However, I don't think it means you have to go to a big hospital. In fact, some small hospitals even say that small clinics are very reliable. Let me give you an example from high school. I didn't go to high school in my hometown city, but went to other places. Once, I didn't know what happened to the food in our high school cafeteria. Many students vomited and had stomachaches after eating it.
Our school is in the urban area, close to the city hospital, and there is also a small clinic near the school. Some students choose to go to a big hospital, while others choose to go to a small clinic. I had the same symptoms when I ate the food in the canteen, and then I went to the city hospital with my classmates, and then I had a blood test and found out that it was food poisoning that caused gastroenteritis. I prescribed a bunch of medicine, and I'll be fine when I get back. As a result, my stomach began to feel uncomfortable at night, and then I had a fever. The teacher sent me directly to the small clinic. The doctor in the clinic knocked on my stomach and then prescribed some medicine for me to go back and eat. As a result, I was really much better after I went back to take medicine, and I was basically better the next day.
Later, I heard from other students that the doctors in this small clinic are quite famous and treat diseases very badly. I'm not saying that what can be cured in a small clinic can't be cured in a big hospital. Doctors in the clinic will also tell other patients that you'd better go to the hospital for treatment, and the effect here may not be good. I just want to say that everyone's illness is different, and not all diseases have to go to a big hospital. It is better to think about how to maintain or restore health more effectively.