And 2 years later moving his practice to a different hospital, because no one talks to him except the other egofreaks (who he hates because they're 'all ego and no skill').
Yeah fucking right!!! They are never wrong so they will ask you for EVERYTHING else and get supremely angry when it is the only instrument that will work.🤷♂️
Holy- that little baby resident has COURAGE. edit: i see a lot of people saying that the doctor is stupid, and that is true. however, this comment was a year ago and i have changed, and back then i didn’t know how to word it.
Courage? More like chutzpah. The nerve! A doctor who has nothing to learn is not a doctor I want operating on me. If he’s that new and already thinks he’s too good to take advice from someone with 20 years of experience in a vital position just because they aren’t a doctor or his boss, he’s an idiot at best and dangerous at worst. Tell him I said, “Sit down and be humble.”
it's sad that ppl are so quick to demean these people !! a hospital can't work without every single person working their butt off !!! if one person takes a day off you'll see just how important they are !! have respect yeesh
As much as doctors are experts in their profession, they don’t spend as much OR time as surgical techs. Techs see many different specialties, techniques, variations of procedures whilst doctors stay within their own scope as well. Surgical techs get real damn good at the art of anticipation!
The amount of times I gave the doc exactly what he wanted even though he said something completely different is insane at this point. I literally can see the future and read your mind, stop being rude just because I'm not a doc lmao
@@ketansharma855 some doctors don't even know the names of the instruments and we still manage to know what they need by simply looking at the step they're on. When I started working this job one of the docs said "that job is so easy even a monkey could do it" so oftentimes we don't get the credit we deserve even though without nurses doctors would be absolutely lost.
My mom was an OR nurse back in the 1940's. The nurse who was in charge of the OR at the hospital where she worked was a nun named Sister Estelle. The doctors learned very quickly you did not disrespect Sister Estelle or the nurses.
@@sourgummiescureyourpain4555 My mother said one of the surgeons gave Sister Estelle some attitude. Sister was in charge of all the scheduling so when it was time for elective surgery, she gave him the most inconvenient schedule and never the times he asked for. Anyway, he eventually got a clue and realized that Sister was the one in charge. He was very polite to her after that.
Lol so true... even in n medical days i learned more from tech, nurses .. non medicos are not able to understand how much great help thy are n dont worry newbies doc understand within in week...
@@joyj6702 that and basic courtesy. I'm doing my internship as a physician. I can go to any area, ask for help with something, and get a favorable response from anyone really. Some of my shiftmates arent even allowed to set foot in some areas and they wonder why. Introducing yourself to the workers in the area, greeting people, asking with a please and a smile in the face, and helping as much as you can when it's requested.
@@LeonArgent yes same thing i also experienced.. tough sometimes we encounter people really rude n mean to us without any reason but in long run its always helped us.... and i always believe in kindness... lots of people kind towards me its saved me many ways i can remember.... i m going to do my specialization emergency medicine i guess we need extra hand in ER compared to other n great team coordination.... i can say you are great human being. .. lots of well my well wishes are with you
@@LeonArgent So very true! Who wants to deal with a person who won't even look you in your eyes. I'm very polite, but I also like to feel that it's reciprocated. There's nothing better than dealing with a great group of people. It's why we got into the profession. At least it is for me. 😁
Thank you for bringing this topic. A good doctor knows that medicine is a teamwork. Technician have plenty of knowledge and they’ve seen it all. Always let them know that they’re a key element in the room.
It's not just young doctors or residents. Seasoned doctors are the same way. They get full of themselves and develop God complexes and think they know it all and forget the people who support them and make their jobs easier. That's why I like my surgeon Dr. John Webber at Harper University Hospital here in Detroit MI. (I call him Watson 😸) everyone loves this man and his team works so well together and so smoothly. I've never been afraid going through any procedure that I've had to have. Doctors must always remember that they don't do what they do alone. Some can't even remember to respect their patients..
And it's backwards as hell. At the end of the day the majority of the people that a patient talks to on a regular basis is the nurse. I saw my doctor once a day when I got admitted into the hospital. Like let's be honest it's never the Doctor Who draw blood, takes x-rays, stitch people up fix broken bones and everything.
@@sagirahakaevilbunny227 I agree with you but broken bones are fixed by orthopedics and x-rays are taken by radiologists. We must understand that nurses and doctors have different roles. You could see it like this; nurses have a more caring role whereas doctors have a more problem solving role (they pretty much study each patient case). Doctors usually are not seen as much as nurses because they run from one patient to the other diagnosing or checking that the right medication or treatment is being given with no problem. This is usually carried out by nurses. Where I live, we have a pretty bad shortage of doctors, that's why you would see them disappearing after giving the diagnosis and treatment plan. We also have long waiting times because of this shortage 😭
Are you thinking about preppy? If so go for it. I am going to do it. It's got the right accreditation so it's A ok. You also get set up with an externship.
As a 2nd year general surgery resident, its great to be friends with the surgical techs... they will put the next instrument you need in front of you whenever you’re in need of help in the next step of the surgery. In those moments I Just put the hand towards them 😜 I learn a lot with them, they dont let me fail when Im operating with the “masters” ahaha
A long time ago, I worked for an organization that held health clinics for the community (very dangerous and impoverished area), and it was staffed by RNs and a couple of residents from the nearby medical university. They had gotten a snot-nosed young guy, and I saw how he was treating the people coming in...until I finally asked him why he went into the medical field because he had "piss poor bedside manners, and really should consider going into a different field." Later, the nurses came to my office to thank me and were laughing at how I had taken the wind out of his sails. Was it rude on my part? Probably, but then when they had a different resident come in, that one was so sweet to all of the people, so I told him that he did a wonderful job interacting with the patients.
@@Thyme888 Ah I see, in Spain having courage is both used to describe someone in a good or bad way depending on the tone you use, I didn't know it was only a positive thing in English but thanks for telling me
Well off topic: I'm surprised you never went into cardiothorasic surgery, instead of cosmetic, Dr. Youn ... ... because you could've opened a practice called Youn at Heart ... But, seriously, I've met some great surgeons, and not so great. Perhaps my favourite was the one whom corrected my scoliosis. Apparently, his habit was once he made an incision, he would carry through, right to the last suture, using the finest usable for the skin. Although the incision basically runs the length of my back, the scar itself is barely much wider than a 20g needle (perhaps a 19g at most). But having wheeled in and out of an OR/OT more than your average person, due to my medical conditions, I would have to say that, without decent surgical techs, mistakes like leaving a gause in, or, perhaps the worse, a hemostat, would be happening way more often ...
My mom's been working as a RN for 30+ years. The amount of times doctors, young and old ones tried to dismiss her opinion when she basically knows more than them about patients is interesting. Haha.
Dissing someone that's supposed to be your eyes and ears is literally as it seems. You are going blind and deaf or very limited into a diagnosis. And forget about the patient in the middle.
My mom was an RN for 40+ years. The older doctors knew not to disrespect her. The newer ones eventually learned. Like you said the RNs care for the patients longer than the doctors.
Reminds me of a nurse i know who used to be a doctor in her country of origin and her husband got sick due to a stomach condition. She had once treated someone with the same symptoms in her country and therefore automatically knew what her husband had. They went to the hospital and doctors were saying your husband has x condition, your husband has y condition, etc. While she was saying no he has z condition and to the stomach. They ran a bunch of tests and diagnosis, turns out she was right from the start. Always funny to see people get humbled down by what they thought was an ordinary nurse.
I'm training to become a surgical tech right now. It's not always easy but I love it. Luckily the doctors at my hospital are super nice and patient (for a surgeon) with us newbies😂😊
Since I work in Germany it's probably a lot different for you. Bit the long standing was hard in the beginning. And your colleagues can be really mean. I don't know why nurses have to be so mean to each other. It takes a long time until you have established your place in the team
@@kruthi1975 idk how it is for other countries. In Germany you have two options. You can either do a 3 year apprenticeship to become a nurse and then do further training for two more years to work in the OR. Or you can do what I do, which is a 3 year apprenticeship to become a OTA (surgical tech) directly
His anesthesiologist outfit reminds me of the anesthesiologist when I was in practice as a surgeon tech. He was really serious with everyone. Even with the new med students. But he always was so happy when I was there. He said that I was mischievous because my eyes where small. I'm very shy and always smile,like an idiot. So my eyes tend to close while smiling or laughing. So was always making jokes to make laugh and see my eyes shrink. He was really happy when I told him that we had the same last name.
Absolutely! I'm a scrub tech...for 20 yrs! I've racked a few knuckles for reaching on my mayo while I've got sharps on it! I've even ripped a few med students, residents & others for being stupid! I love my profession!
18 years as a surgical tech. The mayo stand is off-limits! Even the circulating nurses always ask before reaching for something and then I give it to them! This is how you cut down on contamination!
@@TheEGA4421 "Mayo stand" --- is that the tray where all the instruments are laid out? does the term have anything to do with "Mayo Clinic"? could i just search for those terms? probably. would i rather learn from a person who uses them? definitely.
@@mbr7156 mayo; mayo stand; mayo table; mayo tray...these are the terminology that is used in surgery. This has nothing to do with the Mayo Clinic (per se). This has to do with a piece of hospital equipment in which surgical instruments, supplies, sutures and needles are kept during procedures. Besides the operating room you may find this mayo stand in dentist offices, physicians offices, throughout hospitals, labs, veterinary (yes, animals) offices, eye doctors/clinics. Just about any place where medical stuff is going on.
I currently have my MA but I'm finding that alot of times I'm more paperwork than patient care I'm considering going back for my surgical tech. How's the job market? Have you ever had trouble finding work? How's it been since Corona since all non emergent surgeries have been limited or canceled? Thanks in advance for any insight or tips you might have.
In my campus, we are taught extensively about the importance of inter professional work and responsibilities in healthcare. I hold a great deal of respect towards nurses and other professions in medicine, knowing that they go through a lot of practical/field studies compared to us. Atleast in the early-mid sections of our education.
@@bigdome9322 Right now I am on Protect and Fade.Your line feels really good on the face and I love how gentle it is. I have a closet full of a VERY inexpensive brand but yours is so complete and works so well. I'm getting there!
Attitude is good if you can show something for it, but in the OT we need to respect each other's opinion and maintain a positive environment for the whole team to function at full capacity.
First time I assisted this one OB with a bad reputation, I threatened him before hand: “if you scream at me like you do everyone else, I will burst into tears, possibly cuss you out, and definitely walk right out of that damn OR!!” He was an ANGEL the whole time! 🤣🤣🤣 He said it wasn’t really because I threatened him, but also because he wanted to prove to me he could be nice! 💀💀💀
Resident be like : Hell yeah, I'm a doctor now I know everything already! 20 years later : Arghh, this is it. I never came across this thing in my whole experiences.
True experts know how to rely on the experience of those who have specific jobs like that. Its like a new officer in the military listening to their seasoned NCO, or a young doctor relying on experienced nurses
Like the surgical tech i'm thank You for giving us The respect we deserve!. We study for that, so we know what kind of surgical intrument is necessary ☺️
Ohh that was something 😅😅. I have even learnt from nurses and OT techs. as they had alot of experience and I was just a little girl on my way to become a doctor. I still am always ready to learn anything they can teach. Just learn the difference: a newbie doctor vs a nurse with 20+ years of practice😦😦😦. That nurse will know more than the doctor becoz books and field practice are way different
Do you let residents work on your cash paying patients and if so do your patients know this? I always found it so unethical how many cosmetic surgeons have residents train under them with no discount or even informing the patient. I am not paying for a surgery to have you attend but to perform the actual surgery. This is even worse in cities with large medical schools where you have residents all over the city working in cosmetic surgery clinics.
Budget, if you feel that way then get better insurance and go to a private hospital. I was an RN for 29 years and I observed over and over again: a resident under the tutelage of a good attending usually does a better job as the attending ages.
Am I getting a discount so you can train on me...I am not. Will the resident dr give me a discount when they open their practice and I want to go see them? They won't this has to go 2 ways. This is a money hungry industry cosmetic surgery and you people are double dipping on CASH PAYING patients who allow you to train on them
@K K You want to learn learn in a public healthcare system not in private clinics with uninformed patients who are paying cash. Plenty of opportunities for surgeons outside of the private cosmetic clinics and yes there should be a discount for cash paying patients in a cosmetic setting because they are not there to pay for your training that is not their problem. You cannot even argue the issue.
Always hated patients like these ones during med school and residency. Worst kind of patient to care for. Never had any fun with them. New doctors gotta learn and that learning can come in various forms. U see all those celebrities and big shots getting surgeries? U think they get surgery fully done by attendings? I don't expect much from you since u don't know anything about the Healthcare system but always have respect for others!
Real talk: nurses, techs, lab workers, pharmacists and others in the medical field have so much wisdom and experience! I'm always grateful to learn so much from them and i actually look up to them :)
**At a party for hospital staff** My mom: “oh my son tells me all about you guys, he loves working with you!” OR nurse: “he- he doesn’t hate us? We’ve been trying so hard!” Thank you for showing us some love.
My mother has been a nurse for 30yrs. Once she gave her opinion to a new doctor and he raged, and belittled her in front of other docs and nurses. That same night my mother is off work and she gets a call from the hospital. New doc hadnt known my mom is the best phlebotomist at the hospital and also can place a line on ANYONE (addicts, morbidly obese, preemies, etc). New doc has infant patient no one can get a line in. Nurses told him the nurse he raged on was their only chance. She refused until he promised to apologize to her in front of his whole team. He was so desperate, he agreed. Baby got the line they needed, and the doc knocked himself down a peg by apologizing and informing ALL the nurses that he would reevaluate how much he appreciates them and would try to act in accordance with that. After that, new docs always had a better attitude with nurses when starting because this incident became a “teaching moment” for new docs and they would hear the story every year upon starting; if you get uppity with the nurses, you’re gonna have to grovel at some point lol
Glad to know the infant getting a line was dependent upon your mom being stubborn and prideful. How about just help the infant and speak to the doctor after.
My aunt is a surgery tech. She knows her stuff. She actually works for several cosmetic surgeons in south Florida. Sadly, covid has shut down elective surgery in that area. I'm praying for all the hospital/medical workers. This is not a good time.
@@eleciastewart Tell that to Memorial Hermann. Over 300K, 18 doctors, 5 specialists, 2 yrs. Ended up with permanent scars and complications from an undiagnosed dislocated ankle. They thought it was a spine problem.
Oh, almost forgot the week long torture session of nurses that physically and mentally abused me while in recovery. This team of nurses made a competition out of hurting people. Oh this is the same city that a pain management doctor did a spine injection on me with no numbness agent. Worst pain in my life. If you think Houston doesn't play, you live in a bubble.
@@bjornlucent6307 well your first mistake was going to Memorial Hermann. I wouldn't send my dog there (because I love my dog) but anyway that is the worst hospital. Go downtown to the med center to find a hospital. Baylor's good but not the ER. Ben Taub has a better ER.
As a CNA/ Patient Care Technician in the hospital, I have seen new doctors and nurses undermine Techs in different specialties and the thing is we may not be a nurse, doctor, or anesthesiologist yet but we do know some important things. The Surgical Tech may not be a doctor but they do know a lot and they know their tools. They deserve as much respect as everyone else in the OR.
@@taneishajohnson3790 yes and it's very frustrating. But when a new nurse understands that being respectful of my job role and I can help them,they have a great resource. I remember a new grad RN's first night and how she had a shit show and I helped keep her together and she's one of my favorite work friends to this day b
In my time in the operating room we were talking a bit during the operation and the anesthesiologist told me the most important thing he learned when first working in the OR was to listen to the older nurses. They simply know their stuff
If often been said when the whole team vibes, it is like an orchestrated, well-choreographed dance routine, everyone knows the sequence of events, they speak without speaking, and they just vibe.
when i was in nursing school, we had several opportunities to go to the OR & i was AMAZED at how much those surgical techs knew…they are real life superheros
I thank you for the recognition Dr. Youn as a CST I appreciate your support of “the little guy” that has a big part of the case, your appreciation is felt.
As a guy in medschool with ambitions of becoming a surgeon ohhh boy I’ll make sure and be humble as can be around those experienced guys in the OR haha 😂
The doctor 3 seconds later: give me that clamp
Yeah n probably not apologizing either
And 2 years later moving his practice to a different hospital, because no one talks to him except the other egofreaks (who he hates because they're 'all ego and no skill').
The doctor:cuts wrong area
Yeah fucking right!!! They are never wrong so they will ask you for EVERYTHING else and get supremely angry when it is the only instrument that will work.🤷♂️
I told yaa
Holy- that little baby resident has COURAGE.
edit: i see a lot of people saying that the doctor is stupid, and that is true. however, this comment was a year ago and i have changed, and back then i didn’t know how to word it.
Gacha child
@@frgwyn3760 anything wrong with that?
Courage? More like chutzpah. The nerve! A doctor who has nothing to learn is not a doctor I want operating on me. If he’s that new and already thinks he’s too good to take advice from someone with 20 years of experience in a vital position just because they aren’t a doctor or his boss, he’s an idiot at best and dangerous at worst. Tell him I said, “Sit down and be humble.”
@@ChariW1 I wasn’t trying to offend anyone, sorry..
@@onyxexists never say wrong just gacha child
it's sad that ppl are so quick to demean these people !! a hospital can't work without every single person working their butt off !!! if one person takes a day off you'll see just how important they are !! have respect yeesh
It's not "people" it's doctors
@@kathysharpe7339 the commenter is referring to EVERYONE working in the hospital, not just the doctors.
@@kathysharpe7339 so doctors arent humans?
@@kathysharpe7339 ah no ... the whole point of my comment was to include everyone who works in a hospital, not just doctors 😅
You’ve clearly never worked in a hospital...
As much as doctors are experts in their profession, they don’t spend as much OR time as surgical techs. Techs see many different specialties, techniques, variations of procedures whilst doctors stay within their own scope as well.
Surgical techs get real damn good at the art of anticipation!
True
You got 420 likes i won't ruin that but here 👍
@@ilgazk.9057 to late
That's actually pretty cool lol
2000 likes. 4 comments. Wtf?
The amount of times I gave the doc exactly what he wanted even though he said something completely different is insane at this point.
I literally can see the future and read your mind, stop being rude just because I'm not a doc lmao
Everybody knows that nurses and techs actually run the hospital. They may have white coats but y'all have the real knowledge. Thanks for all you do!!
@@elizabethmion4595 lol everyone has their own role its more like a well coordinated parts of a big machine no need for unnecessary chest thumping
@@ketansharma855 do you even know how much the docs rely on nurses and techs?😂
@@ketansharma855 some doctors don't even know the names of the instruments and we still manage to know what they need by simply looking at the step they're on. When I started working this job one of the docs said "that job is so easy even a monkey could do it" so oftentimes we don't get the credit we deserve even though without nurses doctors would be absolutely lost.
@@elizabethmion4595 dude chill, Surgeons go through 12 years of training for a reason. As ketan said, everyone plays their part.
My mom was an OR nurse back in the 1940's. The nurse who was in charge of the OR at the hospital where she worked was a nun named Sister Estelle. The doctors learned very quickly you did not disrespect Sister Estelle or the nurses.
pls storytime haha
Lol what @@Gummybearkillerr said.
We need to know more! Sounds like a bad ass story
@@sourgummiescureyourpain4555 My mother said one of the surgeons gave Sister Estelle some attitude. Sister was in charge of all the scheduling so when it was time for elective surgery, she gave him the most inconvenient schedule and never the times he asked for. Anyway, he eventually got a clue and realized that Sister was the one in charge. He was very polite to her after that.
The doctor is nothing without his team. Everyone has their role
Lol so true... even in n medical days i learned more from tech, nurses .. non medicos are not able to understand how much great help thy are n dont worry newbies doc understand within in week...
If it takes the new interns more than one shift to understand the great boon and curse the nurses can be, they won't get far in the field.
@@LeonArgent i always believe humbleness is the key
@@joyj6702 that and basic courtesy. I'm doing my internship as a physician. I can go to any area, ask for help with something, and get a favorable response from anyone really.
Some of my shiftmates arent even allowed to set foot in some areas and they wonder why.
Introducing yourself to the workers in the area, greeting people, asking with a please and a smile in the face, and helping as much as you can when it's requested.
@@LeonArgent yes same thing i also experienced.. tough sometimes we encounter people really rude n mean to us without any reason but in long run its always helped us.... and i always believe in kindness... lots of people kind towards me its saved me many ways i can remember.... i m going to do my specialization emergency medicine i guess we need extra hand in ER compared to other n great team coordination.... i can say you are great human being. .. lots of well my well wishes are with you
@@LeonArgent
So very true! Who wants to deal with a person who won't even look you in your eyes. I'm very polite, but I also like to feel that it's reciprocated. There's nothing better than dealing with a great group of people. It's why we got into the profession. At least it is for me. 😁
Thank you for bringing this topic. A good doctor knows that medicine is a teamwork. Technician have plenty of knowledge and they’ve seen it all. Always let them know that they’re a key element in the room.
It's not just young doctors or residents. Seasoned doctors are the same way. They get full of themselves and develop God complexes and think they know it all and forget the people who support them and make their jobs easier. That's why I like my surgeon Dr. John Webber at Harper University Hospital here in Detroit MI. (I call him Watson 😸) everyone loves this man and his team works so well together and so smoothly. I've never been afraid going through any procedure that I've had to have. Doctors must always remember that they don't do what they do alone. Some can't even remember to respect their patients..
So true.
And it's backwards as hell. At the end of the day the majority of the people that a patient talks to on a regular basis is the nurse. I saw my doctor once a day when I got admitted into the hospital. Like let's be honest it's never the Doctor Who draw blood, takes x-rays, stitch people up fix broken bones and everything.
@@sagirahakaevilbunny227 I agree with you but broken bones are fixed by orthopedics and x-rays are taken by radiologists. We must understand that nurses and doctors have different roles. You could see it like this; nurses have a more caring role whereas doctors have a more problem solving role (they pretty much study each patient case). Doctors usually are not seen as much as nurses because they run from one patient to the other diagnosing or checking that the right medication or treatment is being given with no problem. This is usually carried out by nurses. Where I live, we have a pretty bad shortage of doctors, that's why you would see them disappearing after giving the diagnosis and treatment plan. We also have long waiting times because of this shortage 😭
Well if u like him so much then why did u tell us where he works and his full name
@@shadi4141 Techs take the imaging doctors interpret them. Setting of bones should be done by a doctor but...
As a retired surgical tech THANK YOU Dr. Youn!!!
How is this field.is it interesting can I go for it!?
Question please. Do you think an online surgical tech certification is legitimate enough to do the job?
Are you thinking about preppy? If so go for it. I am going to do it. It's got the right accreditation so it's A ok. You also get set up with an externship.
In my country.... In the med school, if we disrespect our surgical tech... We are soo dead 😂..
Where are u from?
Were are you from?
@@Zokalex North Korea.
Hell yeah
Know it all resident! Watch him asking for that same clamp!
😂😂😂
As a 2nd year general surgery resident, its great to be friends with the surgical techs... they will put the next instrument you need in front of you whenever you’re in need of help in the next step of the surgery. In those moments I Just put the hand towards them 😜 I learn a lot with them, they dont let me fail when Im operating with the “masters” ahaha
Why do I feel as though disrespecting these people is the equivalent of disrespecting and pissing off Severus Snape on his WORST day?
It is ☺️
Because it is
Because tgey are not going to save him when he is about to humiliate himself. Repeatidly. They wont let him hurt the patient though.
A long time ago, I worked for an organization that held health clinics for the community (very dangerous and impoverished area), and it was staffed by RNs and a couple of residents from the nearby medical university. They had gotten a snot-nosed young guy, and I saw how he was treating the people coming in...until I finally asked him why he went into the medical field because he had "piss poor bedside manners, and really should consider going into a different field." Later, the nurses came to my office to thank me and were laughing at how I had taken the wind out of his sails. Was it rude on my part? Probably, but then when they had a different resident come in, that one was so sweet to all of the people, so I told him that he did a wonderful job interacting with the patients.
Tracy,
Nwk?
Damn that person has a lot of courage 🍵
@@Thyme888 Ah I see, in Spain having courage is both used to describe someone in a good or bad way depending on the tone you use, I didn't know it was only a positive thing in English but thanks for telling me
Well off topic:
I'm surprised you never went into cardiothorasic surgery, instead of cosmetic, Dr. Youn ...
... because you could've opened a practice called Youn at Heart ...
But, seriously, I've met some great surgeons, and not so great. Perhaps my favourite was the one whom corrected my scoliosis. Apparently, his habit was once he made an incision, he would carry through, right to the last suture, using the finest usable for the skin. Although the incision basically runs the length of my back, the scar itself is barely much wider than a 20g needle (perhaps a 19g at most).
But having wheeled in and out of an OR/OT more than your average person, due to my medical conditions, I would have to say that, without decent surgical techs, mistakes like leaving a gause in, or, perhaps the worse, a hemostat, would be happening way more often ...
Good one lol
My mom's been working as a RN for 30+ years. The amount of times doctors, young and old ones tried to dismiss her opinion when she basically knows more than them about patients is interesting. Haha.
Dissing someone that's supposed to be your eyes and ears is literally as it seems. You are going blind and deaf or very limited into a diagnosis. And forget about the patient in the middle.
My mom was an RN for 40+ years. The older doctors knew not to disrespect her. The newer ones eventually learned. Like you said the RNs care for the patients longer than the doctors.
Real talk....
Reminds me of a nurse i know who used to be a doctor in her country of origin and her husband got sick due to a stomach condition. She had once treated someone with the same symptoms in her country and therefore automatically knew what her husband had. They went to the hospital and doctors were saying your husband has x condition, your husband has y condition, etc. While she was saying no he has z condition and to the stomach. They ran a bunch of tests and diagnosis, turns out she was right from the start. Always funny to see people get humbled down by what they thought was an ordinary nurse.
She doesn't though. If you were a dr you would understand that.
I'm training to become a surgical tech right now. It's not always easy but I love it. Luckily the doctors at my hospital are super nice and patient (for a surgeon) with us newbies😂😊
I want to be a surgical tech, what are the things you struggle with the most?
Since I work in Germany it's probably a lot different for you.
Bit the long standing was hard in the beginning. And your colleagues can be really mean. I don't know why nurses have to be so mean to each other. It takes a long time until you have established your place in the team
@@kaptnblaubar2225 i want to be one too, can i know what course you did?
@@kruthi1975 idk how it is for other countries. In Germany you have two options. You can either do a 3 year apprenticeship to become a nurse and then do further training for two more years to work in the OR. Or you can do what I do, which is a 3 year apprenticeship to become a OTA (surgical tech) directly
@@kaptnblaubar2225 yes, what im planning to do is probably what you did. its called Bachelor's in Operation theatre technology here :)
His anesthesiologist outfit reminds me of the anesthesiologist when I was in practice as a surgeon tech. He was really serious with everyone. Even with the new med students. But he always was so happy when I was there. He said that I was mischievous because my eyes where small. I'm very shy and always smile,like an idiot. So my eyes tend to close while smiling or laughing. So was always making jokes to make laugh and see my eyes shrink. He was really happy when I told him that we had the same last name.
Should have added the patient in there just for giggles
Hell yeah
Ooooo child you’re about to hear some sh*t from someone after your shift 🤨🤣 the Audacity 😳
Care to explain to someone who doesn't know?
Absolutely! I'm a scrub tech...for 20 yrs! I've racked a few knuckles for reaching on my mayo while I've got sharps on it! I've even ripped a few med students, residents & others for being stupid! I love my profession!
18 years as a surgical tech. The mayo stand is off-limits! Even the circulating nurses always ask before reaching for something and then I give it to them! This is how you cut down on contamination!
@@TheEGA4421 "Mayo stand" --- is that the tray where all the instruments are laid out? does the term have anything to do with "Mayo Clinic"? could i just search for those terms? probably. would i rather learn from a person who uses them? definitely.
@@mbr7156 mayo; mayo stand; mayo table; mayo tray...these are the terminology that is used in surgery. This has nothing to do with the Mayo Clinic (per se). This has to do with a piece of hospital equipment in which surgical instruments, supplies, sutures and needles are kept during procedures. Besides the operating room you may find this mayo stand in dentist offices, physicians offices, throughout hospitals, labs, veterinary (yes, animals) offices, eye doctors/clinics. Just about any place where medical stuff is going on.
@@TheEGA4421 thank you for taking the time to explain the terminology.
I currently have my MA but I'm finding that alot of times I'm more paperwork than patient care I'm considering going back for my surgical tech. How's the job market? Have you ever had trouble finding work? How's it been since Corona since all non emergent surgeries have been limited or canceled? Thanks in advance for any insight or tips you might have.
In my campus, we are taught extensively about the importance of inter professional work and responsibilities in healthcare. I hold a great deal of respect towards nurses and other professions in medicine, knowing that they go through a lot of practical/field studies compared to us. Atleast in the early-mid sections of our education.
You are so funny! I love watching you and using your skin care!
Wish I could get some of that skin care, I bet its amazing
@@AurmazlZudeh From what I have ordered, It is very nice. I'm trying to slowly transition over to his entire line.
@@nancylyon-gray3499 what do you like from his skin care?
@@bigdome9322 Right now I am on Protect and Fade.Your line feels really good on the face and I love how gentle it is. I have a closet full of a VERY inexpensive brand but yours is so complete and works so well. I'm getting there!
@@nancylyon-gray3499 ok thanks. ive been wanting to try it
Attitude is good if you can show something for it, but in the OT we need to respect each other's opinion and maintain a positive environment for the whole team to function at full capacity.
First time I assisted this one OB with a bad reputation, I threatened him before hand: “if you scream at me like you do everyone else, I will burst into tears, possibly cuss you out, and definitely walk right out of that damn OR!!”
He was an ANGEL the whole time! 🤣🤣🤣 He said it wasn’t really because I threatened him, but also because he wanted to prove to me he could be nice! 💀💀💀
Dr. Youn, you have the most perfect skin!
Resident be like : Hell yeah, I'm a doctor now I know everything already!
20 years later : Arghh, this is it. I never came across this thing in my whole experiences.
As a certified Surgical Technologist- THANK YOU!!!!
How to start your career off on the wrong foot 101:
I love how even the anaesthesiologist poked his head out from behind the curtain.
You Have A sense Of Humor Dr. I Love It.
I was a surgical tech. It’s our job to know and predict what the surgeon needs before they even have to ask for it.
Why aren’t you a surgical tech now?
@@riotz8742 because it wasn't what I was interested in doing. My mom made me do it. I like helping people but I don't like seeing people suffer
True experts know how to rely on the experience of those who have specific jobs like that. Its like a new officer in the military listening to their seasoned NCO, or a young doctor relying on experienced nurses
I can relate to that 😂😂😂 I am a former surgical tech! 😷
i would have fancied to see even the patient react the same as the medical team :'D
Yes!
I need the backstory on why the anesthesiologist has cheesy stache, lol.
They always do lol
Im a surgical tech of 11 years at a level 2 taruma center...love this...we know our shit!!
This made me laugh big time
Like the surgical tech i'm thank You for giving us The respect we deserve!. We study for that, so we know what kind of surgical intrument is necessary ☺️
You look like the doctor in Korean drama series "Hello monster". I think his name is Lee jun ho
I love that cheesy moustache!
Ohh that was something 😅😅. I have even learnt from nurses and OT techs. as they had alot of experience and I was just a little girl on my way to become a doctor. I still am always ready to learn anything they can teach.
Just learn the difference: a newbie doctor vs a nurse with 20+ years of practice😦😦😦. That nurse will know more than the doctor becoz books and field practice are way different
The patient: 😳 *eyes snap open* "shouldn't have said that"
Mum was an OR nurse and she said that this happened more often than it should have.....
O.o. this is surprising fact
@@gumicherryblossom8015 it happened in Australia so I don't know if that had anything to do with it. :O
Weeknd gotta be: Bruh..
Do you let residents work on your cash paying patients and if so do your patients know this? I always found it so unethical how many cosmetic surgeons have residents train under them with no discount or even informing the patient. I am not paying for a surgery to have you attend but to perform the actual surgery. This is even worse in cities with large medical schools where you have residents all over the city working in cosmetic surgery clinics.
Budget, if you feel that way then get better insurance and go to a private hospital. I was an RN for 29 years and I observed over and over again: a resident under the tutelage of a good attending usually does a better job as the attending ages.
Am I getting a discount so you can train on me...I am not. Will the resident dr give me a discount when they open their practice and I want to go see them? They won't this has to go 2 ways. This is a money hungry industry cosmetic surgery and you people are double dipping on CASH PAYING patients who allow you to train on them
@@sharynhay9993 I am specifically talking about private cosmetic clinics where the surgeon has access to their own OR. Not public hospitals.
@K K You want to learn learn in a public healthcare system not in private clinics with uninformed patients who are paying cash. Plenty of opportunities for surgeons outside of the private cosmetic clinics and yes there should be a discount for cash paying patients in a cosmetic setting because they are not there to pay for your training that is not their problem. You cannot even argue the issue.
Always hated patients like these ones during med school and residency. Worst kind of patient to care for. Never had any fun with them. New doctors gotta learn and that learning can come in various forms. U see all those celebrities and big shots getting surgeries? U think they get surgery fully done by attendings? I don't expect much from you since u don't know anything about the Healthcare system but always have respect for others!
Let's take a moment of silence for the patient that died because of the new "doctor"
Real talk: nurses, techs, lab workers, pharmacists and others in the medical field have so much wisdom and experience! I'm always grateful to learn so much from them and i actually look up to them :)
**At a party for hospital staff**
My mom: “oh my son tells me all about you guys, he loves working with you!”
OR nurse: “he- he doesn’t hate us? We’ve been trying so hard!”
Thank you for showing us some love.
A doctor used to tell me 'give me what I need, not what I ask for' .
My mother has been a nurse for 30yrs. Once she gave her opinion to a new doctor and he raged, and belittled her in front of other docs and nurses. That same night my mother is off work and she gets a call from the hospital. New doc hadnt known my mom is the best phlebotomist at the hospital and also can place a line on ANYONE (addicts, morbidly obese, preemies, etc). New doc has infant patient no one can get a line in. Nurses told him the nurse he raged on was their only chance. She refused until he promised to apologize to her in front of his whole team. He was so desperate, he agreed. Baby got the line they needed, and the doc knocked himself down a peg by apologizing and informing ALL the nurses that he would reevaluate how much he appreciates them and would try to act in accordance with that. After that, new docs always had a better attitude with nurses when starting because this incident became a “teaching moment” for new docs and they would hear the story every year upon starting; if you get uppity with the nurses, you’re gonna have to grovel at some point lol
Glad to know the infant getting a line was dependent upon your mom being stubborn and prideful. How about just help the infant and speak to the doctor after.
When I see doctors doing tiktok, than i think world must end now, everyone is going dumb and dumber day after day
yet ur here
Love these videos so much
Ftgvuvfb eb gg ntngrtbh3rgn ten v ewebf girls the vgr3rjt bfr3tntj 3ru1b5thvtcvhdx
My aunt is a surgery tech. She knows her stuff. She actually works for several cosmetic surgeons in south Florida. Sadly, covid has shut down elective surgery in that area. I'm praying for all the hospital/medical workers. This is not a good time.
famous last words, lol :-P
Hey I'm studying to be a surgical technologist, this is hilarious!
Update I'm a surg tech now.
I would love to see a version of this where the tech literally blinds the intern with a light 🤣🤣🤣🤣 right on cue with the song
I'm not a nurse or doctor but I found this really funny lol thank you for the laugh! I needed it! 😂😂
I had doctor ask for a Kelly clamp and I knew she need and Allis she was like you know what I needed. Lol
Must be out of a Houston hospital.
😂 we don’t play in Houston.
@@eleciastewart Tell that to Memorial Hermann. Over 300K, 18 doctors, 5 specialists, 2 yrs. Ended up with permanent scars and complications from an undiagnosed dislocated ankle. They thought it was a spine problem.
Oh, almost forgot the week long torture session of nurses that physically and mentally abused me while in recovery. This team of nurses made a competition out of hurting people. Oh this is the same city that a pain management doctor did a spine injection on me with no numbness agent. Worst pain in my life. If you think Houston doesn't play, you live in a bubble.
@@bjornlucent6307 well your first mistake was going to Memorial Hermann. I wouldn't send my dog there (because I love my dog) but anyway that is the worst hospital. Go downtown to the med center to find a hospital. Baylor's good but not the ER. Ben Taub has a better ER.
@@bjornlucent6307 and yeah that hospital is abusive
I kinda don't understand it but it's funny nonetheless
Pause the video and read, then you'll get it 😂
As a CNA/ Patient Care Technician in the hospital, I have seen new doctors and nurses undermine Techs in different specialties and the thing is we may not be a nurse, doctor, or anesthesiologist yet but we do know some important things. The Surgical Tech may not be a doctor but they do know a lot and they know their tools. They deserve as much respect as everyone else in the OR.
@@Cynni393 Same here, new nurses undermining the knowledge of a seasoned nursing assistant
@@taneishajohnson3790 yes and it's very frustrating. But when a new nurse understands that being respectful of my job role and I can help them,they have a great resource. I remember a new grad RN's first night and how she had a shit show and I helped keep her together and she's one of my favorite work friends to this day b
Oh you're a big boy now? Don't need no training wheels? Don't go too fast you might hit a brick wall.
Nurses are the back bone of the medical field treat them accordingly.
Doctors on Tik tok really expose how egotistical they are
I've been those or's and it's hilarious 😂 😂
In my time in the operating room we were talking a bit during the operation and the anesthesiologist told me the most important thing he learned when first working in the OR was to listen to the older nurses. They simply know their stuff
Males are so emotional
😂😂😂
This is funny! It would have been hilarious if you had POV of the patient laying down and looking at the Doctor with that "oooh" face 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Why every position I’m interested in gets disrespected? First sonography, now this 😅
I love your respect for the surgical tech. I wish i worked with you!
this made me laugh alot 😂
Sooo true
Sad
Exactly I'm about to graduate from CST School I've been a Cna for 17 years
I’m ass
No fr I had a resident say some shiiii to me yesterday and omg I hope she’s in my room again so I can say something…
Lol
Patient : uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
If often been said when the whole team vibes, it is like an orchestrated, well-choreographed dance routine, everyone knows the sequence of events, they speak without speaking, and they just vibe.
I find this hilarious that this crossed my path while studying how to pack an instrument case and case cart
Even th patient would wake up just long enough to tell the doc they mucked up 😂
Major Margaret Houlihan taught me this.
The attending surgeon was so shocked he broke the sterile zone 😂😂
Hire me!!!!!
😢😢Please help me, I need surgery to install a pelvic and knee joint. Please help me, sir I live in Syria and need the operation
Facts!
when i was in nursing school, we had several opportunities to go to the OR & i was AMAZED at how much those surgical techs knew…they are real life superheros
I was waiting for Patient:"OOOOO!"
Truth !!!! This is perfection!! 😂❤
No matter how much anesthesia there is, if I was the patient, I'd wake up and say: "I'm sedated, and I can feel the burn you're about to receive"
Even the medical students on rotation are going OOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHH
I thank you for the recognition Dr. Youn as a CST I appreciate your support of “the little guy” that has a big part of the case, your appreciation is felt.
As a guy in medschool with ambitions of becoming a surgeon ohhh boy I’ll make sure and be humble as can be around those experienced guys in the OR haha 😂
Please can someone tell me can Pakistan work there in Europe as a surgical technologist is there Bann for Pakistani or not please someone reply😢
Sir, the surgical sciences and surgical technology are same or different??
What is this, a tribute to Steveioe? He did this same idea to the same part of the same tune like a year ago. That's like 50 youtube years!
The ooohhhh should have patient waking up from a coma 😏