而設計的,不是為了緩解「不適」。這是一種對活人徵收的生物稅。我們用自然界那種殘酷而快速的死亡,換取了在候診室裡那種乾淨、緩慢的衰敗。所以,請坐好,喝口自動販賣機那杯難喝的咖啡,並記住:只要血還在血管裡流,你就在政府希望你在的位置。


The Art of Dying in the Waiting Room

 

The Art of Dying in the Waiting Room

Welcome to the modern miracle of the National Health Service, where "Work in Process" (WIP) isn't just a manufacturing term—it’s a lifestyle choice for the patient. In the hallowed, linoleum-floored corridors of state-managed care, the human body is treated with the same logistical efficiency as a semi-finished bolt in a Soviet tractor factory.

From an evolutionary standpoint, humans are wired for "fight or flight." However, the NHS has successfully engineered a third biological state: The Infinite Hover. We sit in plastic chairs, suspended in a purgatory of bureaucratic stasis. Our ancestors survived by responding to immediate threats, but the modern subject must learn to suppress those pesky survival instincts. To complain about a six-hour wait for a basic consultation is seen as a breach of social etiquette. After all, the system is free, and in the eyes of the state, your time has no market value once you enter the triage queue.

The unspoken rule of the waiting room is simple: silence is a virtue, and patience is mandatory. You are a unit of WIP, a statistic waiting for a timestamp. If you have the audacity to moan about your mounting fever or the fact that your "minor" injury has turned a fascinating shade of purple, you are branded a nuisance. The administrative philosophy here draws from a darker well of human nature—the desire for order over individual relief.

There is, however, one golden ticket to bypass the queue: The Exsanguination Exception. Unless you are actively decorating the floor tiles with an alarming volume of hemoglobin, your complaints are merely background noise. The system is designed to respond to the catastrophic, not the uncomfortable. It is a biological tax on the living. We have traded the harsh, violent reality of nature for a sanitized, slow-motion decline in a waiting room. So, sit back, enjoy the lukewarm vending machine coffee, and remember: as long as your blood stays inside your body, you are exactly where the government wants you to be.



象牙塔裡的晨間迷霧:誰弄丟了學生的鬧鐘?

 

象牙塔裡的晨間迷霧:誰弄丟了學生的鬧鐘?

在大學這個生態圈裡,「教授」是一種進化到可以完全無視生存環境的生物。這場助教與教授之間的鬧劇,完美示範了什麼叫做「寫在紙上的政策」與「不願面對的現實」。助教不過是履行那份被視為聖經的課程大綱(Syllabus),教授卻在那裡大發雷霆,這景象實在荒謬得可愛。

這本質上是一場生物性與社會性的錯位。教授成長於那個「出席」等同於「獲取稀缺資訊」的年代,他把早上的導修課視為一種道德修養。在他眼中,學生是渴望被灌溉的容器;但在現代學生的眼裡,他們是追求多巴胺效率與睡眠保存的演化產物。如果一個佔分極低的題目需要讀完一整本書,人類的本能會告訴他:這筆買賣不划算。我們天生會節省能量,如果長毛象的肉是爛的,獵人是不會出發的。

當助教呈上那十六個「逃兵」名單時,教授的驚訝暴露了他的離地。他還守著那套舊時代的商業模式,以為大學壟斷了知識與聲望。他忘記了,現代學生正處於失眠與「心理健康」危機中——這不過是人類試圖在高壓、高期待卻回報遞減的現代環境中生存時,所產生的古老壓力反應。

教授責備助教「擅自」發出警告,不過是為了維護自己的虛榮心。他想要規則帶來的權威,卻不想承擔執行規則時被學生討厭的社會成本。他想當課堂上慈悲的神,而讓助教去當那個收稅的惡棍。這是一場憤世嫉俗的舞蹈:大綱承諾了紀律,現實卻交付了冷漠。而教授繼續在太空漂浮,納悶為什麼這屆年輕人不願為了那些連他自己講起來都可能覺得乏味的課程而起床。


The Ivory Tower’s Morning Breath

 

The Ivory Tower’s Morning Breath

In the ecosystem of higher education, the "Professor" is a creature that has successfully evolved to ignore the environment that sustains it. We see this play out in the comedic tragedy of a TA trying to enforce a syllabus that the Professor treats like a sacred text—until it actually has to be read.

The conflict here is a classic study in biological and social mismatch. The Professor, likely formed in a competitive era where "showing up" was the only way to access guarded information, views a tutorial at 9:00 AM as a moral test. To him, the student is a vessel waiting to be filled. To the student—a modern hominid optimized for dopamine efficiency and sleep conservation—a five-point question based on a 400-page reading is a poor return on investment. Humans are naturally designed to conserve energy; we do not hunt mammoths if the meat is rotten.

When the TA presented a list of sixteen "defectors," the Professor’s shock revealed his detachment. He is operating on an outdated business model where the university holds a monopoly on prestige. He forgets that today's students are navigating a world of chronic insomnia and "mental health" crises—modern labels for the ancient stress of living in a high-density, high-expectation environment that offers diminishing rewards.

By scolding the TA for "warning" the students, the Professor is merely protecting his own ego. He wants the authority of the rules without the social cost of enforcing them. He wants to be the benevolent god of the lecture hall, while the TA is cast as the heartless tax collector. It is a cynical dance: the syllabus promises discipline, the reality delivers apathy, and the Professor remains comfortably adrift in outer space, wondering why the youth of today won't wake up for a lecture that even he would likely find tedious if he weren't the one talking.




恐懼的等級:一場名為「警覺」的集體演出

 

恐懼的等級:一場名為「警覺」的集體演出

英國政府向來喜歡用一種近乎氣象預報的冷靜,來替我們的末日感進行分類。目前,國家恐怖主義威脅級別被定為「嚴重」(Severe)。在官方語言中,這代表攻擊「極有可能發生」。但在一個憤世嫉俗的觀察者眼中,這更像是一場由國家主導的心理制約實驗。

人類的天性極其有趣。身為那隻褪去了毛髮的「裸猿」,我們之所以能在原始草原生存至今,全靠對草叢中任何風吹草動的過度反應。如今,草原變成了水泥鑄就的轉運站,而草叢間的聲響則成了垃圾桶旁一個「無人認領的包裹」。政府一邊貼上「嚴重」的標籤,一邊叮囑我們要「保持冷靜」,這套心理戰術玩得爐火純青:他們希望你保持足夠的警覺,好充當國家的免費監視器;但又不希望你驚慌到不敢去購物中心消費。

從歷史的角度看,統治者總擅長利用「外部敵人」的幻影來收緊控制權。無論是羅馬時代對「門口野蠻人」的恐懼,還是冷戰時期諱莫如深的警告,其運作邏輯如出一轍:維持一種低度發燒般的焦慮感。這種焦慮為車站裡厚底警靴的巡邏提供了正當性,也讓我們默許了對隱私的層層剝繭。我們用一小片自由,去換取一加侖虛幻的安全感——這是國家經營了數千年的老牌商業模式。

人性中更幽暗的一面告訴我們,其實大眾在潛意識裡渴求這種敘事。它為平庸乏味的週二通勤增添了一抹電影般的張力。我們打量著車廂裡的乘客,在心裡玩起「尋找威脅」的遊戲,那一刻,我們不再是枯燥的上班族,而是業餘的情報官。

官方建議我們要「警覺而不驚慌」。這是一個優美的語言悖論,就像叫你坐在釘床上,卻又要保證皮膚不被刺破。我的建議是:留意陰影,保持幽默,並永遠記住——在歷史的長河中,房間裡最危險的東西通常不是那個沒人管的提包,而是那個拿著夾板、教導你該如何感受恐懼的人。