I just started a new position in CS. I came from dietary so it's a huge career change. And, I'm 58 years old. Thank you for your videos. I watch them all the time!
My wife enjoyed this as well as I. She is RN, MSN was, OR educator. You did outstanding explanation and usage of each instrument. Watched set up of small set, again outstanding. Team work, with a great tech, a room & case comes together nicely. Both necessary, both invaluable. Not Boring. Techs taught me so much.
when i first started watching your videos, i thought all the instruments looked the same. it feels so good to come back months later to see how much i've learned.
I just started school for surgical tech and I'm already relying on these videos for reference. I know that if I just watch them several times, when I get to this part of the program, I'll know a little better what is what...thank you!
I’m in college right now taking a Medical Device Reprocessing course. Due to COVID-19, it’s online. Learning instruments online has been BRUTAL. This video has SAVED ME! Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!
Not boring at all brother. You have no idea how much this helps. Please keep up the awesome and helpful content. We appreciate you outhere in Lynwood California!
Far from boring. I love that you take the time to explain each one and give examples of uses and detailed information to help absorb the information and not just the name! Thank you very much.
Thank you so much for this video! Our teacher went over these instruments at lightning speed and I'll need to recognize them in an exam. You explained it very well!
Thank you so much I just started as an OR Nurse. Boring NEVER I am so grateful. Thank you for taking the time to do these videos. You are doing us all a service.
I was an OR Tech back in the early EARLY 80's when there was no laparoscopic stuff. Everyone got opened up. Back then it was just a 1 yr diploma program at the local community college. Started at $5.77/hr. I'd forgotten the names of some of these instruments and it's fun to see them again.
Still is only a 1yr program in some states. TN, is one. Then you can move to Nevada because you qualify for a national license, and make $30hr. IT ISN’T WORTH IT. Everyone needs to work for a city who pays 2.5% every year of work and allows a 20 year retirement, or join the military. Start at 20, and make $40,000 a year passively, by 40. Bingo you no longer need to hunt becoming a landlord, then go chase your second real career, you’ve got 25 years to become whatever you wanted.
I'm not a medical or nursing student, but rather a junior in highschool trying to learn a vast number of topics in medicine, and this video was very helpful.
Great video! Thank you for making it for us. As a Vet Tech, here are tips I use to remember the difference between these instruments: Hemostats/forceps Kelly = striated stops half way down Crile = striated all the way down. I remember like “cry” because tears fall all the way down Needle holders/drivers: Olsen-Hegar = have a scissor combo (for cutting suture) Mayo-Hegar = has NO cutting edges. I remember “Hold the Mayo” (only holds) 🐈🫀🐕🦺
Just started surgical tech school this fall and going back through these videos and have a new found, stronger appreciation for the videos you do! I already liked them, but now I'm so appreciative. Thank you for taking the time to do what you do!!
these are my favorite trays to assemble.. i work in sterile processing and hoping within the next year or two get into the surgical tech program at my hospital.. great videos
It might be boring for you but it’s nice to know someone from the O.R. teaches these instruments again. It’s a great tip for students and medical workers who wish to know these stuffs again in an actual video, O.R. setting.
Thank you so much for this (and your other) videos! I am attempting to reenter the field (I graduated from a program 13 years ago) and have not worked in the field since graduation. Life and motherhood got in the way of my career, so I am more than just rusty! Really hoping I can make it. Your videos are a great help and I am grateful to you!
Hey I want to thank you for these videos. They have been helping to supplement our classes especially during this time. The school I go to is closed for 10 days since someone tested positive and we are using your videos for assignments. So thanks!!
Great video. Not as boring as it may have seemed, as far as instrument guides go this was entertaining. Love the tidbits of your experience that you throw in of use cases and nicknames etc. Looking forward to more
I’m preparing to get my BSN and have a strong preconception that I want to be an OR nurse. This was awesome to get me familiar with how to identify different instruments and what they might be for. Very very informative! Thank you!
@@calilove11001 my hospital is cross training me in scrubbing and I hate it lol. I've been a circulator and I've spent more time scrubbing than anything
Remember to thank your Central Sterile team for cleaning, assembling, sterilizing, and distributing that set :D No surgeries could happen without them!!
Hello Get leaked question and answers for your (NCLEX)upcoming exam which is 100% genuine and authentic. Contact us on WhatsApp +14142533019 wa.link/7crlzf.
I’m currently in school and we just got to minor tray set up and this is helping me exponentially with the instruments on the stringer! Now I just gotta master all the forceps lol
Planning to go to school this coming January, actually not planning cause I’m gonna have my school interview tomorrow. Your videos helps a lot, especially that i don’t know really whats a surgical tech is. All i know it is a well paying job, thats why I’m gonna take it. But now, watching some of your videos, kinda have the general idea of whats gonna happen. And i think i like it. Just have to overcome the blood and tissues etc. thing. Great videos, very well explained even i don’t have a background in medical field, understand it. Keep it up!
Not boring at all. I find this all so fascinating even without being in the medical field! I would like to see more trays, or perhaps more specialized trays just to see and learn more about the different instruments. Do you ever do orthopedic cases like joint replacements?
I do mostly CV and thoracic now, but have fellow friends at work that say they are willing to do some neuro and ortho videos with me. So we will get some of that stuff up soon.
This brought back memories, both good & bad. I miss playing with a full set of instruments. The few tools I have leftover are now working miracles in my little workshop. Not quite the same, but but at least now they're making people smile instead of shrinking away in fear.
Much more basic than the minor tray we use at my hospital, but also included many more forceps than ours does, very interesting to see the differences!
Absolutely not boring!!! Believe it or not I use most most of what you showed for our processes in making large carbon composites military unmanned aircraft ( except the retraction tools ). I'm also building a better than most "medic go kit". Happy to know the actual names of the different tools . Also learning the basics of suturing.... even though I grew up doctoring live stock on the family cattle ranch..... never know when you'll need it. Thanks and keep it up.
Thank you so much for this and your other videos. As a new circulator nurse, this video is so incredibly helpful for me! I would love even more videos on the different trays as well. :)
I found this video very exciting and helpful towards my dream of becoming ODP (Operation Department Practitioner) which something like a Surgical Nurse in England. I'm going to revise these instruments again tomorrow. Keep them videos coming and thank you from the bottom of my heart :)
@@infornoindustries1031 Sadly I'm not fully qualified at all and to be honest NHS (National Health Service - the public provider of healthcare in UK) killed that dream off for me. Good luck in finding someone x
I was a Combat medic then became a 91D O.R. Tech in the Early 80s in the U.S. Army, I was the head General and Thoracic Tech.....a couple of things...1- I noticed a missing instrument in that tray...Right between the Mosquito and Kelly was always a Crile clamp..basically in the trey was a small, med and large clamp....the other thing I wanted to mention...You stated that Suture scissors must always be used to cut Suture...After so much training hands on a classroom in the Army...I finaly got my first case...an Appy...I gave Mayo scissors to cut the suture and the Surgeon (Captain) took the Mayo's and flung them across the room stating never to do that again...Afterwards, he came over to me and said Great job considering it was my very first real case...We would as time went on, always asked for me to be his Tech...We became great friends...
Love this video Shane! Your tray is a little different than the tray we are using at school. A couple of the stringed instruments I hadn’t seen yet but everything else is familiar which is awesome! Not boring at all but then I may not be a good person to ask. Lol. You know how I feel about all things Surg Tech.
thank you - not boring at all - I live in the woods - have had to sew up some wounds - wanted to set up a tray for emergency use until we can get to help. . I wonder about sterilization of these instruments and how I can do that at home. Thanks again. Very helpful in identifying the bag full of instruments I have accumulated.
it is so great educational video.can you do specific procedures too?like OB/GYN, LAPAROSCOPIC AND ENT STUFF?also, I am so confused about equipment that we use for surgery too. please!!! thank you so much !!your video is just so perfect for me
thanks this was really great. it would be good to see a radical prostatectomy tray to see the long mixters, rt angles, thoracics, long gemini rt ang, kantrowitz clamp, harrington forceps..and how to understand the differences of use and jaw styles. Also an advanced lap..taking them apart and how to clean them info
I love that scientific term "it's grippy" lolol. I'm just messing with you, great video I watch them all the time, I'm a huge fan It's just that I very rarely get to talk trash to a doctor so I need to take advantage lol
I graduated from a sterile Technician program and our Potts Smith scissors did not look like that . There were more angular meaning one was 90° and I think 45°. The scissors you called Pottsmiths looked like Mezenbaums. Pottsmiths are much more pointy .
I just started a new position in CS.
I came from dietary so it's a huge career change.
And, I'm 58 years old.
Thank you for your videos. I watch them all the time!
Me also turning 50 and coming from cleaning surgery rooms now training for SPD
You two just inspired me. Needed that!
I'm thinking of starting in CST and I'm 31, happy to see your post.
I'm a 53 and CNA I'm thinking about CST happy to see your comment
My wife enjoyed this as well as I. She is RN, MSN was, OR educator. You did outstanding explanation and usage of each instrument. Watched set up of small set, again outstanding. Team work, with a great tech, a room & case comes together nicely. Both necessary, both invaluable. Not Boring. Techs taught me so much.
when i first started watching your videos, i thought all the instruments looked the same. it feels so good to come back months later to see how much i've learned.
Did you end up graduating?? I’ve been brought back to this a few times and I’m thinking of finally trying
I'm nearing the end of my maternity leave and wanted to brush up. It's nice to watch videos done by someone who knows what they're talking about!
I just started school for surgical tech and I'm already relying on these videos for reference. I know that if I just watch them several times, when I get to this part of the program, I'll know a little better what is what...thank you!
I’m in college right now taking a Medical Device Reprocessing course. Due to COVID-19, it’s online. Learning instruments online has been BRUTAL. This video has SAVED ME! Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!
Not boring at all brother. You have no idea how much this helps. Please keep up the awesome and helpful content. We appreciate you outhere in Lynwood California!
Far from boring. I love that you take the time to explain each one and give examples of uses and detailed information to help absorb the information and not just the name! Thank you very much.
Thank you so much for this video! Our teacher went over these instruments at lightning speed and I'll need to recognize them in an exam. You explained it very well!
Thank you so much I just started as an OR Nurse. Boring NEVER I am so grateful. Thank you for taking the time to do these videos. You are doing us all a service.
I was an OR Tech back in the early EARLY 80's when there was no laparoscopic stuff. Everyone got opened up. Back then it was just a 1 yr diploma program at the local community college. Started at $5.77/hr. I'd forgotten the names of some of these instruments and it's fun to see them again.
Still is only a 1yr program in some states. TN, is one.
Then you can move to Nevada because you qualify for a national license, and make $30hr.
IT ISN’T WORTH IT.
Everyone needs to work for a city who pays 2.5% every year of work and allows a 20 year retirement, or join the military.
Start at 20, and make $40,000 a year passively, by 40. Bingo you no longer need to hunt becoming a landlord, then go chase your second real career, you’ve got 25 years to become whatever you wanted.
I remember those days, started out at 5.49/hr...got certified and went to 7.49/hr. I was barely making it.
I'm not a medical or nursing student, but rather a junior in highschool trying to learn a vast number of topics in medicine, and this video was very helpful.
Great video! Thank you for making it for us. As a Vet Tech, here are tips I use to remember the difference between these instruments:
Hemostats/forceps
Kelly = striated stops half way down
Crile = striated all the way down. I remember like “cry” because tears fall all the way down
Needle holders/drivers:
Olsen-Hegar = have a scissor combo (for cutting suture)
Mayo-Hegar = has NO cutting edges. I remember “Hold the Mayo” (only holds)
🐈🫀🐕🦺
Just started surgical tech school this fall and going back through these videos and have a new found, stronger appreciation for the videos you do! I already liked them, but now I'm so appreciative. Thank you for taking the time to do what you do!!
Did you make it out?
these are my favorite trays to assemble.. i work in sterile processing and hoping within the next year or two get into the surgical tech program at my hospital.. great videos
It might be boring for you but it’s nice to know someone from the O.R. teaches these instruments again. It’s a great tip for students and medical workers who wish to know these stuffs again in an actual video, O.R. setting.
I'm not a surgical tech but a newly qualified theatre nurse in the UK learning scrub. Your videos are extremely helpful thankyou 😊
I am starting in SPD and these videos really help me get familiar with instruments
Thank you for your time and dedication on instructing on the use of instruments please keep those videos coming you are a great inspiration !!!
Im manufacturer and Exporter Neurosurgery + Microsurgery + plasticsurgery + orthosurgery and all kind surgical instruments
Whatsapp# +923444376473
ua-cam.com/video/RYdWmIz1xiQ/v-deo.html
Thank you so much for this (and your other) videos! I am attempting to reenter the field (I graduated from a program 13 years ago) and have not worked in the field since graduation. Life and motherhood got in the way of my career, so I am more than just rusty! Really hoping I can make it. Your videos are a great help and I am grateful to you!
This video has helped a lot.. I been doing this for 11 months and to be honest it was a slam dunk to see this. I am learning as I go. So thank you.
Hey I want to thank you for these videos. They have been helping to supplement our classes especially during this time. The school I go to is closed for 10 days since someone tested positive and we are using your videos for assignments. So thanks!!
i am a software developer and i don't know why i am curious enough to watch your videos. 😄 well explained
Same here :)
@@costelmihaila8520 KOMoMYOMbaMBmJVMUbmjmzmapmbmmROROU
Yep...
because humans are fascinated with seeing other people work in their field
Sad I'm a medical student that wants to code 😔
Your videos are outstanding and they're really helping me understand more about the surgical field .
Great video. Not as boring as it may have seemed, as far as instrument guides go this was entertaining. Love the tidbits of your experience that you throw in of use cases and nicknames etc. Looking forward to more
I’m in college for MDRD this has helped me time and time again. Thank u ❤
I’m preparing to get my BSN and have a strong preconception that I want to be an OR nurse. This was awesome to get me familiar with how to identify different instruments and what they might be for. Very very informative! Thank you!
You won’t need to know instruments lol unless your tech needs you to run and grab a single packed instrument
@@calilove11001 my hospital is cross training me in scrubbing and I hate it lol. I've been a circulator and I've spent more time scrubbing than anything
Brilliant. Going back to CV OR after 22years in ICU. This was a great refresher. Thank-you!
Not boring at all. Thank you for sharing!
Remember to thank your Central Sterile team for cleaning, assembling, sterilizing, and distributing that set :D No surgeries could happen without them!!
Thanks Thanks Thanks so much. I'm about to start my nursing training in the OR and this is being such a help. Looking forward to the anestesia one. :)
I am a new grad/OR nurse. This video is awesome!! This will help me assist the scrub techs if extra instruments are needed. Thank you!
the only useful video for surgical instrument so far in the whole youtube
Interesting how our general minor instrument tray differs. thanks for making this video, always great to see differences and learn something new :)
Preparing myself for school. These will help me be ahead of my class hopefully. Thanks!
Me too
Not boring. Good job.
Im manufacturer and Exporter Neurosurgery + Microsurgery + plasticsurgery + orthosurgery and all kind surgical instruments
Whatsapp# +923444376473
Under paid.
Hello
Get leaked question and answers for your (NCLEX)upcoming exam which is 100% genuine and authentic.
Contact us on
WhatsApp +14142533019
wa.link/7crlzf.
Yes not at all. Useful information
I’m currently in school and we just got to minor tray set up and this is helping me exponentially with the instruments on the stringer! Now I just gotta master all the forceps lol
For a student this is NOT boring! Loved it and found it very helpful! Thank you for what you do!
Planning to go to school this coming January, actually not planning cause I’m gonna have my school interview tomorrow. Your videos helps a lot, especially that i don’t know really whats a surgical tech is. All i know it is a well paying job, thats why I’m gonna take it. But now, watching some of your videos, kinda have the general idea of whats gonna happen. And i think i like it. Just have to overcome the blood and tissues etc. thing. Great videos, very well explained even i don’t have a background in medical field, understand it. Keep it up!
Not boring at all. I find this all so fascinating even without being in the medical field! I would like to see more trays, or perhaps more specialized trays just to see and learn more about the different instruments. Do you ever do orthopedic cases like joint replacements?
I do mostly CV and thoracic now, but have fellow friends at work that say they are willing to do some neuro and ortho videos with me. So we will get some of that stuff up soon.
I'm a nurse, I have spend 7yr.as a scrub nurse.i am really interested about your teaching may God bless you sir.
I beg to differ! boring?! my success in my rotation probably depends on this video so no, I found this very interesting
Im manufacturer and Exporter Neurosurgery + Microsurgery + plasticsurgery + orthosurgery and all kind surgical instruments
Whatsapp# +923444376473
Your videos are helping me SO MUCH through surgical technology classes!!! Thank you!!!
What can I say? You're a natural. ALWAYS good stuff.!!!!!
This brought back memories, both good & bad.
I miss playing with a full set of instruments. The few tools I have leftover are now working miracles in my little workshop. Not quite the same, but but at least now they're making people smile instead of shrinking away in fear.
Much more basic than the minor tray we use at my hospital, but also included many more forceps than ours does, very interesting to see the differences!
Absolutely not boring!!! Believe it or not I use most most of what you showed for our processes in making large carbon composites military unmanned aircraft ( except the retraction tools ). I'm also building a better than most "medic go kit". Happy to know the actual names of the different tools . Also learning the basics of suturing.... even though I grew up doctoring live stock on the family cattle ranch..... never know when you'll need it. Thanks and keep it up.
I just started a new job as sterile technician this helps a lot love the video
It was kind of you to share this wonderful video with us nice
Sterile Processor here love you describing the breakdown of the different sets! Very educational! Also handsome;-)
Not boring at all! I’m starting my surgical tech program next week and can’t wait to get in there!
thank you for this video! just began learning the minor instrument tray & im such a visual learner, this is goldddd for me!
Thank you so much for this and your other videos. As a new circulator nurse, this video is so incredibly helpful for me! I would love even more videos on the different trays as well. :)
I'm in the process of getting nationally certified! I so love this field
Your “Kelly” is a curved hemostat here in NC and the Peon is our Kelly. Funny how certain regions have different names for different instruments.
Spencer Nance, I knew one surgeon that called them peons. They were kellys to everyone else in SC.
exactly the same in Haiti 🇭🇹 but some surgeons just say big clamps
Just curious what are peoples reasonings in disliking such an informative video?
u know what in china we used to call all of them in chinese . now i got the english name of them and am so happy . thank you so much . :D
thanks for making this video! It`s really helpful for me....just a freshman in OR! Thank you again!
Thanks!
Good for SPD tech course too.
I found this video very exciting and helpful towards my dream of becoming ODP (Operation Department Practitioner) which something like a Surgical Nurse in England. I'm going to revise these instruments again tomorrow. Keep them videos coming and thank you from the bottom of my heart :)
are you available?
@@infornoindustries1031 Sadly I'm not fully qualified at all and to be honest NHS (National Health Service - the public provider of healthcare in UK) killed that dream off for me. Good luck in finding someone x
I can’t wait to do this!! I am in central processing and I am going to go to school to be a Surgical Tech!!
Im a new ot nurse and this was v helpful. Trying to memorise them all is CRAZY
I understand that. I graduated from pa school and I still have to look certain clamps up that we went over from school. Congrats on becoming a nurse.
@@timdarr8008 thankyouu !!!!!! Goodluckk
I finally learnt them all :p
I was a Combat medic then became a 91D O.R. Tech in the Early 80s in the U.S. Army, I was the head General and Thoracic Tech.....a couple of things...1- I noticed a missing instrument in that tray...Right between the Mosquito and Kelly was always a Crile clamp..basically in the trey was a small, med and large clamp....the other thing I wanted to mention...You stated that Suture scissors must always be used to cut Suture...After so much training hands on a classroom in the Army...I finaly got my first case...an Appy...I gave Mayo scissors to cut the suture and the Surgeon (Captain) took the Mayo's and flung them across the room stating never to do that again...Afterwards, he came over to me and said Great job considering it was my very first real case...We would as time went on, always asked for me to be his Tech...We became great friends...
I have been watching your vedios since i development interest in becoming a theater technician and i have been learning so much from them
LOVE your videos. They've become my go-to in place of tv so I can learn new things while in clinicals.
Thank you so much!!! Next time can you please put the name of the instrument across the screen? Great video
X
X
That would be helpful! I am bad at spelling XD
Thanks for the detail wit, not boring @ all. I've watched you a few times.
I love these vids!! They are really helping me to study!
My first attempt at learning surgical instruments. I wrote down all of the instruments in this video and will be studying them today.
Love this video Shane! Your tray is a little different than the tray we are using at school. A couple of the stringed instruments I hadn’t seen yet but everything else is familiar which is awesome! Not boring at all but then I may not be a good person to ask. Lol. You know how I feel about all things Surg Tech.
It helped me alot ...tomorrow is my viva so thank you for explaining properly 😊😊
Your videos is my savior 😅 Coming back in the field and i will be assigned in the OR after a year. I am kinda nervous and excited. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much I love medical field as a graduated or tech I was ever had a job I am still enjoying watching your videos
Watched one on sutures. Was going to suggest this one, it popped up. Well done, well explained. Memories. Thank you
thank you - not boring at all - I live in the woods - have had to sew up some wounds - wanted to set up a tray for emergency use until we can get to help. . I wonder about sterilization of these instruments and how I can do that at home. Thanks again. Very helpful in identifying the bag full of instruments I have accumulated.
Extremely helpful for a surgical resident thanks a lot
I love all of your videos. You explain everything nicely. Thank you for this. God Bless you
it is so great educational video.can you do specific procedures too?like OB/GYN, LAPAROSCOPIC AND ENT STUFF?also, I am so confused about equipment that we use for surgery too. please!!! thank you so much !!your video is just so perfect for me
i love all your videos! and I wonder if you could do videos on other trays as well: major, urology, GYN, ENT, etc. Thank you for your work! Great job!
Or put a list in the comment session in their order. I have to replay and replay to get the names correctly. Great video tho
thanks this was really great. it would be good to see a radical prostatectomy tray to see the long mixters, rt angles, thoracics, long gemini rt ang, kantrowitz clamp, harrington forceps..and how to understand the differences of use and jaw styles. Also an advanced lap..taking them apart and how to clean them info
I love that scientific term "it's grippy" lolol. I'm just messing with you, great video I watch them all the time, I'm a huge fan
It's just that I very rarely get to talk trash to a doctor so I need to take advantage lol
Not boring at all. So needed this. Thank you!
thank you! Needed a refresher and this was perfect.
Your videos have helped me and my residency team out immensely. Thank you from NYC!
You did a great job explaining each surgical equipment.
Omg I'm in school now for surgical tech.... u make it look so easy... take us back to when had to learn the tools..... what helped u master this
Thank you so much for the video. I just started my new job in Sterile Processing.
2022…new subscriber - I’m not a med student, just a farmer with accident prone animals. Great info!
Yay I’ve been waiting for this video 🙏🏼🙏🏼💪🏽
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247 people are haters ! I feel like I need to pay this guy for helping me so much! Thank you for these absolutely amazing videos! Keep em comin!
How did you remember all of the instruments? Do you have any tips or remembrance clues that you did to remember?
I should’ve just watched this from the start to help with my skills test today
Do a video showing us how to extract small trays like dressing pack or stitch pack from a general or maybe a CS set please
We used your video in our SPT class today! Love your videos
Sir pls write names of instumenta along with explaination ....its being to hard to clearify their name
I graduated from a sterile Technician program and our Potts Smith scissors did not look like that . There were more angular meaning one was 90° and I think 45°. The scissors you called Pottsmiths looked like Mezenbaums. Pottsmiths are much more pointy .
Thank you for your video it was very helpful. I will be starting surgery tech school soon
Thank you it was a great break down. I'm preparing myself for going to school for this.
When I started my career 5 years ago in Sterile Processing this was the first tray I learned instruments with..lol
Fascinating video! Who gives the instruments to the surgeon a scrub nurse or surgical tech...