Fast Sepsis Response! - 24 Hours in A&E - Medical Documentary

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • 24 Hours in A&E - S16 E23
    Dive into the heart of medical urgency with intense scenes of sepsis management, acute respiratory care, and more. Witness how urgent care techniques save lives in critical moments. Tune in for powerful intensive patient care in action!
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    24 Hours in A&E plunges viewers into the heart of a bustling UK trauma center, presenting a raw, real-time exploration of life inside an emergency department. This British documentary series reveals the relentless pace of emergency medicine, touching patient stories, and the heroic efforts of medical staff. It's an unscripted journey through critical care, personal trials, and the resilience of the human spirit.
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    Welcome to Banijay Bluelight, the ultimate destination for adrenaline-pumping Police, A&E, and emergency TV shows.
    Immerse yourself in the heart-pounding action of shows like 24 Hours in A&E as you witness real-life hospital staff in action. Experience the high-stakes world of emergency medicine with gripping series like Extreme A&E and Mystery Diagnosis.
    From thrilling police operations to life-saving medical interventions, Bluelight delivers non-stop excitement. Get ready to be on the edge of your seat with Banijay Bluelight. Subscribe now and join the front line of action-packed TV!
    Don't miss a moment - click the link to subscribe: www.youtube.co...
    #policeshows #emergencytv #actionpacked

КОМЕНТАРІ • 215

  • @keithnichols7926
    @keithnichols7926 4 місяці тому +80

    I congratulate the producers of this series for employing a live narrator instead of relying on a computer voice.

  • @dreamcatcher3861
    @dreamcatcher3861 4 місяці тому +124

    My heart just breaks for KT, Motor Neuron Disease is horrific. The frustration one must feel at not being able to communicate and to watch yourself waste away must be terrifying. I’m living with terminal breast cancer and that’s bad enough. I just can’t imagine what KT must be going through. You put on a brave face, stay strong for your loved ones but deep down inside, you’re so tired. It’s heartbreaking.
    I wish KT peace, love and oh so much respect. Beautiful soul. 🙏🏻

    • @catbriggs8362
      @catbriggs8362 4 місяці тому +7

      I'm so sorry to hear of the trial you're going through. Pray you are blessed and comforted.

    • @sarahcrain8083
      @sarahcrain8083 4 місяці тому +2

      God bless you. ❤

    • @SJC49
      @SJC49 4 місяці тому +4

      My very best to you!🇨🇦

    • @tassiegirl1991
      @tassiegirl1991 4 місяці тому +8

      KT wife is beautiful, caring and most of all loving, his son was showing such love in his touch of both his dad and mum. What a wonderful family so tragic that KT developed MND. Thank you for sharing so much you are an inspiration to others.

    • @dreamcatcher3861
      @dreamcatcher3861 4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you all so much for your lovely messages, I appreciate your kind words very much. 🙏🏻💜🫂

  • @helensarkisian7491
    @helensarkisian7491 4 місяці тому +86

    It made my heart smile seeing KT’s son supporting his parents. And, I’ve never considered how important the index finger is.

    • @kaidanariko
      @kaidanariko 4 місяці тому +1

      It’s actually the least important finger. Anything your index can do your middle can do. Most of the issue he’d have would be scar restriction and stiffness due to nerve damage. Your pinky is one of the most if not the most important finger because it’s what determines your grip strength. (I have slightly deformed pinkies and my grip suffers due to it)

  • @pamelab7871
    @pamelab7871 4 місяці тому +60

    Losing the ability to speak must be so difficult. And just think how much we communicate with those around us every day, not even thinking about how easy it is to do so. KT is such an inspiration to all of us. His kind spirit shows through even when he is suffering.

    • @ImOnAJourney
      @ImOnAJourney 4 місяці тому +5

      It’s even more difficult with MND because the patient is literally paralyzed from their eyebrows to the bottom of their feet. It’s a devastating disease, and it’s so hard to watch a spouse/sibling/parent/friend go through it. My brother had it and a month before he died my best friend was diagnosed with it. I helped care for both of them through to their last breath. It was the hardest thing I have even done in my life, and also the most rewarding.

  • @catbriggs8362
    @catbriggs8362 4 місяці тому +46

    Good grief. Poor kid having anxiety attacks needs psychological treatment. And medication for anxiety. I'm stunned he was told to just deal with it. He's got CPTSD. That's just as real as a war injury.

    • @LisatheKiwi99
      @LisatheKiwi99 4 місяці тому +9

      The nurse did suggest some distractions, however I agree that he could have been offered more opportunities to learn coping skills, and counselling.

    • @lisasteel6817
      @lisasteel6817 4 місяці тому +11

      She should have referred him to psychology, not told him to read a book. Ffs.

    • @chelsealuvsmusic
      @chelsealuvsmusic 3 місяці тому +4

      We dont know if it’s C-PTSD as that is trauma prolonged and repeated over developmental years. The anxiety seems connected to the injury from the accident, which is PTSD. We don’t know his history so CPTSD cannot be assumed.

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 2 місяці тому

      Yes, she does have a rather abrasive personality. However, and fortunately, the dad knows and he's trying to nurture that path in his son, as he himself benefitted.

    • @rachelwalton3772
      @rachelwalton3772 2 місяці тому

      Agree! And then telling him he will need to take painkillers continually - zero effort to treat root causes (typical of western medicine).

  • @alisonmoffitt1051
    @alisonmoffitt1051 4 місяці тому +152

    How I would love to see that phone cord untangled. I know it’s of no consequence but it drives me nuts. Amazing staff at this place doing everything they can. I salute you! ❤️

    • @crispywalters4431
      @crispywalters4431 4 місяці тому +21

      😂😂😂 Same! That being said when I worked in our medical office our wall phone was always screwed up. I would fix it as I would read charts only to come back to it all goofy again. Thank you for the giggle 🤭.

    • @sandikohler900
      @sandikohler900 4 місяці тому +7

      Me too!!😂

    • @moniquetannour4990
      @moniquetannour4990 4 місяці тому +10

      Me 2
      OCD maybe?😂😂👍

    • @kirakaffee9976
      @kirakaffee9976 4 місяці тому +10

      thank you!! at least it's not just me 😁
      I've been wanting to let it dangle and spin out for years. kid of the 80s bug maybe 😏

    • @alisonmoffitt1051
      @alisonmoffitt1051 4 місяці тому

      @@kirakaffee9976 ❤️

  • @Lisa1111
    @Lisa1111 4 місяці тому +37

    A true loving life partner is the one who brings a letter chart and finding an even more extraordinary way through brilliant technology enabling a person to communicate with the one who has your heart.
    God Bless you ❤

  • @ImOnAJourney
    @ImOnAJourney 4 місяці тому +34

    Everyone who is diagnosed with motor neuron disease (also called ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease) should start practicing communicating without talking or using their limbs as soon as they are diagnosed. If the patient and their caregivers can achieve good communication skills before the patient looses the ability to talk, it makes communicating so much easier when the patient actually loses the ability to talk.

    • @ElainePavek-bv3rs
      @ElainePavek-bv3rs 4 місяці тому +6

      I'm a nurse and watching a brilliant person decline from this insidious disease is heartbreaking😢 I hope you have a lovely weekend❤

    • @patb9463
      @patb9463 4 місяці тому +10

      I remember the abject TERROR I felt when told that I had a serious motor neurone disease & the horror I felt when told that it was likely ALS !
      I’m very impaired, 20 years later, but ALIVE ! ❤️

    • @V-Smith
      @V-Smith 3 місяці тому

      @@patb9463
      I am truly sorry that you are suffering from such a terrible disease. That being said, it’s amazing that you’re still here with us! Praise the Lord!!
      My Nextdoor neighbor and close childhood friend, Scott, was diagnosed with ALSin his late teens and passed away in his early twenties. It was so devastating to watch him deteriorate while also knowing the inevitable… He was such a strong, energetic, and charismatic person who loved to live his life to the fullest and I miss him very dearly!
      I pray that God continues to bless you with many many more years to come! ❤️🙏🥰😊

  • @gaydenmaccallum508
    @gaydenmaccallum508 4 місяці тому +27

    PTSD is horrible! All of a sudden you are reliving something awful. Counseling does help & if it is available please take it.

    • @tictactoe325
      @tictactoe325 4 місяці тому +3

      Agreed. One can recover with PTSD.

  • @daisi4925
    @daisi4925 4 місяці тому +22

    Paul, thank you for your service. I’m sure Jordan is proud of you and loves you. Little girl in the waiting room is a gem, wants to know everything! My heart goes go out for KT. Could you imagine this brilliant man and people kind of talk to you like a well, child, can’t think of a word. His wife loves him so much.

  • @miola2083
    @miola2083 4 місяці тому +26

    Prayers for the Asian man and his family. 😢🙏🏽🌈✨

  • @sasham3256
    @sasham3256 3 місяці тому +8

    It really put me off when the consultant called him Mr. Wong after finding out he was a doctor. I understand that it’s a small thing to overlook in an emergency, but it’s a part of giving him dignity.

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 2 місяці тому +1

      But he isn't a doctor. The paramedic may have said so, but he was a pharmacist. She addressed him correctly. Now for the consultant, she's condescending overall. She spoke to him like he was mentally diminished and there are a lot of people who do that with disabled people. I noticed that the UK isn't up to standards on accessibility and supporting PWD with dignity. Working for an organization who supports PWD live independently in Canada, I get quite irked by the lack of policies, accessibilities and the lack of manners in the UK when it comes to the disabled. Not to say they don't get that here on occasion, but the UK is a generation behind in recognizing PWD as equals. My boss is an Executive Director and he's a quadriplegic and I just about lose my crap when someone talks to him like that.
      We also have MAID, and the UK has nothing like it, so people have to either endure or leave the country to get it done early, while they can still travel.

    • @robine6337
      @robine6337 Місяць тому +1

      In England they don’t call them doctor, they call them Mr. Or Ms. So and so

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 Місяць тому +1

      @@robine6337 Thank you, I wasn't aware of that. As the man was actually a pharmacist and not a doctor though, the attending was appropriate in what she called him in any country .:). The UK really needs to move away from calling nurses Sisters as the origin was from long ago times when nurses were nuns. They are not nuns, and more and more are men :)

  • @sarahbass6116
    @sarahbass6116 4 місяці тому +27

    I’m watching from Sydney Australia
    ALS is a horrible disease, slow and painful

    • @rebeccanisley8709
      @rebeccanisley8709 4 місяці тому +2

      Had a friend with ALS. Yes truly awful. Death by covid was almost a relief.

  • @robertmontgomery1310
    @robertmontgomery1310 4 місяці тому +18

    Motor neuron disease is awful, but this family is exceptional and lovely. God bless KT.

  • @chrissmith-no3bo
    @chrissmith-no3bo 3 місяці тому +4

    13:10 aww Jordans dad.. in the forces.. thank you sir. I grew up in the military. Born and raised.

  • @moni1950412
    @moni1950412 4 місяці тому +15

    KT the doctor wants to talk so badly but can’t it’s heartbreaking 💔

  • @garsu1229
    @garsu1229 4 місяці тому +20

    Love this channel it really brings home what IS important in life❤

  • @river8760
    @river8760 4 місяці тому +31

    ALS is so cruel. 😢

    • @miola2083
      @miola2083 4 місяці тому +4

      Poor man. 😢😢😢

    • @river8760
      @river8760 4 місяці тому +3

      @@miola2083 I know, he’s so sweet and clearly so brilliant. Wonderful family too. His wife is incredible.

  • @nathalielundinsjovil356
    @nathalielundinsjovil356 4 місяці тому +13

    Omg i love Teheran doctor's eyes one green and one brown I love it ❤

    • @bakedovertherainbow8369
      @bakedovertherainbow8369 4 місяці тому +1

      i noticed as well and am wondering why

    • @anncoxwell7015
      @anncoxwell7015 4 місяці тому +5

      @@bakedovertherainbow8369 My guess is heterochromia iridium. It’s a genetic condition that causes the eyes to be different colors due to different amounts of melanin.

  • @Dragonild
    @Dragonild 4 місяці тому +6

    I started crying just listening to Steve and Debbie’s love story, it was so sweet 🥹 KT and Kuai made me emotional too.

  • @donnamitchell7707
    @donnamitchell7707 4 місяці тому +15

    Fantastic episode. Have a great day everyone ❤️🙂⚘️🏥.

  • @kinebrembry6224
    @kinebrembry6224 4 місяці тому +12

    Has the young car accident patient with ptsd been treated for TBI? I think he reported loss of consciousness and memory loss.

  • @valerief1231
    @valerief1231 4 місяці тому +7

    Watching in Texas, USA, I wonder if KT wanted Lorazepam because as a pharmacist he knew the consequences of taking it during such a stressful time… I’m grateful he is able to spend more time with his beautiful and loving family. And I’m so glad Steve got to keep 2 of his fingers, it takes a long time to adapt, but he seems like the kind of person that will do just fine, and take it in stride. So glad Jordan was able to hear and internalize that he is healing, my brother went thru an injury to his right leg, and even after getting a clean bill of health, he favored the leg out of fear and did irreversible damage to his left leg and knee.

  • @alanatolstad4824
    @alanatolstad4824 4 місяці тому +10

    Such brave people.

  • @susanstaton1963
    @susanstaton1963 3 місяці тому +2

    My husband had a bad cold and a persistent cough. Dr ordered chest X-ray, said nothing there, next day still not well, I asked for appt (this was during Covid) . Morning of the phone appt, he went downstairs for a shower and I heard a large thump, I went downstairs and he was unconscious on floor of shower. He came to, i helped him up, his eyes rolled back into his head and I pressed him against the side of the shower as he passed out again. However he was too heavy for me, and I had to help him slide to the floor of the shower. He was grey, had voided his bowels, and was unaware of surroundings. I got him to lie on towel on bathroom floor and called 911. Turns out he had chest infection and had developed sepsis. I’d never heard of it. He was in hospital for 5 days. Only after did I found out how serious it is, especially for seniors.

  • @sarahsnowe
    @sarahsnowe 4 місяці тому +6

    Steve seems like a lovely guy. Every woman should be so lucky.

  • @silverkiss37
    @silverkiss37 4 місяці тому +6

    Cute little girl:
    "Imagine if you just bruised yourself and it hurt but it wasn't serious and you waited six hours to get seen by a doctor and they said it was just fine. That would be really annoying."
    Everyone who's been to the ER:
    "THIS."

  • @debrabolton9372
    @debrabolton9372 4 місяці тому +4

    An exceptional episode. The back stories were very interesting and heartfelt. The patients went through so much and I hope that they are doing well now. 🇺🇸❤️🇬🇧

  • @anncoxwell7015
    @anncoxwell7015 4 місяці тому +12

    Jordan needs therapy to deal with the aftermath of the crash. And would someone please teach him the correct way to use his crutch! That hopping is probably what caused his fall.

  • @chrissmith-no3bo
    @chrissmith-no3bo 3 місяці тому +2

    My heart breaks for this man and all the ppl suffering with ALS OR MND. your body failed you but your mind is still still working

  • @karenedmonds1728
    @karenedmonds1728 4 місяці тому +6

    Watching from Melbourne Australia. Love it.

  • @kinebrembry6224
    @kinebrembry6224 4 місяці тому +10

    Dad: I wish my kid was more open
    Flash to Dad in clip with son In pain in ER: I hope this is a lesson to you.

  • @lorrainecampbell9202
    @lorrainecampbell9202 4 місяці тому +17

    Jordan and his father are carbon copies. Nothing but massive anxiety, which is horribly debilitating. Maybe, some sort of support or therapy would get him through this. Maybe Dad isn’t the best person to be there with him, considering his obvious anxiety during the visit. I hope they both get through their trauma successfully.

    • @river8760
      @river8760 4 місяці тому +11

      Anxiety isn’t a character flaw. The NP could’ve offered better options to him too, like therapy. Dad was great, and totally supportive.

    • @lorrainecampbell9202
      @lorrainecampbell9202 4 місяці тому

      I'm not suggesting that it's a flaw. I suffered with horrendous anxiety for years that prevented me from functioning in any normal way. I was pretty much housebound for years. I'm just saying that, personally, being in a room with another anxious person would not have helped me in such a triggering situation. I needed absolute calm around me, or I would feed off them.

    • @river8760
      @river8760 4 місяці тому +3

      @@lorrainecampbell9202 Your comment felt judgemental, which is why I responded in the way that I did.

  • @ashjan3317
    @ashjan3317 4 місяці тому +5

    HOLY SHITE thos fingers wow thx for th graphic shots

  • @Happytoday67
    @Happytoday67 4 місяці тому +3

    Thursdays and Saturdays are my favourite days now! Thank you

  • @SandraNelson063
    @SandraNelson063 4 місяці тому +2

    Steve and Debbie are wonderful.

  • @WendyOrielly-c1q
    @WendyOrielly-c1q 4 місяці тому +2

    My heart goes out to all the families and the doctors God bless them

  • @corvettesbme
    @corvettesbme 4 місяці тому +1

    I had to come back to watch this to finish. One of the BEST videos I have seen!❤

  • @Bonzolee.
    @Bonzolee. 4 місяці тому +3

    Watching from Ontario, Canada.

    • @alimacdonald2924
      @alimacdonald2924 4 місяці тому +1

      Watching from Nova Scotia, Canada ❤ Love this show... RN here!

    • @SJC49
      @SJC49 4 місяці тому +1

      Watching from Oakville, Ontario.

  • @christinagould9807
    @christinagould9807 4 місяці тому +3

    Watching from suburban Chicago IL

  • @dominiquepilon5910
    @dominiquepilon5910 3 місяці тому +2

    Poor guy who has lock in syndrome his brain is intact but his body is not functioning

  • @donnamitchell7707
    @donnamitchell7707 4 місяці тому +4

    Good morning Banijay, and everyone ❤️🙂⚘️🏥.

  • @chenawejamieson8628
    @chenawejamieson8628 4 місяці тому +4

    Tyty for an awesome program. Absolutely love the series ❤❤❤❤❤❤ prayers to everyone involved.🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @michaelreece2966
    @michaelreece2966 Місяць тому

    I really like the nurse that helped Jordan. Great bedside manner and not just because there are cameras. There are some things you can’t fake.

  • @garsu1229
    @garsu1229 4 місяці тому +4

    Oh man I cry though these episodes but it is all good❤

  • @peacewarrior1175
    @peacewarrior1175 4 місяці тому +3

    ER Doctor pretty disrespectful calling KT Mr instead of Dr - such a lovely family x

    • @aprilluber
      @aprilluber 2 місяці тому +1

      PhD in pharmacology not medical doctor.

  • @sandikohler900
    @sandikohler900 4 місяці тому +4

    Watching from southwest Oklahoma, USA

  • @SJC49
    @SJC49 4 місяці тому +2

    Steve is a rock!

  • @aprilstar3819
    @aprilstar3819 4 місяці тому +5

    Love 💕 and strength to all who are recovering and adapting to the new normals , God Bless from a white lady and believer in Christ from hear in the US , South Carolina

  • @sd6930
    @sd6930 3 місяці тому +1

    Luciane the DR. has 2 different coloured eyes! So cool…never seen that before!

    • @jannalenefensom4130
      @jannalenefensom4130 3 місяці тому

      I didnt want to deny the others of what was happening in their lives but yes the eyes were captivating

  • @debbiearthur6381
    @debbiearthur6381 4 місяці тому +9

    Good evening, from Australia 🦘😊

  • @היילימור
    @היילימור 4 місяці тому +2

    Kt u and your beautiful family r amazing. Love and a whole lot of respect.

  • @nathalielundinsjovil356
    @nathalielundinsjovil356 4 місяці тому +3

    Sweden here 😊❤

  • @GalaxyGirly17
    @GalaxyGirly17 4 місяці тому +1

    My friend lives in England and im so scared that this would happen but Thanks to the hospital to save people's lives and help them but it brakes me when someone dies but people tried so many times KEEP DOING GOOD AND SAVE PEOPLE!!!

  • @robinransom8115
    @robinransom8115 4 місяці тому +2

    Love your videos from southwest Texas

  • @sapphirerain70
    @sapphirerain70 4 місяці тому +1

    Pgh Pa here! I love this channel! ❤

  • @Trudy2018
    @Trudy2018 4 місяці тому

    What a terrifying but beautiful story! Congratulations on your recovery!!❤❤

  • @NWG1961
    @NWG1961 4 місяці тому +3

    Why didn't they have Psychiatry come in to help the boy in the wheel chair?

  • @angelangela-w3z
    @angelangela-w3z 4 місяці тому +2

    Wait times are crazy here in NB Canada, Some people waiting days!

  • @richowens1529
    @richowens1529 3 місяці тому

    Love the show! Minnesota, USA

  • @msalllie99
    @msalllie99 4 місяці тому +3

    It is not true that your family is always there to support you, unfortunately

  • @corvettesbme
    @corvettesbme 4 місяці тому +1

    I might be able to watch the whole episode before work!

  • @angelaparker4110
    @angelaparker4110 4 місяці тому +1

    My late mother told me that she met my dad at 16 and decided then and there that he was the one for her. Took me ages to get to that point in my relationship.

  • @janegrady6990
    @janegrady6990 4 місяці тому

    God bless you! Praying for a complete healing.

  • @SissyLingerfelt
    @SissyLingerfelt 4 місяці тому +2

    I’m watching from Bristol Tennessee 😮

  • @SJC49
    @SJC49 4 місяці тому +9

    KT’s wife is charming!😍🇨🇦

  • @sue.F
    @sue.F 4 місяці тому +1

    Steve is the epitome of sangfroid. I suffered the partial amputation of my left index finger, but unlike Steve, it was successfully reattached plus I was a total mess with the horror and the pain!

  • @tammyhall1008
    @tammyhall1008 3 місяці тому

    Deb is one LUCKY LADY!!

  • @melvanrooyen1165
    @melvanrooyen1165 16 годин тому

    Steve and his wife!! Love birds!

  • @BrianDavis13
    @BrianDavis13 4 місяці тому +3

    Steve seems like a good guy. He has a very calming demeanor about him.
    KT has a wonderful family and is clearly a very strong person, but if I ever get something like that, just kill me straight away.

  • @wolfc8755
    @wolfc8755 29 днів тому

    As long as you still have a thumb and one other finger on your hand, you'll be able to do pretty much anything with time and practice. It's only if you lose your thumb that things get really dicey. I had an uncle with only a thumb and little finger on his right hand (he was right-handed and lost the other three fingers in a farming accident), and he was eventually able to do absolutely everything he needed to do working on his farm. And the little finger on his damaged right hand became SO much larger and more muscular. It was pretty cool to see him carrying heavy pails of milk and bales of hay and straw, as well as wrangling cattle, doing mechanical work on farm equipment, stringing and tightening fence wire, and so on, with just a thumb and little finger. Having the rest of his fingers reattached but not working properly would have probably been more of a hindrance than a help.

  • @meechie69Official
    @meechie69Official 4 місяці тому +2

    Available for hire immediately, phone cord untangler 😂

    • @cynhiacations9879
      @cynhiacations9879 4 місяці тому

      See @alisonmoffitt1051 looking for your help.😂😂

  • @jodiunger9425
    @jodiunger9425 2 місяці тому +1

    i cant imagine what that man is going through, he is asking for Lorazapam because his breathing issue is causing a build up of CO2 in his blood. The anxiety he must be experiencing would be absolutely unbearable, hold your breath and try to keep yourself from breathing, that terrible feeling that overcomes you and forces you to breath is what that man is experiencing constantly. He cannot move, or speak, nothing, he has to sit and wait hoping that a doctor will realize what he is silently experiencing, which unfortunately is unlikely that they will. In addition his wife doesn't seem to realize the gravity and urgency of when he does manage to request for a drug that would help release that feeling slightly. It would be torture, and i have no doubt in that moment he would be wishing for death.

  • @ianmedium
    @ianmedium 4 місяці тому +1

    I wonder what happened to the short haired nurse that used to be on these, I can´t remember her name but she is the sort of person you can´t forget. My heart goes out to KT and his family. I used to work in end of life care and one of my last patients was a gentleman of my age who had advanced MS and he could not talk but could make a noise and could not move and the only way we communicated was with blinks of the eye. Myself and the other carer worked two weeks on two off 24 hour care.
    I used to sleep in a small bed in his room so that I could be there immediately if something went wrong. He was fed by tube and had a catheter for urine. I looked after him for two years. He had to go into hospital every three months to have his food catheter replaced which could only be done at hospital as it was direct into his stomach. He caught an infection whilst in hospital and passed a few days later. He too was a very intelligent man, he was a high court judge and still had all that intelligence working. Sometimes he could just scream out in frustration.

  • @arklinmike
    @arklinmike 3 місяці тому

    2:10 This is a great series. However the phone at their admitting desk is triggering my OCD. I keep wanting to untangle the cord. 🙃

  • @saltchick4623
    @saltchick4623 4 місяці тому +1

    Oh my heck. Don’t say should’ve been doing x vs y when the guy has a horrible fillet-o-fingers injury! 🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @fmt_Guåhan
    @fmt_Guåhan 4 місяці тому +1

    Grand eptsode!

  • @anglophils645
    @anglophils645 2 місяці тому +3

    I did not like the treatment of the young man with leg pain, by the Physician's Assistant. She told him, "With you, it's mind over matter, and you're going to be in pain for about a year, while you're healing." Not good enough. He should have been referred to a pain management specialist physician. There are non-addictive anti-anxiety meds, that also treat pain, such as Zoloft and Cymbalta, among others, that could help him. His pain needs to be managed, be cause pain can actually retard healing. He also clearly needs physical therapy.

    • @wolfc8755
      @wolfc8755 29 днів тому

      Pain that goes unabated for too long can also be come chronic from nerves and brain having been pain activated for so long, even after everything is healed and there's no discernible reason to still be having pain.

  • @Longbow-jt8jp
    @Longbow-jt8jp 2 місяці тому

    The guy with the amputated fingers is one tough guy. Totally not bothered.

  • @Trudy2018
    @Trudy2018 4 місяці тому

    Thats why saws have a safety guards! You have to use it!!!

  • @tinabohrman4809
    @tinabohrman4809 4 місяці тому +1

    Thanks for ur susvis

  • @SJC49
    @SJC49 4 місяці тому +4

    Jordan needs to see a counsellor. If not willing to do that, sit up, comb your hair, take your fingers out of your mouth, show respect for your father. He is your best role model and has your back!

  • @fever_spike
    @fever_spike 3 місяці тому

    10:49 Nice Bruce Lee shirt ya got there, Paul!

  • @nancygehrts828
    @nancygehrts828 4 місяці тому

    Wish the US would treat there patients like the UK does.

  • @chrissmith-no3bo
    @chrissmith-no3bo 3 місяці тому

    My sister in law was in Iraq two tours. 18months each.

  • @brendaaverill611
    @brendaaverill611 3 місяці тому +1

    I wish The States treated Patient's like this. Where The First thing They want is Pain Control for The Patient!!

  • @maartjetrap905
    @maartjetrap905 4 місяці тому

    Whats with the repeat episodes 😮

  • @lesliejanicke2250
    @lesliejanicke2250 3 місяці тому

    im wondering if the gentleman whos paralyzed can get a different computer like what mr. Hawnkins had.

  • @manonlaviggne1085
    @manonlaviggne1085 Місяць тому +1

    I want to find a man that looks at me the way Steve looks at his wife

  • @wolfc8755
    @wolfc8755 29 днів тому

    Jordan doesn't open up to his dad because his dad gives him patronizing platitudes when he does. And anxious parents tend to have anxious kids. Also, pain that goes unabated for too long can become chronic just from nerves and brain having been over stimulated for so long, even after everything is healed and there shouldn't be any more pain. Jordan needs pain relief, and it seems that both dad and son could use some therapy to help them heal from and cope with their individual traumas.

  • @lucindamahaffey4556
    @lucindamahaffey4556 Місяць тому

    Does Luciane have a blown pupil?

  • @Pammellam
    @Pammellam 2 місяці тому

    Steve could get a prosthetic index finger that might be helpful….in some way…

  • @antonelasantos8115
    @antonelasantos8115 4 місяці тому +3

    The way KT is living is no way for a person to live in my opinion...

  • @tictactoe325
    @tictactoe325 4 місяці тому +2

    I wish nurses would have their hair pulled of their faces and away from patient. Hair is dirty. So frustrating

  • @tomik88
    @tomik88 Місяць тому

    11:00 a "typical" teenager talking to his father like that? My son is 20, and if he talked to me like that, I'd probably do something to him.

  • @jeannettetemple8011
    @jeannettetemple8011 13 днів тому

    The young man needs antidepressants / anxiety medicine

  • @YourNextDoorNeighborA
    @YourNextDoorNeighborA 4 місяці тому

    Solution..long term pain meds. For a young man.

  • @AverageSlowBloke
    @AverageSlowBloke 4 місяці тому +5

    Hello early birds

  • @debbiehall7016
    @debbiehall7016 4 місяці тому +1

    if i was very sick, i could not stand that nurse's high pitched singing voice

  • @scotterman7951
    @scotterman7951 4 місяці тому

    How Did The Spesis Did

    • @anncoxwell7015
      @anncoxwell7015 4 місяці тому +2

      KT survived, got a trache, and went home.