7:09 I had a surgery in a foreign country where I don’t speak the language aside from basic things, and nurses kept asking me stuff and I had to keep telling the nurses things before and after my surgery. After clearly noticing a couple of nurses and I couldn’t understand each other, woman in the bed behind the curtain next to me stood up, walked over, opened my curtain holding her IV and everything and stood there and translated my quite embarrassing issues 😂😂 I still laugh when I think about it. Post-surgery she would yell over the curtain to translate still whenever a nurse came haha. She must have been super bored and wanted to show off her English skills, very thankful for her.
Dr. Mike since you are obsessed with chest compressions 😂 I think it would be a great idea to do a video on how to do chest compressions for those of us who don't know
Just Me realistically in an adult about 3in or so is the proper depth of compressions, but if you’re doing for correctly, you’re going to crack ribs. I’m not saying they’re going to shatter like shrapnel in his thoracic cavity, but you’ll definitely feel some give
Irish_ Soldier124 I have actually been trained in CPR and this isn’t completely true. You should feel give but it is the muscles connected to the bone in front of the heart. Ribs crack often but ideally if you do it perfect they won’t
8:58 When a doctor honestly says to me "I don't know" I have a lot of respect for that dr. I have seen many doctors in my life due to a condition that has now been diagnosed but for years I was sick and in pain and so many doctors just guessed what is wrong instead of just saying I don't know and refering me to someone who might
I am a retired RN, worked 10 yrs at level 1 trauma center ER (1980-1990). We cracked a chest (thoracotomy) at least once or twice a week. They were all due to trauma, GSW, impaled object, stabbing, etc. Ahh, the good old days. Best part was having a patient return to visit us after their recovery.
When I heard you say "I've never heard of a thoracotomy done in ER", I flashed back to my ER days on code team and a doc decided the trauma victims only chance was direct massage. He opened up, pointed to me to glove up and do massage. I was just the nursing attendant. It didn't have the desired outcome, we couldn't push appropriate fluids fast enough to maintain any kind of perfusion. This had nothing to do with it, but I went to the dark side not too many years afterward - IT instead of medical, though I have switched back and forth a couple of times over the years.
Does anyone else say "chest compression, chest compression, chest compression"? Along with Dr. Mike? I'm new to his videos and I just realised I've started saying it along with him.
A family practitioner saved my life in 2010! She caught a brain bleed from a hemangioma in my left parietal when no other doctor would give me the time of day! The office also shopped around for the cheapest MRI location as I had no insurance. Ive had some really bad doctors since, but I remember her fondly as the one who believed me and went above and beyond! She even told me what emergency room to rush to when my MRI results came back. I pray she is doing well.♡ I hope she knows how blessed I am because of her.
Then you should look for her and thank her personally. Not on youtube. Edit: Make your gratitude produce effort to find her. Thanking her on youtube on a random video is the slightest effort you could've done.
@@dwoktheraynejonsohn4849 You're right, I guess that I put too much expectation on her. Remembering that favor and having gratitude in her heart is enough.
I went into septic shock once. One of the most frightening moments of my life is when an ER nurse said "We can't get her blood pressure up". They gave me lots of fluids and vasopressors. Very scary :O
first of all, thank you sm dr. mike for liking this haha! :)) and second of all, of course two days after I watch this video I have an allergic reaction to something and I have no idea what ahaha
watch Grey's anatomy as well, that show literally helped me through high school medical classes and still currently helping with some medical terms in college now that I have clinicals
"Oh, cool. It's Dr. Mike taking care of me. Someone let my daughter know I've got good care..." as I pass out. Hopefully I say and don't just think it...
I actually remembered this episode. The kid that was having an allergic reaction was brought in and after some time being treated for it, he seemed to be doing better. Only when the family started to arrive did the kid suddenly start going into anaphylaxis shock again, hence why the doctor was then trying to figure out the cause of it. It turned out the kid's family either owned a bakery or was making some baked goods for an event or something and the recipes contained lots of nuts. The family members trying to visit them were still coated in the stuff so the kid would suddenly start having another reaction.
Thank you so much for your comment on getting an interpreter. Well said. There are serious risks involved in having a relative or friend interpret for the patient, and yes, it's a HIPAA violation.
I did a project in college about the issues of language access in hospitals. One of the most shocking things I found in my research was how common it is for hospital staff to use children, even young children, as interpreters for their parents. One report even found an instance of a 3 y.o. interpreting for their parent. I understand why hospitals have to use family members to interpret when it's a really rare language, like a First Nation language or something, but it happens all the time even with Spanish speakers (in the US). It's inexcusable. Family members, unless they have a medical background, don't know all the medical lingo. Far too much gets lost in the sauce. And quite often, they won't interpret everything, because they think it embarrassing or shameful. Or they're just so overwhelmed by the emotion of it all that their brain shuts down. Or especially in the case of grandchildren, being a blood relative does not mean that you speak grandma's language to a satisfactory degree. Plus, knowing a language doesn't mean you can do well as an interpreter. It's a skill that people train years to acquire. It's like saying, "Hey, you're good at arithmetic, now go teach this math class."
A regular scrub line. I'm not chiseled enough to wear Dr. Mike Scrubs (TM) Need the middle aged nurse version. We haven't seen size 6 since the last century.
@@adriannefluet2896 you’re not wrong. I’m a healthcare professional, and there have been many times where I have considered sleeping in scrubs. They are so comfy. I actually almost prefer scrub pants over jeans.
I remember an episode where twin doctors both had a patient who was faking pain. And after the woman stormed out of the hospital with one twin, the doctor called his brother and told him about her. Which meant when she arrived at the other hospital she ended up meeting the twin of the doctor who determined there was nothing wrong with her. And on her way out, the twin she had as her doctor in the first hospital was walking into the hospital. Pretty much twin doctors made a plan to mess with a patient who was faking it.
I remember that episode! It was quite a story, very funny! I remember the one about the woman who was going in renal failure because she was constantly rubbing forcefully her belly to expel the demon inside. She had been cursed and was responding to this curse the only way she could. In the ER they tried to help her , finally they reached out to a community center form her ethnic background and they performed a sort of exorcist. She was relieved afterward, her demon had been taken out and she stopped the rubbing motion, her kidneys were saved. Beliefs are strong sometimes.
Haha! My 5 year old just broke her arm a few weeks back and was very disappointed she got a white cast instead of pink. But the best part is that the surgeon was upset he couldn’t get her a pink one lol
Just found this video and loved it! This reminds me of when my mom would watch 'Life in the ER' which was live camera in an ER type of show, while we would be eating dinner, since it came on in the evening. Thanks to her, rest her soul, I can watch the most gruesome show while eating food and not be phased at all xD
@@Nettietwixt Yeah, I also have a friend who is a paramedic and hes told me some of the craziest stories from being out on the field, and man, lemme tell you that some of the shit he has told me is just absolutely insane and most of the time, just absolutely disgusting lmao.
I actually remember this episode. The reason the doctor started investigating the CAUSE of the anaphylaxis was because he kept getting the patient stable and he would suddenly relapse back into anaphylactic shock when his parents were sitting with him in his cubicle. Turns out his dad was touching him with hands he had been touching his nut-covered apron with.
I am so happy to see this!! I loved this show so much and so did my mom (she is a former ER nurse turned travel nurse). She always had a ton of great stories to tell me and my siblings growing up. They usually ranged from funny stories to very serious and dark stories. I am so happy that I grew up with a mother that was very knowledgeable in the medical field not only because of the stories but because she knew how to diagnose us when we were sick and knew proper treatment.
The first case I’m already mad that that guy was like “I’m a paramedic, we don’t need to rush” and it turns out she’s going into SHOCK AND COULD DIE. Get your ego out of here just call 911 and let them make the calls, they are equipped you are not, they have protocols for a reason
I dont think thats what he meant. I mean think about whats going on in a normal call. 99% of the time nobody around the patient is a medical practitioner so nobody is doing any first aid or live saving measures so the paramedics have to rush to the location. Just that travel to the location is time they lose to stabilize the patient and get them to an ER. Because the guy in the show is a paramedic he saves the ambulance a lot of time because he can monitor the situation and administer to the patient long before the ambulance gets there. To give him benefit of the doubt i dont think that was ego i think that was him saying "im a paramedic and because of that the other paramedics had a lot of extra time to stabilize her that they otherwise would not have had."
I'm an ER nurse in a level 1 trauma centre in Australia. I've been involved with countless thoracotamies in our resus rooms over the last 17 years. Last ditch effort yes, but they 100% happen outside of the OR.
Same!! I worked at level 1 in the US and saw a handful of them in my ER. Coolest thing I ever saw in all my ER years….. not so cool for the patient, but you know what I mean lol
I actually remember that episode with the kid. The reason he called his wife is that episode air probably over 15 years ago which means the story was well before that time so it was a time before translators were more easily accessed. Also the reason they were trying to get to the bottom of it was because every time they thought that they had gotten the kids stable he would suddenly go back into anaphylactic shock. Turns out that he was allergic to something the parents were feeding while in the hospital. They weren't being malicious they just had no idea that he was allergic to an ingredient
I was given a three 33% chances for my mom after a motorcycle accident... 33% chance to live, 33% chance to die, 33% chance she will stay in a coma like state... The doctor never told me where that last 1% went... end of story Mom lived and is doing fine
24 Hours in A&E is way more raw and real. It's actual footage in documentary style. This show is just sensation and reconstruction. Can't really compare the two in my opinion. A&E is awesome.
That's that doctor's scrubs. He finds the most horrible scrubs he can and wears them. He addressed this subject in an episode once. I love this show lol
They need trackers or something. I lose or forget my epi pen nearly every day. They are also so freaking expensive! 150$ where I live but apparently in the States it can be as high as 600?
My sister works at a call center as an interpreter for medical calls. She receives calls from US hospitals (we live in Costa Rica) and I honestly admire her a lot cuz it's tough
my CAT had a bout of diabetes so I got a taste of the expenses associated with medicine that Americans deal with (vet expenses are not covered in Canada)--would be a great topic.
Supply and demand, there is a limited supply, the demand is rising, and a large portion of the supply is ropped off yo be given away for free. Insulin isnt cheap to make, and with so much of it being basicly stolen by the goverment (purchased at like 1/4 cost) they have to pay for the production of all the insulin, paying their employees, and developing new drugs from the profits of only about 30% of the product.
Please. Thank god I have good health insurance through my hospital. But there was a time I didn’t have any. $600 for 2 vials of novolog. Then Obamacare came just in time for those with pre-existing conditions and who couldn’t get health insurance through their parents. I went to Peru and was able to get the same type of insulin for $50. Truly insane.
Can someone please make a compilation of everytime Doctor Mike has said "Chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions" ? Or make a song out of it.
Clarnaka I remember watching an episode of that a few years ago and a lady didn’t know she was pregnant until she went to the toilet to poop and she pushed a baby out into the toilet like um okay you mean to tell me you went 9 months without your period, didn’t feel an actual tiny human moving in your stomach, and went to take a shit but pushed out a baby instead???
@@raverbun the period, some people are irregular and don't see it for up to a year. At least that's what I've read. The tiny human moving, I can't speak to, maybe they thought it was gas.
I wouldn’t say every one of the stories on that show is completely far fetched. There’s people out there who have irregular periods, are on birth control, or bleed like normal without ever knowing they were pregnant. My friend had normal periods with her pregnancy, and she had no idea she was pregnant! With some people’s bodies, they simply just don’t show enough to make them think that they are pregnant. They might notice a slight weight gain, but it’s such an insignificant amount of weight, it can easily be mistaken for typical weight gain from lack of diet and exercise. Sometimes it’s just where the baby is positioned in the body. Or if the women is heavyset as well. I think there was an episode I saw where a women even went to the doctors and they all just said she was overweight, until she was doubled over in pain due to labor. I’m not totally surprised by the stories because sometimes the symptoms are so minor they could easily be passed off. Or it could just be complete utter denial. Idk there’s just so many factors, and not every pregnancy is the same. I think there’s a UA-camr who is an OBGYN who reviews the episodes if you want to check out her channel. I can’t remember her name off the top of my head though. Edit: It’s “Mama Doctor Jones”
someone collapsed outside my job the other day and first thing i asked her is do you need me to call an ambulance or anyone for you. she was conscious but legs gave out do to age and back surgeries. i threw my backpack down to help her down and had her lean on me to get her strength back. almost everyone out of the store helped in some way and it really shows there are good people still in the world. im a manager at the store so im glad i was there to oversee and let her know to call if shes coming in so we can put stuff aside for her so she doesnt tire herself out as much next time.
My dad “died” for a few moments due to an allergic reaction to something he didn’t know he was allergic to. The Dr’s told us he may be different. And he really was, he’s basically not the same person anymore. It’s crazy how things like that can change you.
@@jljl24 he’s not the person I knew when I was younger, it’s neither bad nor good, just different. Something changed and I don’t know wether it was his outlook on life that drove that. But he cares less about things, I think he’s realised that the small stuff we care about just doesn’t really matter in the long run. It’s strange to be honest
I was a nurse in a level 1 trauma center for ten years. I don’t remember ever seeing any thoracotomies preformed in our ER. It’s a possibility that it happened on a shift I didn’t work but something like that would have made it’s way through the hospital quick! Most hospitals, especially large hospitals, have operating rooms dedicated to trauma. There are entire teams of nurses and surgical techs that can also get an OR ready for any surgery very quickly. If a big trauma comes into a hospital and the trauma OR’s are in use it’s common to have a non-emergent case be pushed back. I should restate to any emergency can push one that’s not life threatening. It’s not only frustrating for the patient and family but for hospital staff as well. We want you to get better, be healthy; it’s why most people go into healthcare.
Ya I would have to agree with your CPR trainer because it’s not always a good idea to start performing CPR on someone who is still breathing and has a pulse. Just because they passed out doesn’t mean you start CPR. It can actually hurt them and cause damage to the person in certain scenarios where it’s not needed.
Can you do doctor and pharmacist react to a show? Pharmacy staff don’t get any love and we’ve been working extra hard, especially during the pandemic 😪
My brother worked in insurance. He always told everyone "if you have any questions about medication, talk to the pharmacist, not the doctor. They really know the meds". I agree pharmacy people should get more love and credit. Thanks for all you do.
@DoctorMike. I'm so glad you said about chest compressions. I found my dad in cardiac arrest. He was agonal breathing and I was so unsure if he was choking. I was in shock and just started cpr before the emergency services even answered the phone. Despite being quick to act he still passed. Every moment matters
You missed the best part of that episode! The kid is stabilized but every time a new family member comes in he reacts again. They all swear there's no peanuts in the food they were making, but they finally find out it's the almonds in the baklava
6:41 I’m an OR nirse in a level 1 trauma center. We actually just did a thoracotomy in the ER a couple weeks ago. Doesn’t happen often, but it does happen.
The boy depicted actually had several allergies reactions in a row even after receiving epi. Every time it happened when a family member appeared visiting. Eventually the source was traced to the clothing they were wearing. Now this family was volunteering at the Greek Orthodox Church right next to the hospital working on desserts but because of this tree nut dust ended up on the clothing causing the reactions. The family was told to go home and shower and change so not to cause the reaction again. While the boy was given an epi pen to make sure an allergic reaction is nipped in the bud. I saw this episode before so that is what happened.
My friend: I'm having the worst headache Me: don't worry I know what to do. "Chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions.” The only thing I took from this video 😆😆
Dr Mike: “First thing we gotta do is get the patient completely naked.” Me: *Starts unbuttoning* “It was just a paper cut but you don’t have to tell me twice.”
I have come across two car accidents in the past two years. One was a driver and the other was a pedestrian involved in a hit and run. Both were unconscious. One had no pulse and the other did. I was trained how to do cpr but froze and panicked when this happened both times. I asked someone if they could do cpr on the one without a pulse even though I knew it was basically pointless. But on the driver I didn’t want to further injure her. If I would’ve just started chest compressions maybe she would’ve lived. But hearing you say that if someone’s unconscious to start chest compressions really confirms that if this happens again that’s what I need to do. I’ve panicked both times and I still blame myself but now I know that what I was thinking would’ve been the right thing to do. So thank you.
Wow, my sister has had many anaphylactic reactions (she's allergic to nuts, legumes, soy, and other random things like bananas, and used to be allergic dairy, eggs, and gluten) and I remember it always being scary, but never realized it was so dangerous.
Worked at level 1 trauma center and witnessed 2 thoracotomies performed at the bedside during a traumatic arrest. I got to perform direct cardiac massage. It was number 1 on my nursing bucket list. Patient’s didn’t make it, but seeing it was soooooo cool.
Doctor Mike, could you do a video in which you react to Austin McConnell’s “What to do if your parachute fails”? It’s a short but informative video, and I thought it would be cool if, after discussing the video, you talked a little about the ways the body responds to a fall, ranging from in a fall in which you scrape your knee, to a fall from 12,000 feet. I think it’d be super interesting to learn about how the body starts to try to heal itself.
Don't know if you'll ever see this but the translation scene would make a lot more sense if you'd seen the entire episode. The doctor had stabilised the young boy 2 or 3 times and he kept going back into shock so he had to try to figure out the reason why he kept going back into shock.
Dr. Mike, I just got BLS trained for the first time at the hospital I'm working at... And the best part is I knew a lot of things because of watching your videos. Thank you 💜 Not just this but most of the times I learn stuff from the channel and then later somewhere I definitely get to use it. You're the best and most authentic person to rely on for medical information.
Untold Stories of the ER is a show I grew up watching. It's the reason I want to study pre-med in college. I turn 18 next January and at that point, I can start taking courses through my town's fire department to be a paramedic. I plan on getting experience through the job and hope to attend NYIT. If I make it into med school I want to major in emergency medicine. It's been my dream for years now and your reaction to this show brought back a lot of memories.
I really wish that epipens weren’t so expensive, I’m still holding on to my year old ones because I can’t afford new ones. Just gotta pray I avoid nuts at all costs 🙏🏽
Assuming your in the usa I wonder if after coronavirus you can take a trip to canada and buy some epi pens here. Our medical system costs 40% less than what hospitals in usa spend.
I just got CPR certified and was told that Auvi -Q was the same as an EpiPen but in some cases you could get it for free. Look up Auvi-Q and see if you can get a free one
This is the one thing that I don't understand in the USA. What I get is that anaphylactic shocks are not that rare that this kind of medication should have been made easily available and cheap (due to the high demand). In my country where it is very rare to have ANY allergy that could have resulted in anaphylactic shock, epipen only cost at most $10.
Dr. Mike, nurses and nursing assistants love sharing their stories too. I'm a nursing assistant at a hospital, and I also did long term care and home care. I never run out of stories, and in the medical profession, you can never say that you've seen it all.
Ok but am i the only one who prefer Doctor Mike with glasses?
wigconic no definitely no
uhh you again with that pp😂
Glasses, a little scruff, button down and tie are my favorite combination on him. Sexy and sophisticated.
wigconic would prefer him with no clothes on but yea glasses are cool too .. 😂
Annette Avery omgggg😱😂😂
Boy: I really like you
Girl: ok
Boy: my heart stops when you leave me
Girl: ‘chest compression, chest compression, chest compression’
Marry that girl
Ha I do that.
Lmao
😂
😂
Anybody- “sneezes”
Dr mike- CHEST COMPRESSIONS
hahaha
Gonna have to do that a lot for my coworkers then
*Man gets head gets cut off*
Dr mike: god damit i said chest compressions
MORE HES GONNA DIE
I actually want to do that to someone I hate
7:09 I had a surgery in a foreign country where I don’t speak the language aside from basic things, and nurses kept asking me stuff and I had to keep telling the nurses things before and after my surgery. After clearly noticing a couple of nurses and I couldn’t understand each other, woman in the bed behind the curtain next to me stood up, walked over, opened my curtain holding her IV and everything and stood there and translated my quite embarrassing issues 😂😂 I still laugh when I think about it. Post-surgery she would yell over the curtain to translate still whenever a nurse came haha. She must have been super bored and wanted to show off her English skills, very thankful for her.
People like that are angels imo.
Show off her English skills? Really?
Dr. Mike since you are obsessed with chest compressions 😂 I think it would be a great idea to do a video on how to do chest compressions for those of us who don't know
Watch the office
Push til you crack ribs, you’re welcome
@@irish_soldier1248 I don't think I'll be able to do that 😮 I mean what if you push way too hard and make more damage from breaking the ribs
Just Me realistically in an adult about 3in or so is the proper depth of compressions, but if you’re doing for correctly, you’re going to crack ribs. I’m not saying they’re going to shatter like shrapnel in his thoracic cavity, but you’ll definitely feel some give
Irish_ Soldier124 I have actually been trained in CPR and this isn’t completely true. You should feel give but it is the muscles connected to the bone in front of the heart. Ribs crack often but ideally if you do it perfect they won’t
Chest Compressions
Chest Compressions
Chest Compressions
-Doctor Mike
Yes lol
He should make merch with that and donate a portion to the AHA to help people get the resources to learn CPR
Hopefully only when the patient isn’t breathing
indeed
He should make a lesson on CHEST COMPRESSIONS
So now that you've done Untold Stories of the ER.....
Sex Sent me to the ER next?
omg! I remember that show!!
Yes
CLS he’s trying to keep his monetization :(
He's done that show it was about a year ago
Omg i’ve heard that before!
8:58 When a doctor honestly says to me "I don't know" I have a lot of respect for that dr. I have seen many doctors in my life due to a condition that has now been diagnosed but for years I was sick and in pain and so many doctors just guessed what is wrong instead of just saying I don't know and refering me to someone who might
Yes!
Or worse, they'll say "there's nothing wrong." Happens to me a lot. Same with my mom.
Hey Doctor Mike! Have you ever embarrassed yourself in front of a patient?
Good question... I'd also like to know
Great question!
Good question I’d like to to know.
what is even the point of this -_-
HEY I WANT TO KNOW TOO!
Oh dear I was 1 minute in and I heard “chest compressions “ I could’ve expected that ...
Mrs. Dr. Mike: "I'm pregnant!"
Dr. Mike: "That's great!"
Mrs. Dr. Mike: "What should we name our - "
Dr. Mike: "Chest Compressions."
Mrs. Varshavski
Nuka_Hypex Mrs Dr Mike is funnier
It is. Good to know, though!
😂 oml
@@Nuka-_- nah mrs. dr mike sounds better
I am a retired RN, worked 10 yrs at level 1 trauma center ER (1980-1990). We cracked a chest (thoracotomy) at least once or twice a week. They were all due to trauma, GSW, impaled object, stabbing, etc. Ahh, the good old days. Best part was having a patient return to visit us after their recovery.
Yup! I've seen plenty in the ER!
Dr Mike: *rips on the ER doctor’s 90s scrubs*
Also Dr Mike: *wears a tan checkered shirt & jean tie*
He still look good tho
A jie?
Hahaha lol still hot true!
@Linda Teske I mean, this is his secondary job, so he is technically working 🤔🙃😅
Linda Teske
UA-cam is definitely his other job especially since he’s monetized.
Patient: Dying
Dr. Mike: oh honey those scrubs aren't it
Absolutely disgusting scrubs
@@wolfiestar5185 D I S G U S T A N G
Those scrubs are so not in rn
i wanna LIKE your comment but as its at a perfect "911" on a medical vid im just gonna comment with
👍🤘🤌👌👊🤝🙃
😂😂😂😂
I should be doing neuroscience homework, but I decided this was more educational
I KNOW RIGHT.
Johanna Grace this is just like
Studying...well it’s the most productive study break you can take haha
@PG - 06RL - Calderstone MS (1435) r/im14andthisiswoosh
1600 honestly,if you didnt care you would not even reply
1600 What you said is really disgusting. You don’t talk to people like that. Be a positive not a negative. Didn’t your momma ever teach you manners?
When I heard you say "I've never heard of a thoracotomy done in ER", I flashed back to my ER days on code team and a doc decided the trauma victims only chance was direct massage. He opened up, pointed to me to glove up and do massage. I was just the nursing attendant. It didn't have the desired outcome, we couldn't push appropriate fluids fast enough to maintain any kind of perfusion. This had nothing to do with it, but I went to the dark side not too many years afterward - IT instead of medical, though I have switched back and forth a couple of times over the years.
Does anyone else say "chest compression, chest compression, chest compression"? Along with Dr. Mike? I'm new to his videos and I just realised I've started saying it along with him.
Candii A.L. Same here
Yes I do.
I’ve said it to one of my patients.. when they were singing the abcs
YES
I do too😂😂😂
A family practitioner saved my life in 2010! She caught a brain bleed from a hemangioma in my left parietal when no other doctor would give me the time of day! The office also shopped around for the cheapest MRI location as I had no insurance. Ive had some really bad doctors since, but I remember her fondly as the one who believed me and went above and beyond! She even told me what emergency room to rush to when my MRI results came back. I pray she is doing well.♡ I hope she knows how blessed I am because of her.
Then you should look for her and thank her personally. Not on youtube.
Edit: Make your gratitude produce effort to find her. Thanking her on youtube on a random video is the slightest effort you could've done.
@maddy likes sloths I don't want *her* to be dead. Oh my life, you're worried about that woman's dead spirit cursing her?
@@TheAlienPoison Dang, have you considered that their comment was just to share a story? Why the judgement instead of encouragement
@@dwoktheraynejonsohn4849 You're right, I guess that I put too much expectation on her. Remembering that favor and having gratitude in her heart is enough.
That was lovely, I hope you're doing well now. God bless
Dr Mike be like :
Chest compressions
Chest compressions
Chest compressions
They save lives baby
Hahaha
they do dough
100th like baby
Clarice Lafargue 😂 u forgot baby boo😆
She’s breathing and has a steady heartbeat.
Dr. Mike- chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions
I went into septic shock once. One of the most frightening moments of my life is when an ER nurse said "We can't get her blood pressure up". They gave me lots of fluids and vasopressors. Very scary :O
I’ve learned more on this channel that I have in any of my health classes honestly
first of all, thank you sm dr. mike for liking this haha! :))
and second of all, of course two days after I watch this video I have an allergic reaction to something and I have no idea what ahaha
watch Grey's anatomy as well, that show literally helped me through high school medical classes and still currently helping with some medical terms in college now that I have clinicals
xbadtemptationx ah I will! thank you and good luck!
@@bea2661 thanks love! likewise
Aw you don't need a doctor anymore now!
Imagine youre getting a surgery and as you go under you hear "pee-woop!"
That would be SO FUNNY 😂
🤣🤣
😁
That sound should become a requirement as the patient is going under. Then see if they remember when they wake up. 😂
"Oh, cool. It's Dr. Mike taking care of me. Someone let my daughter know I've got good care..." as I pass out.
Hopefully I say and don't just think it...
I actually remembered this episode. The kid that was having an allergic reaction was brought in and after some time being treated for it, he seemed to be doing better. Only when the family started to arrive did the kid suddenly start going into anaphylaxis shock again, hence why the doctor was then trying to figure out the cause of it. It turned out the kid's family either owned a bakery or was making some baked goods for an event or something and the recipes contained lots of nuts. The family members trying to visit them were still coated in the stuff so the kid would suddenly start having another reaction.
Baked goods, it was baklava. Walnuts
There was another one that dude's gf had a peanut butter sandwich earlier in the day, forgot about it, then kissed him. 😳
@@thepinkBra1 Oh yes I remember that episode.
@@thepinkBra1 the most passionate kisses make your heart stop
@@thepinkBra1 OH yea I remember that.. She brushed her teeth and flossed but missed one tooth.. That was crazy..
Thank you so much for your comment on getting an interpreter. Well said. There are serious risks involved in having a relative or friend interpret for the patient, and yes, it's a HIPAA violation.
I did a project in college about the issues of language access in hospitals. One of the most shocking things I found in my research was how common it is for hospital staff to use children, even young children, as interpreters for their parents. One report even found an instance of a 3 y.o. interpreting for their parent. I understand why hospitals have to use family members to interpret when it's a really rare language, like a First Nation language or something, but it happens all the time even with Spanish speakers (in the US). It's inexcusable.
Family members, unless they have a medical background, don't know all the medical lingo. Far too much gets lost in the sauce. And quite often, they won't interpret everything, because they think it embarrassing or shameful. Or they're just so overwhelmed by the emotion of it all that their brain shuts down. Or especially in the case of grandchildren, being a blood relative does not mean that you speak grandma's language to a satisfactory degree. Plus, knowing a language doesn't mean you can do well as an interpreter. It's a skill that people train years to acquire. It's like saying, "Hey, you're good at arithmetic, now go teach this math class."
When is that scrub line coming out
A regular scrub line. I'm not chiseled enough to wear Dr. Mike Scrubs (TM) Need the middle aged nurse version. We haven't seen size 6 since the last century.
I hear that scrubs are perfect for pjs
@@adriannefluet2896 lol
@@adriannefluet2896 you’re not wrong. I’m a healthcare professional, and there have been many times where I have considered sleeping in scrubs. They are so comfy. I actually almost prefer scrub pants over jeans.
@@nckoes LOL Yes!!
"These are the real stories that Doctors never talk about." So they're going to talk about it on TV.
Yeah like have you ever talked to a doctor?? They’ve got crazy stories out the wazoo.
Well, they needed some kind of opening to get the viewers attention!!!
Never talk about as in never get to talk about it. Don't be stupid.
THATS WHAT IM SAYING
Doctors? You should talk to emt or paramedics we see EVERYTHING
Patient: I've been having anxiety...
DM: CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS
Fluids, fluids a ton of fluids
Chest compressions
Made by the chest compressions group
I remember an episode where twin doctors both had a patient who was faking pain. And after the woman stormed out of the hospital with one twin, the doctor called his brother and told him about her. Which meant when she arrived at the other hospital she ended up meeting the twin of the doctor who determined there was nothing wrong with her. And on her way out, the twin she had as her doctor in the first hospital was walking into the hospital.
Pretty much twin doctors made a plan to mess with a patient who was faking it.
I remember that episode! It was quite a story, very funny! I remember the one about the woman who was going in renal failure because she was constantly rubbing forcefully her belly to expel the demon inside. She had been cursed and was responding to this curse the only way she could. In the ER they tried to help her , finally they reached out to a community center form her ethnic background and they performed a sort of exorcist. She was relieved afterward, her demon had been taken out and she stopped the rubbing motion, her kidneys were saved. Beliefs are strong sometimes.
*PETITION FOR DR.MIKE TO MAKE FUNNIEST BLOOPERS 2019*
@@JTL3 😂😂
I don't carry my EpiPen and I'm pretty sure it's also expired. I just avoid kiwis 🤷
@@Loverleezack what are you allergic to?
@@Loverleezack if it's discolored toss it out. I found out the hard way.
OH
Never EVER EVER say "quiet" or "slow" in an ER. Everyone knows this.
This also is true in retail, restaurants, and trucking. Lol
“OOPS”
Same goes for any hospital ward!
Wait...why not?
It jinxes it
In kindergarten I broke my arm. My parents told me that I cried cause the cast was blue not pink. Not because of pain.
Yikes
Parents are ignorant asf when you try to describe your mental issues & pains.
Infinity then talk to someone else about it
@Infinity you didn’t understand the original comment
Haha! My 5 year old just broke her arm a few weeks back and was very disappointed she got a white cast instead of pink. But the best part is that the surgeon was upset he couldn’t get her a pink one lol
Just found this video and loved it! This reminds me of when my mom would watch 'Life in the ER' which was live camera in an ER type of show, while we would be eating dinner, since it came on in the evening. Thanks to her, rest her soul, I can watch the most gruesome show while eating food and not be phased at all xD
Doctors and cops love post-shift storytelling.
So do teachers. :)
And paramedics. I have two friends who are paramedics and the stories I hear range from disturbing to truly hilarious.
Cna do to
@@Nettietwixt
Yeah, I also have a friend who is a paramedic and hes told me some of the craziest stories from being out on the field, and man, lemme tell you that some of the shit he has told me is just absolutely insane and most of the time, just absolutely disgusting lmao.
Nurses & correctional officers do too.😂
I actually remember this episode. The reason the doctor started investigating the CAUSE of the anaphylaxis was because he kept getting the patient stable and he would suddenly relapse back into anaphylactic shock when his parents were sitting with him in his cubicle. Turns out his dad was touching him with hands he had been touching his nut-covered apron with.
Smaller town, smaller clinic or hospital
Idiot dad...
@@elizley?
Dr. Mike: I’ve never head of a thoracotomy outside the ER
Me: Clearly you don’t watch enough Grey’s Anatomy
you mean OR
Also to note prehospital resuscitative thoracotomies are a standard in physician led helicopter emergency medical services
Shadman • 47 years ago • Updated resuscitative thoracotomy is done in emergency not OR
hermionehp1100 in* not out
skezza100 been there, seen that too!! I found that statement funny too
I am so happy to see this!! I loved this show so much and so did my mom (she is a former ER nurse turned travel nurse). She always had a ton of great stories to tell me and my siblings growing up. They usually ranged from funny stories to very serious and dark stories. I am so happy that I grew up with a mother that was very knowledgeable in the medical field not only because of the stories but because she knew how to diagnose us when we were sick and knew proper treatment.
“They can just go ahead and die”
I felt that
Same
The first case I’m already mad that that guy was like “I’m a paramedic, we don’t need to rush” and it turns out she’s going into SHOCK AND COULD DIE. Get your ego out of here just call 911 and let them make the calls, they are equipped you are not, they have protocols for a reason
Too close.
He was trying to be a paragod. I would have wanted code 3.
I dont think thats what he meant. I mean think about whats going on in a normal call. 99% of the time nobody around the patient is a medical practitioner so nobody is doing any first aid or live saving measures so the paramedics have to rush to the location. Just that travel to the location is time they lose to stabilize the patient and get them to an ER. Because the guy in the show is a paramedic he saves the ambulance a lot of time because he can monitor the situation and administer to the patient long before the ambulance gets there. To give him benefit of the doubt i dont think that was ego i think that was him saying "im a paramedic and because of that the other paramedics had a lot of extra time to stabilize her that they otherwise would not have had."
@@justarandomveryintelligent8934 He would probably not have any equipment in his home and therefore unable to help her.
@@justarandomveryintelligent8934 I appreciate you trying to be positive, and give him the benefit of the doubt. Not that many people do that.
I'm an ER nurse in a level 1 trauma centre in Australia. I've been involved with countless thoracotamies in our resus rooms over the last 17 years. Last ditch effort yes, but they 100% happen outside of the OR.
Resus bay thoracotomies are EXTREMELY unusual here in the States. Dr. Mike is rather parochial in his perspective.
Same!! I worked at level 1 in the US and saw a handful of them in my ER. Coolest thing I ever saw in all my ER years….. not so cool for the patient, but you know what I mean lol
That's where they crack the chest right?
@@evangelineiadonisi3210 yep!
@@evangelineiadonisi3210that is my idea of hell. Is it better than dying? I'm honestly not sure.
I actually remember that episode with the kid. The reason he called his wife is that episode air probably over 15 years ago which means the story was well before that time so it was a time before translators were more easily accessed. Also the reason they were trying to get to the bottom of it was because every time they thought that they had gotten the kids stable he would suddenly go back into anaphylactic shock. Turns out that he was allergic to something the parents were feeding while in the hospital. They weren't being malicious they just had no idea that he was allergic to an ingredient
"Is the patient breathing?"
"Yes"
Dr. Mike "chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions"
Chest compressions aren't always for breathing, its also used to manually pump someone's heart (I had to take a cpr class for school)
I'm CPR certified, I know. It was a joke.
Oh okay! Sorry 😅😅
"Is the patient conscious and walking and responsive?"
"Yes"
Dr. Mike "chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions"
Haha
If he's doing something against IT He is ok. If Not He needs them 😂 they tell you anyway 😂😂😂
I haven’t watched the video yet I’m betting on 15 “chest compressions “
Same
They save lives baby 🤣
Karan wtf
@Karan what the actual f
@Karan dumbass!
ER doctor: “These are the real stories of the ER that doctors never talk about.”
Dr Mike: nah uh hun, we just had a tea-spilling session yesterday
Ha!
😂
Yuxin Zhang dhdhdhsj hahahahaha
I was given a three 33% chances for my mom after a motorcycle accident... 33% chance to live, 33% chance to die, 33% chance she will stay in a coma like state... The doctor never told me where that last 1% went... end of story Mom lived and is doing fine
Can you watch the British version of this show (24 hours in A&E) and discuss what the differences are between UK and US healthcare
James Wishart omg yeeeee
24 Hours in A&E is way more raw and real. It's actual footage in documentary style. This show is just sensation and reconstruction. Can't really compare the two in my opinion. A&E is awesome.
One is free another is expensive as shit
24 hours in A&E is such a good show
Rokuro Emmado it might not be with good ol Boris
Please Dr Mike do a video review of "my 600lb life" or a video talking about obesity, please!
a person: has a mild cold
dr. mike: *chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions*
When he was naming off the tests, all I could think was “Why not just say you need all the alphabet soup tests? That would be faster.” 😂
**man walks into room carrying a hecking tuba**
Dr. Mike: look at those scrubs
That's that doctor's scrubs. He finds the most horrible scrubs he can and wears them. He addressed this subject in an episode once. I love this show lol
It’s a French Horn...
@@a.7889-v8f No, a French horn is circular. That would be a baritone or a tuba
@@a.7889-v8f that is 100% not a french horn. Tuba or baritone. Looks too small to be a tuba to me personally.
@@msguineapigsrus A euphonium maybe?
The funny thing about listening to doctors is that 90% of the time you need to tell them to speak English.
“Stop speaking big brain.”
Why is no one talking about him mentioning a scub line 😍❣❣
alicia s I know right!! I can’t wait!!
His scubline i can’t wait to see lol but I don’t like to wear cloths that my huge muscles are about to bust out of lmao
oof I'm going to have to buy some for when I have clinicals ❤
I'm in nursing school and your videos help me remember so many terms! I can enjoy even your silliest videos but still learn something! It's great! 🤗
All doctors share their stories! For educational and for fun reasons! True story!
Nurses too. Some of the best stories have come from nurses.
@Dus M. K. i tell some of these stories from time to time on my channel if you want to more stories ;-)
dr mike: “pLease carry your epipen”
my epipen from somewhere in my room: 👀
alexa j yo dude my names Alexa too
My broke butt unable to afford an EpiPen 😬😬
Lol same. I have one EpiPen pack that is lost in my art desk somewhere
They need trackers or something. I lose or forget my epi pen nearly every day. They are also so freaking expensive! 150$ where I live but apparently in the States it can be as high as 600?
👁👄👁
Somebody is going to make a shirt that says:
"Chest Compressions,
Chest Compressions,
Chest Compressions.
Doctor Mike"
Mythical Unicorn i’d totally buy it
I’m still waiting on my shirt 🤷🏾♂️
YES
Someone literally sent him as shirt that says "chest compression".😂 It is in one of his videos
it needs to have a tighter chest fabric to give chest compressions
My sister works at a call center as an interpreter for medical calls. She receives calls from US hospitals (we live in Costa Rica) and I honestly admire her a lot cuz it's tough
Ur sister is awsomesauce!
@@shelby8709 she definitely is! I'm a med student so she usually understands the medical terms I use too
Could you do a video about the problems surrounding insulin prices and how they affect diabetics especially type 1
Insulin is bankrupting me, and I'd declare bankruptcy, but I can't afford it due to buying insulin.
my CAT had a bout of diabetes so I got a taste of the expenses associated with medicine that Americans deal with (vet expenses are not covered in Canada)--would be a great topic.
Supply and demand, there is a limited supply, the demand is rising, and a large portion of the supply is ropped off yo be given away for free.
Insulin isnt cheap to make, and with so much of it being basicly stolen by the goverment (purchased at like 1/4 cost) they have to pay for the production of all the insulin, paying their employees, and developing new drugs from the profits of only about 30% of the product.
Please. Thank god I have good health insurance through my hospital. But there was a time I didn’t have any. $600 for 2 vials of novolog. Then Obamacare came just in time for those with pre-existing conditions and who couldn’t get health insurance through their parents. I went to Peru and was able to get the same type of insulin for $50. Truly insane.
@@AdamIsUrqed Do you live near the Canadian border? You can buy many types of Insulin OTC at a pharmacy in Canada for much cheaper.
Can someone please make a compilation of everytime Doctor Mike has said "Chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions" ? Or make a song out of it.
Drinking Game?
Amber Tony take a shot every time he says chest compression
I wish someone would
I’m gonna do it I have to 😂
Hannah Marie Schwartz do you still make video??
Please react to i didnt know i was pregnant
It seems so fake
Clarnaka I remember watching an episode of that a few years ago and a lady didn’t know she was pregnant until she went to the toilet to poop and she pushed a baby out into the toilet like um okay you mean to tell me you went 9 months without your period, didn’t feel an actual tiny human moving in your stomach, and went to take a shit but pushed out a baby instead???
@@raverbun the period, some people are irregular and don't see it for up to a year. At least that's what I've read. The tiny human moving, I can't speak to, maybe they thought it was gas.
@@raverbun hahah
I mean wasnt there a single symptom?
It’s real. Check out mama dr Jones on UA-cam. She’s a gynaecologist and she reacts to this
I wouldn’t say every one of the stories on that show is completely far fetched. There’s people out there who have irregular periods, are on birth control, or bleed like normal without ever knowing they were pregnant. My friend had normal periods with her pregnancy, and she had no idea she was pregnant! With some people’s bodies, they simply just don’t show enough to make them think that they are pregnant. They might notice a slight weight gain, but it’s such an insignificant amount of weight, it can easily be mistaken for typical weight gain from lack of diet and exercise. Sometimes it’s just where the baby is positioned in the body. Or if the women is heavyset as well. I think there was an episode I saw where a women even went to the doctors and they all just said she was overweight, until she was doubled over in pain due to labor. I’m not totally surprised by the stories because sometimes the symptoms are so minor they could easily be passed off. Or it could just be complete utter denial. Idk there’s just so many factors, and not every pregnancy is the same. I think there’s a UA-camr who is an OBGYN who reviews the episodes if you want to check out her channel. I can’t remember her name off the top of my head though.
Edit: It’s “Mama Doctor Jones”
someone collapsed outside my job the other day and first thing i asked her is do you need me to call an ambulance or anyone for you. she was conscious but legs gave out do to age and back surgeries. i threw my backpack down to help her down and had her lean on me to get her strength back. almost everyone out of the store helped in some way and it really shows there are good people still in the world. im a manager at the store so im glad i was there to oversee and let her know to call if shes coming in so we can put stuff aside for her so she doesnt tire herself out as much next time.
Doctor: "What's Wrong?"
Patient: "My lungs have been replaced with wooden chests!"
Doctor: CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS
Dats clever 😏
Yaarrrrr!! Tharrrr be me booty! Ye scallywag hath stolen me booty from me, have ye?! Ye be walking the plank, ye scurvy dog
Alex Barac um.... what
Alex Barac o noes!
rips open chest, stores important stuff in the drawers, stitches chest back up
My dad “died” for a few moments due to an allergic reaction to something he didn’t know he was allergic to. The Dr’s told us he may be different. And he really was, he’s basically not the same person anymore. It’s crazy how things like that can change you.
OMG
That’s sad
Is he different in a bad way?
@@jljl24 he’s not the person I knew when I was younger, it’s neither bad nor good, just different. Something changed and I don’t know wether it was his outlook on life that drove that. But he cares less about things, I think he’s realised that the small stuff we care about just doesn’t really matter in the long run. It’s strange to be honest
So like no one else wants to know about the 10 year old boy who’s arm was cut off..
He is a little older than ten. He and a friend attempted armed robbery of a home and got his arm lopped off by a decorative sword.
I guess
I think I remember seeing this episode before and if I remember correctly they found his arm and reattached it.
Meagan Wallwork it’s weird how with modern medicine we can say that like it’s nothing
It's okay, they performed chest compressions.
I was a nurse in a level 1 trauma center for ten years. I don’t remember ever seeing any thoracotomies preformed in our ER. It’s a possibility that it happened on a shift I didn’t work but something like that would have made it’s way through the hospital quick! Most hospitals, especially large hospitals, have operating rooms dedicated to trauma. There are entire teams of nurses and surgical techs that can also get an OR ready for any surgery very quickly. If a big trauma comes into a hospital and the trauma OR’s are in use it’s common to have a non-emergent case be pushed back. I should restate to any emergency can push one that’s not life threatening. It’s not only frustrating for the patient and family but for hospital staff as well. We want you to get better, be healthy; it’s why most people go into healthcare.
When my mother had a heart attack my dad did chest compressions until the ambulance came and she lived..... for 2 more weeks atleast
Sorry for your loss but like the slight humor
jeez that took a turn
Sorry for your loss.
They had us in the first half not going to lie
Oh I'm so sorry,hope your all ok!
I'm sorry but "stay away from those nuts" brought out my 10 year old self.
🙈
You may have drilled chest compressions into my head, but I can hear my EMR teacher yelling look listen and feel at my class
Ya I would have to agree with your CPR trainer because it’s not always a good idea to start performing CPR on someone who is still breathing and has a pulse. Just because they passed out doesn’t mean you start CPR. It can actually hurt them and cause damage to the person in certain scenarios where it’s not needed.
Can you do doctor and pharmacist react to a show? Pharmacy staff don’t get any love and we’ve been working extra hard, especially during the pandemic 😪
My brother worked in insurance. He always told everyone "if you have any questions about medication, talk to the pharmacist, not the doctor. They really know the meds". I agree pharmacy people should get more love and credit. Thanks for all you do.
Okay but I dare you to this with "Sex Sent Me to the ER"
sad potato I hope my story doesn’t end up in that show. Lol
me : WHAT DO I DO!?!?!
Dr.Mike : chest compressions chest compressions chest compressions they save lives baby!
Mhmm... We need a reaction to '24 hours in A&E'
Definitely!
YES! That documentary is bomb af
100%
Yes, my brother was in the first series
YES THIS
@DoctorMike. I'm so glad you said about chest compressions. I found my dad in cardiac arrest. He was agonal breathing and I was so unsure if he was choking. I was in shock and just started cpr before the emergency services even answered the phone. Despite being quick to act he still passed. Every moment matters
With this show I wonder how much is true vs how much is distorted through the editing, and re-enactments
yeah, i think that with any reenactments you need to keep this question in mind and not take it as facts
You missed the best part of that episode! The kid is stabilized but every time a new family member comes in he reacts again. They all swear there's no peanuts in the food they were making, but they finally find out it's the almonds in the baklava
@Faith Sierra I think the show was at it's peak in like 2012-13
"Call 911 and tell 'em to bring *everybody*" Ya mom, dad, dog, neighbor that keeps mowing into your lawn, ya third grade crush....
your favorite cow!
Your town's local priest.
the hair stylist
His third cousin, twice removed...
@Sally Salinas Yes! Don't forget the pizza!
6:41 I’m an OR nirse in a level 1 trauma center. We actually just did a thoracotomy in the ER a couple weeks ago. Doesn’t happen often, but it does happen.
The boy depicted actually had several allergies reactions in a row even after receiving epi. Every time it happened when a family member appeared visiting. Eventually the source was traced to the clothing they were wearing. Now this family was volunteering at the Greek Orthodox Church right next to the hospital working on desserts but because of this tree nut dust ended up on the clothing causing the reactions. The family was told to go home and shower and change so not to cause the reaction again. While the boy was given an epi pen to make sure an allergic reaction is nipped in the bud. I saw this episode before so that is what happened.
Did the whole discovery take place in the ER tho? ERs aren't supposed to find the underlying problem lol
@@tiffanyh629 They did on House.... they'd even break into people's houses and steal things to determine what the problems were lol
TIffany H yep it happened like that.
@@andied1842 amazing! Healthcare has evolved so much! xD
thanks
My friend: I'm having the worst headache
Me: don't worry I know what to do.
"Chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions.”
The only thing I took from this video 😆😆
Friend: * ribs break*
Me: DONT WORRY THEY CAN HEAL!
Same
😂 LOL
Dr Mike: “First thing we gotta do is get the patient completely naked.”
Me: *Starts unbuttoning* “It was just a paper cut but you don’t have to tell me twice.”
😂😂😂😂 same
lmaooooo this is my mood
Oh my gosh 😂😂😂😂🤦🏽♀️
I have come across two car accidents in the past two years. One was a driver and the other was a pedestrian involved in a hit and run. Both were unconscious. One had no pulse and the other did. I was trained how to do cpr but froze and panicked when this happened both times. I asked someone if they could do cpr on the one without a pulse even though I knew it was basically pointless. But on the driver I didn’t want to further injure her. If I would’ve just started chest compressions maybe she would’ve lived. But hearing you say that if someone’s unconscious to start chest compressions really confirms that if this happens again that’s what I need to do. I’ve panicked both times and I still blame myself but now I know that what I was thinking would’ve been the right thing to do. So thank you.
Loved this vid. Can you maybe react to some medical horror stories? Like the ones Shane Dawson reacted to. He saw some surgery mishaps.
OMG YES
+
Dr. Mike a friendly advice from someone named Mike, you have to watch season 4 episode 15 of House. Best episode, you won't regret it
Monsters inside me was one of my favorite shows as a kid. Lol Freaked me out but I loved it!
same, now im always at urgent care just to make sure
Yes, that show is responsible for like 80% of my anxiety as a parent however lol
Loved that show when I was 10🤣
lunar moth yesss
same I always freaked me out but yet I still watched it and 1000 ways to die and untold stories of the er.
Wow, my sister has had many anaphylactic reactions (she's allergic to nuts, legumes, soy, and other random things like bananas, and used to be allergic dairy, eggs, and gluten) and I remember it always being scary, but never realized it was so dangerous.
DO YOU KNOW HOW LONG I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS?!?!!?!!?!!?
Haha, how long?? Since I dropped the survey on the community section?
Doctor Mike No, since before that I’ve been commenting since FOREVER
I think it’s engrained in my head now...”chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions.”
It's engraved not engrained but not bring a hater and yeah
Worked at level 1 trauma center and witnessed 2 thoracotomies performed at the bedside during a traumatic arrest. I got to perform direct cardiac massage. It was number 1 on my nursing bucket list. Patient’s didn’t make it, but seeing it was soooooo cool.
Very cool! 👍 sucks that he didn’t make it
Doctor Mike, could you do a video in which you react to Austin McConnell’s “What to do if your parachute fails”?
It’s a short but informative video, and I thought it would be cool if, after discussing the video, you talked a little about the ways the body responds to a fall, ranging from in a fall in which you scrape your knee, to a fall from 12,000 feet.
I think it’d be super interesting to learn about how the body starts to try to heal itself.
I wanna like but it's at 69 likes
A insane Half German now it’s not
Pansexual Bean so?
I know this is irrelevant but visual-wise, he can be Captain America.
He probably has Americas ass
@@terynb4407 I WHEEZED...💀💀
Don't know if you'll ever see this but the translation scene would make a lot more sense if you'd seen the entire episode. The doctor had stabilised the young boy 2 or 3 times and he kept going back into shock so he had to try to figure out the reason why he kept going back into shock.
Dr. Mike, I just got BLS trained for the first time at the hospital I'm working at...
And the best part is I knew a lot of things because of watching your videos.
Thank you 💜
Not just this but most of the times I learn stuff from the channel and then later somewhere I definitely get to use it.
You're the best and most authentic person to rely on for medical information.
Mom: hears four seconds of him speaking
Mom: from a different room: hey is that that hot doctor
Mom: Hes so cute
Me: do you want to watch something with me
Mom: no I have stuff to do
Mom: wait
Mom: is it that hot doctor
Me: *sigh* yeah
Mom: im coming
WUT
Your mom is amazing lol
Legit my mom
you should make merch and it should be shirts/hoodies that just say:
“chest compressions
chest compressions
chest compressions”
There should be an outline where the proper hand placement goes as well.
S H LMAO YES
Please talk about your watches!! Great content as always
Untold Stories of the ER is a show I grew up watching. It's the reason I want to study pre-med in college. I turn 18 next January and at that point, I can start taking courses through my town's fire department to be a paramedic. I plan on getting experience through the job and hope to attend NYIT. If I make it into med school I want to major in emergency medicine. It's been my dream for years now and your reaction to this show brought back a lot of memories.
oml u should really watch the episode where the bratty mom gives her pageant daughter tapeworms and she like acts all innocent about it
Oh god. That episode was soo baddd. Have you seen the one where a man's eye was bulging out of his head?
YES!
That was the best episode!!!
all of these episodes are so obviously staged its actually funny
@@se7vin77 They're reconstructing the stories. *Of course* they're staged.
I really wish that epipens weren’t so expensive, I’m still holding on to my year old ones because I can’t afford new ones. Just gotta pray I avoid nuts at all costs 🙏🏽
Assuming your in the usa I wonder if after coronavirus you can take a trip to canada and buy some epi pens here. Our medical system costs 40% less than what hospitals in usa spend.
I just got CPR certified and was told that Auvi -Q was the same as an EpiPen but in some cases you could get it for free. Look up Auvi-Q and see if you can get a free one
@@karensaenz9711 thank you for this, I will definitely look into it! ♥️
This is the one thing that I don't understand in the USA. What I get is that anaphylactic shocks are not that rare that this kind of medication should have been made easily available and cheap (due to the high demand). In my country where it is very rare to have ANY allergy that could have resulted in anaphylactic shock, epipen only cost at most $10.
@@juliaspoonie3627 in the last 15 years the price of insulinhas risen with about 360% in the us.
20% of comments: *Random Stuff*
80% of comments: cHeSt CoMmPrEsIoNs cHeSt CoMmPrEsIoNs cHeSt CoMmPrEsIoNs
46.38% of statistics are made up on the spot...
Baby Girl lol I made this ages ago
@@austejazilyte9939 that's 67.98% truth and 32.02% false
Btw that did add up to 100, but u get my point
I- okay your just being annoying now
Dr. Mike, nurses and nursing assistants love sharing their stories too. I'm a nursing assistant at a hospital, and I also did long term care and home care. I never run out of stories, and in the medical profession, you can never say that you've seen it all.
“Whenever a Doctor is yelling nuts at you, you’re doing something wrong” 😂😂😂
Nice picture. Lol as you can tell by mine, it be sal