Bass playing anesthesiologist myself. Great analogy! Actually, the best way to explain what an anesthesiologist does comes from a bass player. Garry Tallent from Springsteen’s E Street Band once said: “What I do, nobody’s notices… ‘till it stops”.
I am an anesthesiologist and a pilot and have been practicing this job for the last 35 years. This is exactly what I say to my students, residents and to my son who is also an anesthesiologist in Hamburg Germany. Well said,amazing video. I appreciate your channel a lot and I always advise my residents to watch your videos. Outstanding and passionate colleague. Thank you in the name of our team.
Hey, I am a Private Pilot but I am curious if i could be an Anesthesiologist with a hand injury. I still fly, and I broke my right hand but I've had 3 surgeries on it and recored. I do however dont have 100 full motion of it. My thumb can goes to my ring finger going a crossed. My pointer and middle finger can make a fist and touch but my ring finger and pinky cant touch my palm making a 80% fist? With that being said could i still do that type of work? I am planning on being a airline pilot but I still may change careers because of the injury. Thank you in advance!
@@JBK-w5uyou may be capable of it depending on which hand is affected. If it’s your non dominant hand and you are able to perform effectively then go for it. I’m sure you’re aware but worth mentioning you’ll be scrutinized severely by medical doctors as an airline pilot and the loss of function in your hand may preclude you from being cleared to fly commercial. Keep working at your rehabilitation. Nerve damage can take years to recover from if ever, but continued deliberate efforts to rehabilitate the affected nerves can really improve the outcome. Good luck in whichever career you land in.
Anaesthetists/Anaesthesiologists are physicians with NERVES OF STEEL. I’m so glad to be training in this intellectually rewarding field here in Australia.
I would argue that you can learn reasons 1-4 (thinking under stress, multitasking, team leadership and manual skills) with good training. I struggled with a lot of these aspects myself when I started training, but with working in anesthesia for a longer period of time I acquired all of these skills. However, reason number 5 is something you can't get out of your system, if you want the spotlight you'll have to choose another specialty.
Thank you for doing this video. Your passion for anaesthesia and education is infectious! Please continue to be the voice for anaesthetists around the world :)
I am an anesthesia resident in Canada. You do an amazing job describing our specialty to people (including other doctors) who may not have a good understanding of what our job is all about.
Yeah, can you let all of the rest of the MDs in the hospital know this too? I find it inexcusable that especially surgeons STILL don't get it. Raise your own table.
I now work in PACU formerly an ER Nurse. I absolutely love Anesthesiologists. They are vitally important especially when patients are recovering and things may "Go South" very quickly.
Yes and take the blame for everything that goes wrong. Doctors who have no idea about anesthesia like internal medicine and family medicine will tell the patient that anesthesia is the cause of everything. When things go bad in the OR surgeons will tell the patient and family members it was the anesthesia. People don't recognize you, patients could care less about the anesthesiologist. We do a lot to keep patients a live during surgery and honestly when you think about the Anesthesiologist is the most important person in the room. Yet most hospitals favor and reward the surgeon because they bring the patients and revenue to the hospital. You have to reward and recognize yourself for a job well done. No one else will!
One sided view but It is understandable . As a surgeon I can’t function without an anaesthetist so I have the utmost respect for them. But Let’s face it: without the surgeon, there wouldn’t be a surgical procedure. Also, Bringing clients (patients)to the hospital is a lot of work that needs to be rewarded . The surgeon becomes the breadwinner and everyone can now eat including the anaesthetist.
@@tranquilsoothingsounds3334 Well what you are saying is how most people feel about surgeons anyway. For my experience most surgeons are rewarded for their efforts and I have no problem with that. I don't want to compare myself to a surgeon. My issue is how anesthesia is treated. We are have to endure a lot of verbal abuse by surgeons and this can happen on a daily basis. When other people witness this level of disrespect then nurses and ancillary staff feel like its okay to disrespect anesthesia. Surgeon's are rewarded for what they do and that is okay. My basic problem is that everyone should be treated in a dignified and respectful manor in the OR and when it comes to the anesthetist that is not always the case!
@@bh2155 I'm not a surgeon but if I were I'd abuse you too. The constant bitching and whining. Surgeons have to stand up and focus for hours. They round on dozens of patients before and after their lengthy surgeries. Then they're pressured to work up and operate on critically ill patients from the Emergency Department. Add in the clinics for all the patient's they've operated on, new ward consults, and the nights they are constantly on call, in what way do Anaesthetists do an equal amount of work for the hospital? America is now using nurses to anaesthetise patients because you don't need much training for it. Don't lie, I know you're sitting down looking at tiktok clips on your phone during the maintanence phase of anaesthesia for that one patient you have to deal with.
@@tranquilsoothingsounds3334 sounds like a lot of garbage. Where i work anaesthesia also covers critical care. 100% of the time when surgical team fuck things up they will beg us for icu beds. So to say that surgery is "the breadwinner" is absolutely fucking delusional mate. We just dont reason with surgeons because ya'll cant be reasoned.
Thank you for this nice showing of our work! I like it, too, even more after more than 20 years. What I miss: Anaestesiologists in operation rooms and emergency (car) medicine doctors, too, have been able to switch between waiting, waiting (for ex for surgeons), waiting (for ex for the next emergency call on car), to take periods in operation room when nothing interesting seems to happen (for ex because you do a good job and keep the patient stable) , true boredom, seemingly/treacherously boring periods and then suddenly seconds of very important acting. For me that seems another difference to working as a surgeon. An anaestesiologist who didn't like this and switched to another medical field once told me, for him anaesthesiology is "hours of boredom, minutes of tension and seconds of horror". Good that he left! We have such an interesting, important job with so different areas. Again thank you for your super good videos (especially about ultrasound for nerve blocks)!
Thank your for this beautiful video. I'm a dentist who now completes his MD degree. I decided to leave dentsistry behind and I'm considering of selecting anaesthesiolgy. It's a tough call though. I can't deny the fact though that when I see a patient wake up it's such a strong emotion for me.
I'm still in high school but I want to become an anesthesiologist. I am very good at keeping my cool and trying hard even at the last minute (happened a lot for my due dates assignments and exams) but I don't know if it requires math because I'm pretty bad at it...
all good bro idk too much abt the field but math isnt too difficult to understand. if i could leave u with one thing itd be dont go around with the mindset that your dumb or someone else is “smart” just remember math is a lifestyle for some people doing math isnt cool it just makes you a geek(trust me dont be one) it just means your experienced and took 10000000 hours to learn smth no one else wanted to. So youll be fine man math is super easy once you get the hang of how to read and absorb textbooks
Nice practice you have Sir. I wonder how many of the anesthesiologists feel like their work and ethical perspectives are not respected. The ER physicians believe they are better dealing with airways, the icu people do not listen to post anesthesia reports o vent settings, the crna will try to prove that you are not needed, administrators do not care much about your needs; the list is long. Fighting so many adversities, the good anesthesiologists must learn to ask for help ..
Exactly what I face daily...so stressful....I try living in the shadows....but the man in the mirror will bring me to the spotlight....critical importance and salvaging a bad situation....I 3njoy
ER better at airways?? Haha ..Not even close. i had the Yale ER grads calling for help daily..after they bloodied it all up... CRNAs get sent to Siberia aka GI if we heard 1 tiny peep...the Vascular Surgeons REFUSED CRNAs in their room....A good relationship with Ortho, OB and, Ortho is paramount..Ignorance is the main culprit of Administration...overall rewarding yes, but must be ready for anything..
Anesthesiologists are the SWAT team of medical field. Specialised to handle critical situations. The rest of the times we just stay in our AC suits sipping coffee while solving crossword puzzle. 😂 The worst part of being an anesthesiologist/critical care physician is having to see critically ill patients slowly dying in the ICU. It is also the most compassionate and spiritual part of our lives.
Thank you for the two videos on reasons for being or not being an anesthesiologist. Nailed it! To the comparison of pilots and anesthesiologists I usually add the point that we "fly" planes that definitely are not in a technical state where they should be flown. And that they are unter maintenance inflight where somebody shuts off fuel pipes or makes them leaking or they use tools that interfere with your avionics so on... And sometimes I have the feeling that we are nannies who watch over the playground to make sure that the little ones don't climb where they shouldn't or that they don't fight over their toys.... and when they are told that they can't play anymore, they get grumpy.
@@colinhopkins8009 How true! But this shows all the more that we as anesthesiologists should do our utmost to work in an organized, professional and effective manner to prevent our patients from "crashing" - even if we do not crash ourselves. Another difference to "real" pilots is that we don't necessarily see the sun while working 🙂
In the modern day, even most surgeons live in the shadows of medicine, unfortunately. Modern patient care requires so many people be involved. Unfortunately most of modern medicine is endless documentation on a computer, consulting other services, clicking buttons, and things happening in the background. The difference is that in anesthesia, you are the one DOING the medicine. You are in (almost) total control for those few hours 8:28 . It’s the purest form of medicine still in existence. The reward from anesthesia doesn’t come from patients praising you; it comes from the sense of flow that you get when performing the work in silence, especially during a challenging or emergent case.
I like to expand on the airline metaphor, some cases are like flying for a national airline in clear skies into a quiet airport. Some cases are like flying a clapped out 30yr old plane into an improvised runway in a warzone with no ILs or autopilot.
In Europe the anesthesiologists are considered on a political par with surgeons, whereas in America, because the surgeons are the profit generators, the anesthesiologists are viewed as the second class citizens of the operating room, and most definitely not team leaders. In America, unlike Europe, money and profit drive the healthcare system, a fact reflected in the medical hierarchy, close to the bottom of which reside the anesthesiologists.
In military, there are so many corps. Among them commandos are the group who respond quickly, firmly and at the front. I seem myself as commando of the physicians. Bcoz we respond faster among others and i'm proud of it.
Is it possible CRNAs will replace anesthesiologists in the future? They can already practice independently in many states , I hope things dont change by the time I start working on the field .
Look, I love this channel and its guides for they've helped me a lot as a young anesthesiology resident but this is getting slightly out of hand with megalomaniac vibe of this video lol. I'm sure you're an amazing an accomplished physician and all but why do you need to keep praising yourself? Is that the point of this video? And I'd say go easy with the stern absolutism when it comes to determining if someone is fit for anesthesiology or not - I'd say 90% of these skills and qualities that ultimately lead to being effective in the field can be learned. Certain personality types may find it easier than others but I believe almost every med student can be taught into it if he's determined to go for that specialty. Having written that comment I feel a little bad but hope it's been taken as a constructive criticism in the goal of making more quality content on this channel for helping other residents and colleagues in the field.
Hi Massacreto! Thanks for the feedback. The beauty of open-source info like UA-cam is that we do not have to agree on everything and that we can voice our opinions freely. However, the purpose of making this video is not what you thought but we will definitely work more in order to create a quality content like we did. Greetings from NYSORA!
Nicely elaborated sir...✨ I'm still a student... I am ambitious to become an anesthesiologist 🙂thanks a lot for sharing your experiences and attitudes about being an anesthesiologist 😇 really inspired with ur video .... Fighting to enter your field 💪 Respect u all✌️🤍
wondering if i should do anesthesiology, and then comes the analogy of the bass!! (used to play bass, awesome instrument!!!), i really put it as one of my considerations along ophthalmology, ENT, Urology, and family medicine
after 20 yrs in anesthesiology I've chose the profession for being an introvert and like to live in the shadows.. then I realized that, it's the most important part of the job is to keep things as simple and boring as long ad they can be.. because of these 2 reasons, sadly you are gonna be a great anesthesiologist and you are going to be in the spotlight in your workplace and everyone will ask for your service..!!😂
The manual dexterity that you claim it needs is a bit overblown. Compared to even simple surgical procedures, putting in central lines and intubating has a very flat learning curve.
Thank you for doing this video. Your passion for anaesthesia and education is infectious! Please continue to be the voice for anesthetists around the world :)
I absolutely love being an anesthesiologist! Started residency with general surgery but migrated to anesthesia. Best career decision ever!
Cheers Obi. Brothers in arms! Thanks for watching!
how is your work life balance?
@@zjohn662
Great work life balance.. Most new grads are choosing the per diem route which offers even more flexibility.
Can you please share like what do you recommend me to do as a High School senior? How should I start? How was your career path?
where do you start to become one
Bass playing anesthesiologist myself. Great analogy!
Actually, the best way to explain what an anesthesiologist does comes from a bass player. Garry Tallent from Springsteen’s E Street Band once said: “What I do, nobody’s notices… ‘till it stops”.
I am an anesthesiologist and a pilot and have been practicing this job for the last 35 years.
This is exactly what I say to my students, residents and to my son who is also an anesthesiologist in Hamburg Germany.
Well said,amazing video.
I appreciate your channel a lot and I always advise my residents to watch your videos.
Outstanding and passionate colleague. Thank you in the name of our team.
Hi Marwan! Glad you enjoyed watching our content. Brothers in arms! Greeting to you and all your Residents from Team NYSORA!
Hej Marwan, I'm in Hamburg as well! Working at Albertinen, where's your son at? :)
Uniklinik Eppendorf
Hey, I am a Private Pilot but I am curious if i could be an Anesthesiologist with a hand injury. I still fly, and I broke my right hand but I've had 3 surgeries on it and recored. I do however dont have 100 full motion of it. My thumb can goes to my ring finger going a crossed. My pointer and middle finger can make a fist and touch but my ring finger and pinky cant touch my palm making a 80% fist? With that being said could i still do that type of work? I am planning on being a airline pilot but I still may change careers because of the injury. Thank you in advance!
@@JBK-w5uyou may be capable of it depending on which hand is affected. If it’s your non dominant hand and you are able to perform effectively then go for it. I’m sure you’re aware but worth mentioning you’ll be scrutinized severely by medical doctors as an airline pilot and the loss of function in your hand may preclude you from being cleared to fly commercial. Keep working at your rehabilitation. Nerve damage can take years to recover from if ever, but continued deliberate efforts to rehabilitate the affected nerves can really improve the outcome. Good luck in whichever career you land in.
Patients don’t come to the hospital to receive anaesthesia so you have to be able to live in the shadows of medical care!!! Such an epic line ❤️
Also people talking to/about you as if you're not a doctor lol.. the doctor in their mind is always the surgeon
Hi Rena! Thank you for commenting,. keep watching!
But what NO ONE seems to understand is that the anesthesiologist is the doctor that ensures you LEAVE the hospital.
And my school loans were JUST as expensive
Anaesthetists/Anaesthesiologists are physicians with NERVES OF STEEL.
I’m so glad to be training in this intellectually rewarding field here in Australia.
Hi Andrew! Totally agree Boss-man! Greetings and thank you for watching!
I would argue that you can learn reasons 1-4 (thinking under stress, multitasking, team leadership and manual skills) with good training. I struggled with a lot of these aspects myself when I started training, but with working in anesthesia for a longer period of time I acquired all of these skills. However, reason number 5 is something you can't get out of your system, if you want the spotlight you'll have to choose another specialty.
Fair enough!
Thank you for doing this video. Your passion for anaesthesia and education is infectious! Please continue to be the voice for anaesthetists around the world :)
I am an anesthesia resident in Canada. You do an amazing job describing our specialty to people (including other doctors) who may not have a good understanding of what our job is all about.
Hi there! Thank you for commenting. Keep watching- a lot more videos are coming very soon. Greetings to you and all your colleagues from NYSORA!
Yeah, can you let all of the rest of the MDs in the hospital know this too? I find it inexcusable that especially surgeons STILL don't get it. Raise your own table.
Can we talk through email
If you don't mind
I now work in PACU formerly an ER Nurse. I absolutely love Anesthesiologists. They are vitally important especially when patients are recovering and things may "Go South" very quickly.
Yes and take the blame for everything that goes wrong. Doctors who have no idea about anesthesia like internal medicine and family medicine will tell the patient that anesthesia is the cause of everything. When things go bad in the OR surgeons will tell the patient and family members it was the anesthesia. People don't recognize you, patients could care less about the anesthesiologist. We do a lot to keep patients a live during surgery and honestly when you think about the Anesthesiologist is the most important person in the room. Yet most hospitals favor and reward the surgeon because they bring the patients and revenue to the hospital. You have to reward and recognize yourself for a job well done. No one else will!
Great to know you are "not alone"! Greetings and thanks for watching!
One sided view but It is understandable . As a surgeon I can’t function without an anaesthetist so I have the utmost respect for them.
But Let’s face it: without the surgeon, there wouldn’t be a surgical procedure.
Also, Bringing clients (patients)to the hospital is a lot of work that needs to be rewarded . The surgeon becomes the breadwinner and everyone can now eat including the anaesthetist.
@@tranquilsoothingsounds3334 Well what you are saying is how most people feel about surgeons anyway. For my experience most surgeons are rewarded for their efforts and I have no problem with that. I don't want to compare myself to a surgeon. My issue is how anesthesia is treated. We are have to endure a lot of verbal abuse by surgeons and this can happen on a daily basis. When other people witness this level of disrespect then nurses and ancillary staff feel like its okay to disrespect anesthesia. Surgeon's are rewarded for what they do and that is okay. My basic problem is that everyone should be treated in a dignified and respectful manor in the OR and when it comes to the anesthetist that is not always the case!
@@bh2155 I'm not a surgeon but if I were I'd abuse you too. The constant bitching and whining. Surgeons have to stand up and focus for hours. They round on dozens of patients before and after their lengthy surgeries. Then they're pressured to work up and operate on critically ill patients from the Emergency Department. Add in the clinics for all the patient's they've operated on, new ward consults, and the nights they are constantly on call, in what way do Anaesthetists do an equal amount of work for the hospital? America is now using nurses to anaesthetise patients because you don't need much training for it. Don't lie, I know you're sitting down looking at tiktok clips on your phone during the maintanence phase of anaesthesia for that one patient you have to deal with.
@@tranquilsoothingsounds3334 sounds like a lot of garbage. Where i work anaesthesia also covers critical care. 100% of the time when surgical team fuck things up they will beg us for icu beds. So to say that surgery is "the breadwinner" is absolutely fucking delusional mate. We just dont reason with surgeons because ya'll cant be reasoned.
Thank you for this nice showing of our work! I like it, too, even more after more than 20 years. What I miss: Anaestesiologists in operation rooms and emergency (car) medicine doctors, too, have been able to switch between waiting, waiting (for ex for surgeons), waiting (for ex for the next emergency call on car), to take periods in operation room when nothing interesting seems to happen (for ex because you do a good job and keep the patient stable) , true boredom, seemingly/treacherously boring periods and then suddenly seconds of very important acting. For me that seems another difference to working as a surgeon. An anaestesiologist who didn't like this and switched to another medical field once told me, for him anaesthesiology is "hours of boredom, minutes of tension and seconds of horror". Good that he left! We have such an interesting, important job with so different areas.
Again thank you for your super good videos (especially about ultrasound for nerve blocks)!
Hi Michael! Thank you for sharing your experience as well with us! Great to know you are "not alone"! Greetings and thanks for watching!
Come on guys, we are the coolest docs on earth!!! 💪🏼😂
Hi Zacki! Indeed! Thank you for your comment. Greetings from NYSORA!
Thank your for this beautiful video. I'm a dentist who now completes his MD degree. I decided to leave dentsistry behind and I'm considering of selecting anaesthesiolgy. It's a tough call though. I can't deny the fact though that when I see a patient wake up it's such a strong emotion for me.
Dr. Admir, that's a real description of our job..... working back stage of a necesary scenario to help patients ...
Hi there! Indeed! Thank you for commenting!
I'm still in high school but I want to become an anesthesiologist. I am very good at keeping my cool and trying hard even at the last minute (happened a lot for my due dates assignments and exams) but I don't know if it requires math because I'm pretty bad at it...
all good bro idk too much abt the field but math isnt too difficult to understand. if i could leave u with one thing itd be dont go around with the mindset that your dumb or someone else is “smart” just remember math is a lifestyle for some people doing math isnt cool it just makes you a geek(trust me dont be one) it just means your experienced and took 10000000 hours to learn smth no one else wanted to. So youll be fine man math is super easy once you get the hang of how to read and absorb textbooks
A good surgeon deserves a good anaesthesiologist but a bad surgeon needs one👏👏👌
Nice practice you have Sir.
I wonder how many of the anesthesiologists feel like their work and ethical perspectives are not respected. The ER physicians believe they are better dealing with airways, the icu people do not listen to post anesthesia reports o vent settings, the crna will try to prove that you are not needed, administrators do not care much about your needs; the list is long. Fighting so many adversities, the good anesthesiologists must learn to ask for help ..
Exactly what I face daily...so stressful....I try living in the shadows....but the man in the mirror will bring me to the spotlight....critical importance and salvaging a bad situation....I 3njoy
Hi Ricardo! Thank you for sharing this. Greetings to you and all your colleagues from NYSORA!
ER better at airways?? Haha ..Not even close. i had the Yale ER grads calling for help daily..after they bloodied it all up...
CRNAs get sent to Siberia aka GI if we heard 1 tiny peep...the Vascular Surgeons REFUSED CRNAs in their room....A good relationship with Ortho, OB and, Ortho is paramount..Ignorance is
the main culprit of Administration...overall rewarding yes, but must be ready for anything..
@@arisdelis1can you elaborate on your CRNA comments? What do you mean by one tiny peep? And why did the vascular surgeons outright refuse CRNAs?
Anesthesiologists are the SWAT team of medical field.
Specialised to handle critical situations. The rest of the times we just stay in our AC suits sipping coffee while solving crossword puzzle. 😂
The worst part of being an anesthesiologist/critical care physician is having to see critically ill patients slowly dying in the ICU. It is also the most compassionate and spiritual part of our lives.
Hi Rishav! Thank you for commenting. Greetings to you and all your colleagues from NYSORA!
Thank you for the two videos on reasons for being or not being an anesthesiologist. Nailed it!
To the comparison of pilots and anesthesiologists I usually add the point that we "fly" planes that definitely are not in a technical state where they should be flown. And that they are unter maintenance inflight where somebody shuts off fuel pipes or makes them leaking or they use tools that interfere with your avionics so on...
And sometimes I have the feeling that we are nannies who watch over the playground to make sure that the little ones don't climb where they shouldn't or that they don't fight over their toys.... and when they are told that they can't play anymore, they get grumpy.
Hi Thomas! Thank you for sharing your point of view. Very well written. Greetings from NYSORA!
When the “plane” crashes in anaesthesia the “pilot” doesn’t die!
@@colinhopkins8009 How true! But this shows all the more that we as anesthesiologists should do our utmost to work in an organized, professional and effective manner to prevent our patients from "crashing" - even if we do not crash ourselves.
Another difference to "real" pilots is that we don't necessarily see the sun while working 🙂
In the modern day, even most surgeons live in the shadows of medicine, unfortunately. Modern patient care requires so many people be involved. Unfortunately most of modern medicine is endless documentation on a computer, consulting other services, clicking buttons, and things happening in the background. The difference is that in anesthesia, you are the one DOING the medicine. You are in (almost) total control for those few hours 8:28 . It’s the purest form of medicine still in existence. The reward from anesthesia doesn’t come from patients praising you; it comes from the sense of flow that you get when performing the work in silence, especially during a challenging or emergent case.
Thank you for your wonderful comment and support! Greetings from team NYSORA!
I’m 65 years old and an anaesthesiologist since I was 27 years old and my feelings are still the same I think you Born to be an anaesthesiologist😢
Is it a hard job? I am 17 yrs old wanting to be an anesthesiologist
Anesthesiologist Is the first to come in and the last to leave the OR every time.
I like to expand on the airline metaphor, some cases are like flying for a national airline in clear skies into a quiet airport. Some cases are like flying a clapped out 30yr old plane into an improvised runway in a warzone with no ILs or autopilot.
In Europe the anesthesiologists are considered on a political par with surgeons, whereas in America, because the surgeons are the profit generators, the anesthesiologists are viewed as the second class citizens of the operating room, and most definitely not team leaders. In America, unlike Europe, money and profit drive the healthcare system, a fact reflected in the medical hierarchy, close to the bottom of which reside the anesthesiologists.
Anaesthesia is a career where you are generally deeply respected by colleagues but not seen by patients
That's true, but we've seen increased awareness among patients regarding the importance of anesthesiologists.
In military, there are so many corps. Among them commandos are the group who respond quickly, firmly and at the front. I seem myself as commando of the physicians. Bcoz we respond faster among others and i'm proud of it.
Is it possible CRNAs will replace anesthesiologists in the future? They can already practice independently in many states , I hope things dont change by the time I start working on the field .
The last part makes me happy
Perfect job description. Congratulation.
Look, I love this channel and its guides for they've helped me a lot as a young anesthesiology resident but this is getting slightly out of hand with megalomaniac vibe of this video lol. I'm sure you're an amazing an accomplished physician and all but why do you need to keep praising yourself? Is that the point of this video? And I'd say go easy with the stern absolutism when it comes to determining if someone is fit for anesthesiology or not - I'd say 90% of these skills and qualities that ultimately lead to being effective in the field can be learned. Certain personality types may find it easier than others but I believe almost every med student can be taught into it if he's determined to go for that specialty.
Having written that comment I feel a little bad but hope it's been taken as a constructive criticism in the goal of making more quality content on this channel for helping other residents and colleagues in the field.
Hi Massacreto! Thanks for the feedback. The beauty of open-source info like UA-cam is that we do not have to agree on everything and that we can voice our opinions freely. However, the purpose of making this video is not what you thought but we will definitely work more in order to create a quality content like we did. Greetings from NYSORA!
Svaka čast za video doktore Hadžić!🙌
Nicely elaborated sir...✨ I'm still a student... I am ambitious to become an anesthesiologist 🙂thanks a lot for sharing your experiences and attitudes about being an anesthesiologist 😇 really inspired with ur video .... Fighting to enter your field 💪 Respect u all✌️🤍
We're excited to have you. Thank you for already being a part of the NYSORA community!
Really you touch my heart ❤️ rare to get appreciation as you told ( live in shadow)
For me,it’s fascinating
Hi Vinod! Glad you think so! Keep watching- a lot more is coming soon!
wondering if i should do anesthesiology, and then comes the analogy of the bass!! (used to play bass, awesome instrument!!!), i really put it as one of my considerations along ophthalmology, ENT, Urology, and family medicine
So.. Have u decided yet?
As someone with GAD, I occasionally have hand tremors when I'm
Such a brilliant video! Thank you for putting the real picture in such an amazing approach. Anaesthesiologist in the shadows and proud! ✌🏼
Thank you so much for your kind words; Your comments are much appreciated!
I’m a cvicu nurse of 20 yrs going back to medical school 😅. My goal is to match into anesthesia 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️
Well explained tasks of Anaesthesiologists
Hi Desi Doctor! Glad to know that you liked our content! Keep watching- a lot more is coming soon. Greetings from Team Nysora!
after 20 yrs in anesthesiology
I've chose the profession for being an introvert and like to live in the shadows..
then I realized that, it's the most important part of the job is to keep things as simple and boring as long ad they can be..
because of these 2 reasons, sadly you are gonna be a great anesthesiologist and you are going to be in the spotlight in your workplace and everyone will ask for your service..!!😂
Hi Mohamed Kamal! Glad to know your story as well. Thank you for watching our videos. Greetings from Nysora!
I love this comment
Nicely expressed 👍
Hi Dharmendra! Thank you for your comment. Cheers!
That's a brilliant explanation for the aspirants and the ignorant!
GREAT post.......VERY realistic !!!! 👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great post 👏🏻
💯
Bravo, colega, 100% de acuerdo, muchas gracias
Great to hear and thanks for watching. Greetings to you and your colleagues!
Donde practicas?
@@eduardodiaz9354 Cuba, Holguín
Masterpiece 👍
Hi KD! Glad you liked our videos. Keep watching!
The manual dexterity that you claim it needs is a bit overblown. Compared to even simple surgical procedures, putting in central lines and intubating has a very flat learning curve.
I don’t have a good hands, but I would like to be an anaesthesiologist
praktikuisea, i vese poluchitsea. U menya toje ne poluchilosi 30 let nazad, a teperi kak po maslu.
Very interesting!!
Great video, thanks once again!
I love your videos .
Hi Jaime! Thank you for commenting! Keep Watching- a lot more is coming soon!
True
Thanks!
Thank you for what you do.
Is it more difficult for you to perform your job when a patient has a thick beard and mustache?
Keep up the great work!
the plane analogy is critical. Its like landing a damaged A350 Airbus in a bad storm. Daily
I’m an anesthesiologist and I agree with this statement.
Hi Edwin, Thank you for your comment! Greetings from NYSORA!
We are the Michael Collins of the first lunar landing…if you cant get your head around that…do something else
I really wanna become a anesthesiologist 😭😭😭
say F it and go for it 😂
Add time stamps plzzzz
lol i was ask my sister is anesthesiologist is a doctor also. she said yes
10 year as anesthesiologist..I feel this branch should be scrapped
is it worth it
Can a pharmacist become a anaesthesiologist
Wut?! lol What type of question is this
👍
Anesthesia filled with hours of boredom and seconds of terror !!
19 years and counting !!
Indeed!
The anesthesiologist is always a guess in the OR. The host, the man who runs the show is the Surgeon. We run the show only, when/if pts codes.
Agree!
The anesthesiologist is ubiquitous but largely invisible, Henry Jay Przybylo MD 😔
Thank you for supporting our team! We can't wait to share more useful content. Greetings from NYOSRA!
You must love pharmacology and physiology or it will be hell
Started BS anesthesia.
If you really think about it...
Anaesthesiologist = ATC
Surgeon = Pilot
Indeed!
Its boring
Because your head is always empty
@@modernmedicine2562 oh then tell me y anaesthetics always want to leave anaesthesia
Boring is good-means you are doing things correctly.
@@king20854 it's the same for any department. Mostly personal reasons.
@@king20854 moronic statement. very irresponsible to say
The biggest reason: Mid Level Encroachment
7387 Alfreda Skyway
Thank you for doing this video. Your passion for anaesthesia and education is infectious! Please continue to be the voice for anesthetists around the world :)
Thank you so much for these kind words, they are well appreciated. Kind regards.