It's entirely possible. Generally speaking, although fresh graduates receive a lot of knowledge and education, but with the real production is still very out of touch. Especially in the medical industry, the industry itself is determined to be a highly technical industry that requires a long period of accumulation and experience. The college students who just went there, including myself, can't do anything, my first year is completely the company to raise me, because it's too complicated, a lot of things need to learn, and I've been doing it for almost 2 years before I can slowly figure it out. I think Wan Dong is quite good like this, it is more nurturing, so as not to do a lot of more complicated work right out of the gate, which makes college students very impatient.
Our company does the same thing, and the engineering students who just came in go to work in the workshop for a year, and then they are deployed in the department according to their performance and personal interests. I graduated with a master's degree and worked in after-sales service for almost three years before moving to a R&D position.