Thiis is a custom tab.
Electronic laryngeal speaker:
Can quickly restore language function and chat with family and friends.
Comfortable feel
Close to real person pronunciation
Support old for new
Suitable for:
Patients who cannot speak and pronounce due to complete head removal after surgery
Patients with hemi-laryngectomy who have half of their throat removed and speak very softly
Patients with organ removal who have vocal cord compression and damage caused by acquired causes Patients with vocal cord removal
Patients who have undergone tracheotomy
Easy to operate and use
Audio volume can be freely controlled
Audio volume can be freely adjusted to make communication barrier-free
Long-lasting battery life and long-lasting experience without worrying about going out
Large-capacity battery life, say goodbye to power worries, no longer affected by power outages.
The public believes that medical malpractice is caused by the incompetence of certain doctors, a sentiment echoed by lawyers and the media. However, this is not entirely accurate. Medical errors occur frequently, and every doctor is susceptible to making mistakes; we just rarely witness these errors firsthand, leading to misunderstandings. When errors happen, we prefer to think of them as anomalies. A few years ago, on a winter Friday at 2 AM, I was dressed in surgical scrubs and gloves, making an incision on the abdomen of a teenager who had been stabbed during a fight. At that moment, my pager went off. "Trauma, 3 minutes!" the nurse in the operating room loudly read from my pager. This meant that an ambulance was about to bring in another trauma patient. As the surgical resident on duty in the emergency room, I had to be present when the patient arrived. I left the operating table and took off my scrubs. The two other surgeons—attending physician Benson and the chief resident—continued to manage the wound on the patient on the table. They were supposed to supervise me with the incoming trauma patient, but they couldn't leave at that moment. Benson, who was 42 and appeared quite stern, scrutinized me as I walked toward the door and said, "If you run into any trouble, just call us; one of us will come help you." And indeed, I encountered trouble. In recounting this story, I have modified some details (including names) to protect the patient, my colleagues, and myself, but I will remain as true to the facts as possible. The emergency room was one floor above the operating room, and I hurried up there in a few quick steps. When I arrived, the emergency room nurse was just wheeling in the patient. She was a woman in her thirties, weighing over 90 kilograms, lying motionless on the stretcher with her eyes closed and her face pale, blood continuously flowing from her nostrils. 1\an electrolarynx,an electrolarynx comfortable feel ,an electrolarynx large-capacity battery life
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