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报告翻译问题



To be fair yeah.
Strip heat? Stripe hat?
I did.
No. (Doesn't matter if they're real or imaginary, there.)
From... what perspective?
I've interacted with literal "axe-murderers" who just also happened to be psychotic, too. (The one I'm thinking about was not longer particularly dangerous, but... Nobody working in an environment like that ever, ever, makes that assumption about anyone. Never. Not even once. Because that's when "it" will happen.)
The "scariest" patient I've ever interacted with declared themself both Jesus and the Antichrist, at the same time. He wasn't big enough to be a serious threat to a healthy man, but... again, one never assumes that.
The most demonstrated "scary" one was one the med students on their psychiatric rotation were advised about, but they ignored that advice since they "knew everything about everything, already." Sensible, right? /sigh That one escaped after beating the snot out of their assigned med student when she took him outside to sit on a bench. The student was hospitalized and did not return.
The most scary "looking" one was not truly scary, just troubled and mildly retarded. He directly intervened and saved the life of a night-shift employee who was about to be killed by a patient that successfully snuck up on them.
(He looked like this guy: https://media2.fdncms.com/pittsburgh/imager/u/original/16101845/plan-9-from-outer-space-1959-3.jpg )
From the perspective of a patient stabilized on their medication and able to give a more-or-less rational testimony? Yes. As terrifying as it can get, in some cases. Though, some have experiences that are only seen that way afterwards.
From the perspective of what a patient "should" feel who is undergoing treatment? No. They shouldn't feel that way at all in an appropriate setting with appropriate help and treatment.