In Vietnamese culture, the word "Dong" (Unity/Togetherness) evokes a spirit of solidarity, a shared pulse once immortalized by President Ho Chi Minh: "Our people, remember the word 'Dong' / Common will, common strength, common heart, common alliance." It is the echo of the "Dong A Spirit"-the unyielding consensus of the Tran Dynasty.
Today, in an era where machines achieve flawless precision, AI predicts complications, and clinical protocols are born from Big Data, we still collide with an ancient, unanswered question: Who can cure fear?
The Story: Beyond the Sterile Blade"Empathy" (Đồng Cảm) confronts that question head-on. Through a stark yet compassionate "real-life" narrative, the book explores the thin, trembling line between technical mastery and human connection.
The central figure, Dr. Khoa, enters the story like a perfect surgical "machine" precise, sterile, and silent. His world is disrupted by two patients from opposite poles of existence:
Mr. Luc: A man of power who refuses to accept the uncertainty of the human body, demanding: "I pay for certainty."
An: A quiet soul carrying wounds that go deeper than the skin-a silent struggle with self-stigma and the yearning for a gender-affirming journey where the body finally matches the name.
Between them lies the threshold of Empathy: a boundary Dr. Khoa must cross, or risk seeing his surgical brilliance become meaningless in the face of a patient's terror.
The Intersection of Medicine and DignityThe book painstakingly recreates the hospital atmosphere as it truly is: the cold glare of LED lights, the sharp scent of iodine, the rhythmic beep of monitors, and the rigid discipline of "time-in and time-out."
But beneath the "textbook" surface, "Empathy" opens a crossroads where psychology, gender identity, the right to health, and human dignity meet. From the humble "Breathing Corner" in the hallway to the profound simplicity of asking: "What are you most afraid of?" and "If you felt a little better, what would you do first?"-this book demonstrates that quality healthcare is not merely about biological survival, but about reclaiming the soul.