@@FutureDeep Yeah,, except the guy in this episode was an undercover cop who had been working on this major bust for months and months away from his family and it's why he needed to get back so fast. He needed to provide the details of exactly where and when this major deal was going to take place and it's why he left and asked to be discharged. The major deal was supposed to be within the next few days so he really COULDN'T be in the hospital and needed to be out! The problem was he did actually have a conscience about doing bad things to good people.
It's what happens when you get a hack doctor in amongst real ones, you don't get paid as much. Foreman was just a diversity hire and an incompetent moron
@@just-tess maybe if you are a sickko like us who watched at least a 100 hours of House and know the characters and the tricks even if you haven`t seen a specific episode...
This is probably the best team in the show. Foreman and Chase returning and Thirteen and Taub still around as well. Though I was never a fan of Thirteen and Foreman together
House: “This is Dr. Chase. You may think your friends are scary but this man killed the dictator of a foreign nation and risked a war just because he wanted to. Your life will be in his hands now. Well, I’m going to leave you two alone now.”
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
Next time, 1 idea per paragraph, blank lines between paragraphs. Blocks of text are hard to read. Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.
I was in the hospital for a week. If they had the results of a test sooner, I could have been out on Friday….the doctor had the weekend off so I had to wait until Monday. This guy has five doctors on call 24/7. Must be nice….
Yea it would have taken my grandma an eternity to get emergency dialysis and then another surgery to implant the permanent dialysis thingy like several days the only reason she got it so fast was bc the dr was also taiwanese so he came in early to help her. I mean i get it. Drs are busy and the entire hospital is usually understaffed except for the administrators (yay more money for them) but its defs panic inducing to think abt the hospital bills stacking up as u just lay there like u could have been doing in hr own home.
@@catrice1296 Hospital bills stacking up? Wait times? I heard that wait times were only a thing that happened in countries with universal healthcare, you're telling me you deal with long wait times AND have to pay bills after treatment? Thats actually wild.
@@connorbranscombe6819First off, you don’t know what he was in the hospital for. Second, you don’t know the size of the hospital. Third, you don’t know why the doctor had the weekend off. Fourth, test results take as long as they take because chemicals & labs don’t know how long someone is waiting. Fifth, what you’re not paying in healthcare, you’re paying in taxes. Sixth, you’re a stupid child and trying to Strawman-argue your way into proving something no one asked about. Shut up already.
Hey, I was born one day late 'caues the doctor's shift was about to end when my mother was starting to go in labor, so they just pumped her with hormones to delay the labor, if you ask me, you got off easy JKJK
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 ...relax. I'm in on the comment outlining the joke plot from the show. I'm just offering third party social commentary on how they went meta with it. To speak in your terms, " ??? Why are YOU commenting so angrily towards me? It's called English nuance and subtext"
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 I apologize. I noticed you mentioned you're from Ukraine in a different comment. I admire how well you speak English, and I didn't intend to condescend towards you since you're multilingual. My apologies.
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
@@chitlitlahyeah but medical malpractice, which lead to his wife and his team almost being fired. He then made two of them lie to the board, a judge and his wife about it. He then kept it a secret from his wife, and emotionally cheated on her with booze. The warlord also used the same logic this cop just did though, he did bad things to good people for the good of his people. To the warlord he was saving his people. To the cop hes saving the public. House wants to know is killing off hundrends of people who were in the warlords eyes causing suffering to his people is similar to intentionally harming innocent people just to make an arrest?
I totally loved this series,, I binge watched it last year free online, but some episodes were just not available no matter how hard I tried, and I also worked out that some of the episodes were mixed up. Nevertheless I still totally loved it!!
So he used a beta-block antihipertensive to cease his physical anxiety symptoms because it blocks peripheral sympathetic response, however stopping abruptly the medication caused a hypertension even tho he doesnt has hypertension
Depending on how long he'd been taking the drugs, his body could have developed tolerance to them, leading to increasing dosage to counter the tolerance. That is even more likely seeing as he'd been taking them for contra-indicated usage that likely requires supra-clinical doses. Stopping abruptly would then trigger withdrawal symptoms, as his body's used to fighting beta-blockers to maintain normal BP.
It is interesting that a hardened criminal still has guilt over doing terrible things to other people. Doesn’t make his actions or himself sympathetic, but I’d like to think there are others out there who can and want to change.
I worked as a physician in an inner city Milwaukee hospital and this basically happened to me at least half a dozen times. Usually an ICU patient with uncontrolled diabetes checking themselves out as soon as they were awake because they had some "bidness" to take care of. Probably at the local park or parking lot
Man, there’s 8 seasons of this show. And this is the episode I ALWAYS go back to watch. It’s the most meaningful and deep episode, especially with Ethan Embry as the guest star! LOVE this episode 🙏🏼
Always love looking at things through a fantasy lens in a world where our healthcare system cares about patient outcomes instead of maximizing profits. We can always dream I guess since somehow people aren't all convinced that this is better than our current system.
“Sure my kids are suffering under this system, but imagine maybe having some my taxes go to those undeserving liberal poors” Envy and fear are powerful voter motivators that pharma and insurance lobbyist exploit
@@theman13451unlike in America, where insurance companies decide who can afford to live. I thought life was a right but apparently that's just words on a page. Stupid whataboutism just shows how, well, stupid you are.
Yeah, having the government run things will totally make humans less greedy and self-interested. And I'm sure trying to sue a government doctor for malpractice will go swimmingly.
I loved how he called Chase out: "you're not going to put a pillow over his face, right?" Chase has personal scruples that allow him to violate boundaries with minor and kill patients, making him a very dangerous physician. It's why Cameron leaves him.
@@lightdarksoul2097 Foreman's meeting with Cutty was a ploy and he basically knew he was being played so he played them right back and won btw. He got them all to admit it was a ploy and then he got a raise because they all had bet or promised part of their salaries and that was the deal he made with Cutty, not that he went and asked for a raise like everyone thought he would. He went to cutty and basically said "If i can play them into giving up part of their salaries to me will you sign off on it? and she said "yes" and he did.
4:40 I only just clocked onto this: If he sleeps where they keep their stash, to find out about the possible environmental causes, House would be sending them to a possible drug dealer or gang's hideout and storage room. Where they could be keeping and maybe guarding thousands or millions of dollars in illegal substances.
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
@@WarGrowlmon18 Ah, well I was under the assumption the guy was part of some gang and to tail him, they'd have to follow him to a stronghold of kinds where if they even tried breaking in they'd have probably been shot
@@potato1341He WAS a drug dealer and so was the guy with him, but this guy was an undercover cop working to bring them down. The other guy actually took a MASSIVE risk trying to help 13 check out the drug den for a possible source of the guy's illness. When the dealer and 13 got caught, she just pretended to be a prostitute or something like that and they got away with it. That was actually one of the sad things about the ending aside from the guy dying: his friend got busted along with everyone else. Mickey (which as it turns out isn't even his real name, we never learn what it is by the way) had a choice where he could've sent the other guy to the bust or let him stay at the hospital and avoid it. He did his job, but there was clear conflict on his face, especially after the guy took such a huge risk for him. Before sending his friend, Mickey apologized to him I believe. When the friend got busted, you could tell that he figured out what had happened and he was devastated.
What I like about this is that it does raise an important question in medical ethics. I'm not a doctor, but I do know that if you show up at the ER with a knife wound or a bullet wound, the cops get involved, even if you really don't want them to. The hospital is required to report these sorts of injuries to law enforcement. However, if someone is seriously wounded, but is a criminal or an undocumented immigrant, they may avoid seeking treatment because they know that the police will be called to investigate the situation. If that's the case, they may not survive or may attempt to treat it themselves, worsening the situation. So what do you do in a situation like that? Is it more valuable to treat the patient and not inform the police because patients that would have died or suffered severe issues from trying to treat these things themselves are more likely to come to the hospital, or is it better to report these wounds to law enforcement so that criminals that caused those wounds can be dealt with before they harm someone in the future?
Worked at a Belgian ER, can't speak for other countries' laws but it's actually not at all obligated to inform the police UNLESS you as the ER worker actually witnessed a criminal offence OR you have proof/high suspicion of danger for a third party. Another lawfull exception is suspicion of sexual abuse of non-adults. If somebody walks into the ER with a knife or a bullet in his body and he says he did it himself and it was an accident, strictly speaking you have to take his word for it and are not allowed to call in the cops as long if he does not show any agression there. Same with the stereotypical black eyed wife caused by doorframes etc.. Now when are you obligated? If your ambulance picks up a robber after a heist because the cashier knocked him out, if someone proclaims he will shoot the one who shot him,threatens the staff or minors are involved. Now this ofcourse, is the theory. In practice, usually the local cops will show up by themselves and already be aware a crime has been comitted. As long as they don't hinder any medical procedure in any way, they can do their job even in a packed ER. "suspicion of danger for a third party" also can be interpreted very broadly as long as the police plays along (which ofcourse they always did because in a small city like mine they usually were on first name terms with the ER staff). And yes, a fair amount of very coincidental anonymous calls reach the police department on the exact time when kids that "fell of the stairs for the third time in a month" are brought in (insert comparable situation). One wink and a free coffee for the local patrol that just so happened to check up on the ER those days... Now to be clear, this type of ...let's call it "ethical cheating" can still be risky business and will ofcourse only happen when doctors join in on your crystal clear suspicion. In general, the knowledge of how somebody ends up in the ER serves only one purpose: To be able to treat him better. Wether it's a legal or illegal cause is in general, neither the ER's problem or responsibillity
Literally clicked on this because, seeing the thumbnail, I immediately knew this was Ethan Embry!!!!!! My big middle school actor crush 🥰 "SHOPLIIIIFTEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRR"
3:07 How come 13 is making more money than Foreman, she joined the team late and I suppose Foreman helped more in differentials with his knowledge and wit.
A beta blocker to relieve symptoms of stress - that's a new one for me. Though if diabetics are also on beta blockers, they have to be careful because the blockers mask the stress symptoms of hypoglycemia and the diabetics won't realize they are in trouble with low blood sugar.
His vertigo is specifically triggered by auditory stimulus, so the impact of the cane against the exam bed is loud and sudden enough to cause the faint.
I got put on beta blockers about 3 weeks ago as my doctor said they would help with my migraines. Since I started taking them my migraines have been concentrated above and behind my right eye and I'm having constant migraines that don't get better, just continue 24/7 Is that supposed to happen?
No, it's not. It's impossible to tell what's wrong with you over a UA-cam comment chain, but I would recommend the same thing Fierce said: get another doctor to examine you, make sure you mention the first attempted treatment and what changed since.
I have taken beta blockers (in this case, Inderal) for 35 years and since being prescribed them have never had a full blown migraine since. I do sometimes get the aura that proceeds the migraine, but no migraine follows. I'm not a doc and you shouldn't follow any advice, with the exception that you should revisit your doc and see if the meds need to be adjusted or stopped. I'm sorry you are going through this.
You go back to the moment you were born when you die, you forget it all and the shape of time persists like a sun-bleached stone on the sterile moon @@Deangirl86
💊 drugs unregulated Usually there’s 2 things ☠️ death Or, incarceration. 🤷♂️ However though we are primitive humans we make mistakes Breakthroughs are rare an dangerous also
I used to work in a hospital that had an anesthesiologist that would withhold pain meds during surgical procedures on drug dealers BUT use the appropriate paralytic agents as his unique form of payback. I had a hard time deciding who was more twisted him or the drug dealers. But then again they’re one and the same I guess but one is sanctioned the other isn’t.
Jesus Christ. I'm not saying that your coworker was morally wrong, but that could've gotten them into a world of legal trouble if not costing them the ability to do their job in any First World countries.
@WinstonSmithGPT no, I said that I wasn't saying it. Mostly because if OP supported what their coworker was doing, I wouldn't have to deal with their angry and possibly threat-laden response, since that's pretty much all the discourse online anymore and I just do not have the time.
“So he’s dangerous and withholding which you find irresistible but guys like that…they never call” 😂 man I love Thirteen and House’s interactions
Wilson calls! 😂
"if you don't get this checked out this will happen again"
"What"
*Smacks cane*
*Faints*.
"Cool"
Chase nervously chuckling about the pillow 😅
Hahahaha. Murder... Good times.
This was after the murder of the dictator?
@@FutureDeep Yeah,, except the guy in this episode was an undercover cop who had been working on this major bust for months and months away from his family and it's why he needed to get back so fast. He needed to provide the details of exactly where and when this major deal was going to take place and it's why he left and asked to be discharged. The major deal was supposed to be within the next few days so he really COULDN'T be in the hospital and needed to be out! The problem was he did actually have a conscience about doing bad things to good people.
Two sides to every story 🙏🏽
@@FutureDeep ... Sounds like something Mark Normand would say. :-)
"Did Cameron get your hair in the divorce?" 🤣🤣🤣
savage lol
"but were doctors all the timeee its soo boring 😞"
"Fineee😞"
I enjoyed the remark too 😂
Ohhhhhh SNAP!
Chase: No just me nuts mate.
Foreman slowly realizing he is underpaid in this is hilarious
Joke is, he wasn't. Everyone else was in on it.
It's what happens when you get a hack doctor in amongst real ones, you don't get paid as much. Foreman was just a diversity hire and an incompetent moron
yeah the wristwatch made it painfully obvious it was a setup
@@just-tess maybe if you are a sickko like us who watched at least a 100 hours of House and know the characters and the tricks even if you haven`t seen a specific episode...
@@camillosteussIndeed, it was just a watch to me. I need to get down with the House sickness
House’s “cool” in the clinic always gets me
I'm unsure if his reaction is part surprise that it worked.
If he runs just clap your hands really loud
House saying "Cool" always an Epic moment
'guy's probably late to a stabbing'😂😂😂😂😂😂
and then a few seconds later… “13’s middle name is beauregard?!?”
I like the sarcastic "or you could walk away with a tumor in your ear".
This is probably the best team in the show. Foreman and Chase returning and Thirteen and Taub still around as well. Though I was never a fan of Thirteen and Foreman together
House: “This is Dr. Chase. You may think your friends are scary but this man killed the dictator of a foreign nation and risked a war just because he wanted to. Your life will be in his hands now. Well, I’m going to leave you two alone now.”
That is the sort of thing House would say. 😂😂😂
Chase was based
@@Ave_Satana666fucking loved Dr. Chase, always glad to have him around.
🤣🤣🤣
What was the timestamp? Didn't see it in the video
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
The storyline of this episode is easily one of the best, and the end scene with Maggot Brain playing is just heartbreaking.
Cameron got your hair in the divorce😂😂
🤣🤣
My fav episodes were the few where he was allowed to showcase his immense talent as a musician and a singer.
Seriously!!! He's extremely talented, and I like his English accent coming through.
@@Snowstorm3176 He did a movie called The Gatherers. Until I saw it, I didn't even realize he was British.
@@PaulaDautremontoh dear.
Watch black adder.
"But we're doctors all the time it's so boring!"
The writers speaking through the characters right there.
I really like when house does something kinda weird and it works and than he says cool
'Guys like that - They never call.'
Speaking from experience, Dr. Hadley?
She is the guy like that
shut up lady
Dr. Remy Beauregard Hadley :)
Yes, that's... part of the joke 🤦
He's a fainting goat😂😂😂😂
Next time, 1 idea per paragraph, blank lines between paragraphs. Blocks of text are hard to read.
Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you
as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not
be afraid.
Only one way to test that... Thirteen?
@@veramae4098Bro what
1:07 sometimes I find it funny to imagine what if House is wrong. Like what if bro just stayed standing instead of falling lmfao
🤣🤣🤣
I feel the conversation would just go like. "Hmm, I was sure that was going to work. Carry on then."
Oh, Hugh. You'll always be the Prince of Wales to me.
Was he at one point?
@@b2kzangelalwayz Black Adder. BBC. Back when we rode mastadons to work.
or Bertie Wooster. Avoiding his terrifying aunts.
@@MegaLilJenhodey-odey-oh, sir.
You gotta joke about your last murder 😂
Well, I mean, if you can’t joke about that, then what CAN you joke about? 🤷♀️🤣
2:25 "briefcase full of ee-legal drugs"
"HOW MUCH DO YOU WANT FOR THE EE-LEGAL NARCOTICS?"
"A HALF A MILLION DOLLARS!"
Lmao 🤣
@@mason96575 I'm impressed how many people got that reference :D
I was in the hospital for a week. If they had the results of a test sooner, I could have been out on Friday….the doctor had the weekend off so I had to wait until Monday.
This guy has five doctors on call 24/7. Must be nice….
Your experience wouldn’t have made for a very intriguing hour-long show.
Yea it would have taken my grandma an eternity to get emergency dialysis and then another surgery to implant the permanent dialysis thingy like several days the only reason she got it so fast was bc the dr was also taiwanese so he came in early to help her. I mean i get it. Drs are busy and the entire hospital is usually understaffed except for the administrators (yay more money for them) but its defs panic inducing to think abt the hospital bills stacking up as u just lay there like u could have been doing in hr own home.
@@catrice1296 Hospital bills stacking up? Wait times? I heard that wait times were only a thing that happened in countries with universal healthcare, you're telling me you deal with long wait times AND have to pay bills after treatment? Thats actually wild.
@@connorbranscombe6819First off, you don’t know what he was in the hospital for. Second, you don’t know the size of the hospital. Third, you don’t know why the doctor had the weekend off. Fourth, test results take as long as they take because chemicals & labs don’t know how long someone is waiting. Fifth, what you’re not paying in healthcare, you’re paying in taxes. Sixth, you’re a stupid child and trying to Strawman-argue your way into proving something no one asked about. Shut up already.
Hey, I was born one day late 'caues the doctor's shift was about to end when my mother was starting to go in labor, so they just pumped her with hormones to delay the labor, if you ask me, you got off easy JKJK
human version of a fainting goat 😂😂😂
This show started running out of ideas rather early 😆
@@mason96575 ??? The comment was praising the joke, what are YOU talking about?
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 ...relax. I'm in on the comment outlining the joke plot from the show. I'm just offering third party social commentary on how they went meta with it.
To speak in your terms,
" ??? Why are YOU commenting so angrily towards me? It's called English nuance and subtext"
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 I apologize. I noticed you mentioned you're from Ukraine in a different comment. I admire how well you speak English, and I didn't intend to condescend towards you since you're multilingual. My apologies.
I've been binge watching these, and I hate it because I never see the ending. But I can't stop.
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
"He's probably late to a stabbing"
Underrated line
The best part of this episode is the very end when Maggot Brain plays
2:14 "So now he's not just a drug dealer, he's a cocaine dealer" Ummm
"He seemed peppy."
'Unlawful patient," I think you mean criminal.
Atleast we know his ears are okay.
That laugh that chase did is some how unnerving considering what he has done
I figured it was nervous laughter in front of the patient not that he actually found it funny
Yea nervous laughter I agree.
What has he done? Stopped a ruthless dictator from committing genocide?
@@chitlitlahyeah but medical malpractice, which lead to his wife and his team almost being fired. He then made two of them lie to the board, a judge and his wife about it. He then kept it a secret from his wife, and emotionally cheated on her with booze.
The warlord also used the same logic this cop just did though, he did bad things to good people for the good of his people.
To the warlord he was saving his people. To the cop hes saving the public. House wants to know is killing off hundrends of people who were in the warlords eyes causing suffering to his people is similar to intentionally harming innocent people just to make an arrest?
Why is that unnerving? I'm curious.
I totally loved this series,, I binge watched it last year free online, but some episodes were just not available no matter how hard I tried, and I also worked out that some of the episodes were mixed up. Nevertheless I still totally loved it!!
Where'd you watch it
Amazon Prime got all of it! At least in Brazil
@pipipopop As of September 2024, it is available gratis on US Prime gratis, too.
So he used a beta-block antihipertensive to cease his physical anxiety symptoms because it blocks
peripheral sympathetic response, however stopping abruptly the medication caused a hypertension even tho he doesnt has hypertension
Depending on how long he'd been taking the drugs, his body could have developed tolerance to them, leading to increasing dosage to counter the tolerance. That is even more likely seeing as he'd been taking them for contra-indicated usage that likely requires supra-clinical doses. Stopping abruptly would then trigger withdrawal symptoms, as his body's used to fighting beta-blockers to maintain normal BP.
It is interesting that a hardened criminal still has guilt over doing terrible things to other people. Doesn’t make his actions or himself sympathetic, but I’d like to think there are others out there who can and want to change.
@@matthewriley7826 He actually had a conscience because, spoilers, he was really an undercover cop.
I worked as a physician in an inner city Milwaukee hospital and this basically happened to me at least half a dozen times. Usually an ICU patient with uncontrolled diabetes checking themselves out as soon as they were awake because they had some "bidness" to take care of. Probably at the local park or parking lot
The way you spelled business says everything 😂
Cool story lady
Can’t fault their work ethic.
yeah it says (thinly veiled) racism and good thing they don't work in 'inner city' Mwakee anymore
2:49 "Penises look good" - Dr. Foreman
1:10 house went so fast you can’t even see him hit them 😮
3:13 "You guys are getting paid?"
Man, there’s 8 seasons of this show. And this is the episode I ALWAYS go back to watch. It’s the most meaningful and deep episode, especially with Ethan Embry as the guest star! LOVE this episode 🙏🏼
Always love looking at things through a fantasy lens in a world where our healthcare system cares about patient outcomes instead of maximizing profits. We can always dream I guess since somehow people aren't all convinced that this is better than our current system.
“Sure my kids are suffering under this system, but imagine maybe having some my taxes go to those undeserving liberal poors” Envy and fear are powerful voter motivators that pharma and insurance lobbyist exploit
Well you can always do socialized healthcare.. did wonders in Venezuela and in Canada where they have death panels
@@theman13451unlike in America, where insurance companies decide who can afford to live. I thought life was a right but apparently that's just words on a page. Stupid whataboutism just shows how, well, stupid you are.
Yeah, having the government run things will totally make humans less greedy and self-interested. And I'm sure trying to sue a government doctor for malpractice will go swimmingly.
@@theman13451 no they don't have death panels ya jackalope, omg, the things people like you will type...
"but were doctors all the time sO bOriNg"
I loved how he called Chase out: "you're not going to put a pillow over his face, right?" Chase has personal scruples that allow him to violate boundaries with minor and kill patients, making him a very dangerous physician. It's why Cameron leaves him.
Nothing better than hearing House say "Cool."
Foreman is PISSED hahaha
Yo foreman being screwed over on his pay is messed up
House set it up and that's why Foreman had the meeting with Cutty. No one else was making that much, they all wanted Foreman to think they were.
@@blackdandelion5549 ahh smart
@@lightdarksoul2097 Foreman's meeting with Cutty was a ploy and he basically knew he was being played so he played them right back and won btw. He got them all to admit it was a ploy and then he got a raise because they all had bet or promised part of their salaries and that was the deal he made with Cutty, not that he went and asked for a raise like everyone thought he would. He went to cutty and basically said "If i can play them into giving up part of their salaries to me will you sign off on it? and she said "yes" and he did.
@@blackdandelion5549 gotta love the group. They may argue a lot but love to screw each other over some
@@blackdandelion5549Cuddy, not Cutty
but yeah
Badass House moment of the day. 1:10
Forman is off looking for a raise
4:40 I only just clocked onto this: If he sleeps where they keep their stash, to find out about the possible environmental causes, House would be sending them to a possible drug dealer or gang's hideout and storage room. Where they could be keeping and maybe guarding thousands or millions of dollars in illegal substances.
He was actually an undercover cop and a good man. And the other guy took a huge risk trying to help 13 save his friend. I remember the ending of the episode where he sends his friend to be busted, but you could tell that he was sorry for it at least a little bit and the other guy realized the truth as he was being arrested. But ultimately there was nothing that the doctors could do for him: the guy had some rare genetic condition that was causing him bleeds that would eventually kill him and it did. He was probably already terminal by the time that he got to the hospital, although those pills that he was taking had actually been unknowingly treating it a bit. All that they could do for him in the end was get him to call his family to be by his side in the end.
@@WarGrowlmon18 Ah, well I was under the assumption the guy was part of some gang and to tail him, they'd have to follow him to a stronghold of kinds where if they even tried breaking in they'd have probably been shot
@@potato1341He WAS a drug dealer and so was the guy with him, but this guy was an undercover cop working to bring them down. The other guy actually took a MASSIVE risk trying to help 13 check out the drug den for a possible source of the guy's illness. When the dealer and 13 got caught, she just pretended to be a prostitute or something like that and they got away with it. That was actually one of the sad things about the ending aside from the guy dying: his friend got busted along with everyone else. Mickey (which as it turns out isn't even his real name, we never learn what it is by the way) had a choice where he could've sent the other guy to the bust or let him stay at the hospital and avoid it. He did his job, but there was clear conflict on his face, especially after the guy took such a huge risk for him. Before sending his friend, Mickey apologized to him I believe. When the friend got busted, you could tell that he figured out what had happened and he was devastated.
alternative title "unlawful patient meets unlawful doctor"
I am a paramedic and can usually can get where they are going but this episode really floored me
1:09 I love House's "magic tricks."
This is one of my favorite episodes. Ethan Embry is so good AND Wilson proposes to House!
So he was an undercover cop how did he get sick I’m only on season 3
What I like about this is that it does raise an important question in medical ethics. I'm not a doctor, but I do know that if you show up at the ER with a knife wound or a bullet wound, the cops get involved, even if you really don't want them to. The hospital is required to report these sorts of injuries to law enforcement. However, if someone is seriously wounded, but is a criminal or an undocumented immigrant, they may avoid seeking treatment because they know that the police will be called to investigate the situation. If that's the case, they may not survive or may attempt to treat it themselves, worsening the situation. So what do you do in a situation like that? Is it more valuable to treat the patient and not inform the police because patients that would have died or suffered severe issues from trying to treat these things themselves are more likely to come to the hospital, or is it better to report these wounds to law enforcement so that criminals that caused those wounds can be dealt with before they harm someone in the future?
Worked at a Belgian ER, can't speak for other countries' laws but it's actually not at all obligated to inform the police UNLESS you as the ER worker actually witnessed a criminal offence OR you have proof/high suspicion of danger for a third party. Another lawfull exception is suspicion of sexual abuse of non-adults. If somebody walks into the ER with a knife or a bullet in his body and he says he did it himself and it was an accident, strictly speaking you have to take his word for it and are not allowed to call in the cops as long if he does not show any agression there. Same with the stereotypical black eyed wife caused by doorframes etc..
Now when are you obligated? If your ambulance picks up a robber after a heist because the cashier knocked him out, if someone proclaims he will shoot the one who shot him,threatens the staff or minors are involved.
Now this ofcourse, is the theory. In practice, usually the local cops will show up by themselves and already be aware a crime has been comitted. As long as they don't hinder any medical procedure in any way, they can do their job even in a packed ER. "suspicion of danger for a third party" also can be interpreted very broadly as long as the police plays along (which ofcourse they always did because in a small city like mine they usually were on first name terms with the ER staff). And yes, a fair amount of very coincidental anonymous calls reach the police department on the exact time when kids that "fell of the stairs for the third time in a month" are brought in (insert comparable situation). One wink and a free coffee for the local patrol that just so happened to check up on the ER those days...
Now to be clear, this type of ...let's call it "ethical cheating" can still be risky business and will ofcourse only happen when doctors join in on your crystal clear suspicion. In general, the knowledge of how somebody ends up in the ER serves only one purpose: To be able to treat him better. Wether it's a legal or illegal cause is in general, neither the ER's problem or responsibillity
"undocumented immigrant"
You mean an illegal alien?
House just factory reset that man 1:05
Was he...was he teasing him about that one time he killed the dictator of Zamunda?
Literally clicked on this because, seeing the thumbnail, I immediately knew this was Ethan Embry!!!!!! My big middle school actor crush 🥰
"SHOPLIIIIFTEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRR"
Liked him in Dutch as a kid.
This episode absolutely broke my heart. "I think I'd like to call my wife now." 💔😭😭😭
Always good!
I wish I had a doctor like him 😊
"That guys probably late to a stabbing."
3:07 How come 13 is making more money than Foreman, she joined the team late and I suppose Foreman helped more in differentials with his knowledge and wit.
House was right, that was really cool!
only time ive heard Maggot Brain in a tv show great music choice
Guy falls on the floor, possibly hitting his head again.
House: Cool.
A beta blocker to relieve symptoms of stress - that's a new one for me. Though if diabetics are also on beta blockers, they have to be careful because the blockers mask the stress symptoms of hypoglycemia and the diabetics won't realize they are in trouble with low blood sugar.
I love House, his the best.
The one thing that no criminal wants to deal with is life or death situations
Yet another episode where I missed Chase as endgame.
Heheh…. Taste of his own medicine… I get it.
1:10 Mf hit em with the domain expansion: Emergency Room
ABR performed by MDs instead of audiologists while patient is awake and starts having seizures = not his ears?
Cool.
It’s tv bro
How did that patient fall to the ground when house just hit the chair?
Loud noise.
His vertigo is specifically triggered by auditory stimulus, so the impact of the cane against the exam bed is loud and sudden enough to cause the faint.
This show is just so... medical.
1:45 pause here 😂
What is it with criminals in this show having pheochromocytoma. Death row guy had it as well.
2:47 and turn on CC
I got put on beta blockers about 3 weeks ago as my doctor said they would help with my migraines. Since I started taking them my migraines have been concentrated above and behind my right eye and I'm having constant migraines that don't get better, just continue 24/7 Is that supposed to happen?
Get a second opinion.
Fresh pair of eyes (no offense) is a good place to start.
No, it's not. It's impossible to tell what's wrong with you over a UA-cam comment chain, but I would recommend the same thing Fierce said: get another doctor to examine you, make sure you mention the first attempted treatment and what changed since.
I have taken beta blockers (in this case, Inderal) for 35 years and since being prescribed them have never had a full blown migraine since. I do sometimes get the aura that proceeds the migraine, but no migraine follows. I'm not a doc and you shouldn't follow any advice, with the exception that you should revisit your doc and see if the meds need to be adjusted or stopped. I'm sorry you are going through this.
Just because he got a fake ID while on a family vacation in Vegas... That's not breaking the law...
This is PEAK house 1:09
"But we’re doctors _all the time!_ It's BORING!"
Is there a real life House and can I get them as a PCP?
I mean it’s Preston!
Wasn't that other guy, Eddie, in Tears from the sun?
err check out the closed captions at around 2:50
Did you guys enjoy the fire wood while watching?
At 2:50 youtubes closed captions
Well, since Chase is ready to kill a dictator and faking it, I'd say a pillow on that dude wouldn't be too big deal for him
Except, as it turns out, he's actually an undercover cop.
Seriously one of the best intros, top 5.
I LOVE THIS SHow
I want a crash cart !
A solid gold Patek Phillipe are drug dealers making that much money?
an episode I've never seen??
Why i have to use a VPN to watch this from Poland?
The beginning was kinda cool
What's up with the subtitle at 2:50 ...LOL
1:10 Exactly what my father gives me if I misbehave.
Ooooh it’s the crooked cop from Desperate Housewives ❤❤❤ hottie 😂❤
Man we are even paying the people in house or making suggestions to them aren’t we James Gunn and friends
this is From
Season 6 Episode 10 not 11 , House Season 6 Episode 10 The Down Low
House Season 6 Episode 11 is Remorse
Oh my god I thought that was dean from supernatural and jumped
DEAN!!!! SAM!!!!
*God
@@randygreen007 I keep it lowercase because I'm using the improper noun, I have commitment issues
That looks nothing like him.
You go back to the moment you were born when you die, you forget it all and the shape of time persists like a sun-bleached stone on the sterile moon @@Deangirl86
8:15 oh yeah chase was the one that killed the ni- the political leader(dictator?) that was about to cancel all treaties after war.
bro WHAT
💊 drugs unregulated
Usually there’s 2 things ☠️ death
Or, incarceration. 🤷♂️
However though we are primitive humans we make mistakes
Breakthroughs are rare an dangerous also
I used to work in a hospital that had an anesthesiologist that would withhold pain meds during surgical procedures on drug dealers BUT use the appropriate paralytic agents as his unique form of payback. I had a hard time deciding who was more twisted him or the drug dealers. But then again they’re one and the same I guess but one is sanctioned the other isn’t.
Jesus Christ. I'm not saying that your coworker was morally wrong, but that could've gotten them into a world of legal trouble if not costing them the ability to do their job in any First World countries.
@@nicholasfarrell5981You’re not sure if torture is morally wrong? Wtf
@WinstonSmithGPT no, I said that I wasn't saying it. Mostly because if OP supported what their coworker was doing, I wouldn't have to deal with their angry and possibly threat-laden response, since that's pretty much all the discourse online anymore and I just do not have the time.
That's pretty twisted.
That's horrible. How'd the Dr know they were drug dealers?