A Medical Look Into What Killed Every President

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 сер 2022
  • CORRECTIONS:
    *Kennedy was killed in 1963, not 1968. typo that slipped through. Sorry!
    *Garfield was not killed IN Baltimore, but rather in DC at a train station CALLED Baltimore. Honest mistake.
    *Garfield was shot 4 months into his Presidency, not 18.
    *John Quincy Adams died at the age of 80, not 78
    *Franklin Pierce died at 64, not 69.
    SOURCES
    General Sources:
    www.whitehouse.gov
    www.doctorzebra.com
    George Washington
    www.mountvernon.org/library/d...
    John Adams
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g02.htm#...
    Thomas Jefferson
    www.monticello.org/site/resea....
    James Madison
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g04.htm
    James Monroe
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g05.htm
    John Quincy Adams
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g06.htm#...
    Andrew Jackson
    jamanetwork.com/journals/jama...
    Martin Van Buren
    www.nytimes.com/1862/07/25/ar...
    William Henry Harrison
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g09.htm
    John Tyler
    www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-...
    James K. Polk
    jameskpolk.com/history/the-de...
    Zachary Taylor
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g12.htm
    Millard Fillmore
    www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-...
    Franklin Pierce
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g14.htm#...
    James Buchanan
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_B...
    Abraham Lincoln
    www.shapell.org/manuscript/do...
    Andrew Johnson
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g17.htm
    Ulysses S. Grant
    www.history.com/this-day-in-h...
    Rutherford B. Hayes
    www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-...
    James Garfield
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g20.htm
    Chester A. Arthur
    www.cs.mcgill.ca/~rwest/wikis...
    Grover Cleveland
    www.npr.org/2011/07/06/137621...
    Benjamin Harrison
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g23.htm
    William McKinley
    www.history.com/news/the-assa...
    Theodore Roosevelt
    archive.nytimes.com/www.nytim...
    William Howard Taft
    millercenter.org/president/ta....
    Woodrow Wilson
    millercenter.org/president/wi...
    Warren G. Harding
    doctorzebra.com/prez/g29.htm#...
    Calvin Coolidge
    www.politico.com/story/2019/0...
    www.upi.com/Archives/1933/01/...
    Herbert Hoover
    www.nytimes.com/1964/10/21/ar...
    Franklin D. Roosevelt
    millercenter.org/president/fd...
    Harry S. Truman
    www.nytimes.com/1972/12/27/ar...
    Dwight D. Eisenhower
    www.politico.com/story/2018/0...
    John F. Kennedy
    www.cnn.com/2017/11/22/health...
    Lyndon B. Johnson
    www.pbs.org/newshour/politics...
    Richard M. Nixon
    www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv...
    Gerald R. Ford
    www.nytimes.com/2006/12/27/wa...
    Ronald Reagan
    www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/...
    George H. W. Bush
    www.washingtonpost.com/local/...
    Contact Email: DoctorMikeMedia@Gmail.com
    Executive Producer: Doctor Mike
    Production Director and Editor: Dan Owens
    Managing Editor and Producer: Sam Bowers
    Editor and Designer: Caroline Weigum
    * Select photos/videos provided by Getty Images *
    ** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional **

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @DoctorMike
    @DoctorMike  Рік тому +20503

    *Kennedy was killed in 1963, not 1968. Sorry!

  • @Noah73827
    @Noah73827 Рік тому +6564

    Fun fact: Theodore Roosevelt once was starting a speech, was shot by someone, and finished the speech before getting medical attention. That shows how much of a badass he is.

    • @anasazidarkmoon
      @anasazidarkmoon Рік тому +674

      And he even told the audience he'd been shot, but it'd take more than that to stop a Bull Moose, as that was the political party he was running under at the time.

    • @MaficJustice
      @MaficJustice Рік тому +413

      And part of the reason he survived was because the bullet hit the breast pocket of his shirt, which held his super thick speech notes. (I'm only slightly exaggerating when I say it was like 40 pages.) The thick paper slowed the bullet down to a point where the wound wasn't fatal.

    • @arwensdorf8311
      @arwensdorf8311 Рік тому +368

      This reminds me of when Reagan was giving a speech in Germany and a balloon popped and without missing a beat he said “missed me” and would have kept smoothly going except for the applause.

    • @azloyal298
      @azloyal298 Рік тому +170

      and our former president complained about everything that bothered him on social media and the current president can't even remember his line. what a world we live in

    • @ja.lena.a
      @ja.lena.a Рік тому +176

      @@anasazidarkmoon wow, i wonder how that went down-
      *starts speech*
      "Ouch"
      "Oop I just got shot everyone-"
      "That kinda hurt"
      "Anyway"

  • @way9895
    @way9895 8 місяців тому +203

    Its scary to think that the history of medicine is quite literally the expertise of trial and error

    • @jessicamerkert6392
      @jessicamerkert6392 6 місяців тому +12

      And by a lot of unethical medical studies.

    • @skgerttula
      @skgerttula 2 місяці тому +10

      That's why it's called "practicing" medicine. They're still learning new things.

    • @BubcoPhonics
      @BubcoPhonics 22 дні тому

      And still is :)

    • @KeatanDay
      @KeatanDay 20 днів тому

      Like it or not the Nazis provided a lot of studies that lead to modern medicines

  • @PaulaDautremont
    @PaulaDautremont 11 місяців тому +241

    Fun fact - Edwin Booth (John's brother) saved Abraham Lincoln's son, Robert, from serious injury or even death when he fell or was pushed from a train platform as a train was approaching.

  • @OhSkyeLanta
    @OhSkyeLanta Рік тому +4986

    I’m a history writer and the wooooorst part about all of my research is learning about medical procedures that should not have been or medicine that were actually killing people, and the gruesome ways people died that we have successfully figured out how to prevent, and turns out it’s pretty easy.

    • @notthecaptainguy
      @notthecaptainguy Рік тому +78

      IKR like i read an entire two books on those(Strange Medicine: A Shocking History of Real Medical Practices Through the Ages by Nathan Belofsky and Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything by Lydia Kang and Nate Pedersen, good books btw and very funny, like one of the lines, this is out of context i know 💀, is "...the sinister inner workings of the Jew...") for research and they KILLED me

    • @aguyontheinternet8436
      @aguyontheinternet8436 Рік тому +108

      It's so bad, apparently you can shoot someone, and then say the doctors killed him because they did such an awful job he would have a higher chance of surviving if he was never taken care of at all.

    • @SergioHernandez-le8wp
      @SergioHernandez-le8wp Рік тому +12

      What do you write? Books or articles?....anything I may have read?

    • @OhSkyeLanta
      @OhSkyeLanta Рік тому

      @@aguyontheinternet8436 pretty hilariously ironic. Also brings up some interesting thoughts on at what point does is the President’s health is no longer their own decision but a matter where people can say “for the good of the nation, we need to open you up to 20 inches to look for the benign bullet.”

    • @aguyontheinternet8436
      @aguyontheinternet8436 Рік тому +4

      @@OhSkyeLanta yea

  • @Skip2105
    @Skip2105 Рік тому +2943

    When Theodore Roosevelt’s mom and wife died on the same day, he wrote in his diary (the light in my life turned off). He then lived as fast as he could saying “darkness can’t catch the horseman who rides the fastest”. Then, right before he went to sleep on a night in which he’d die, he uttered his last words: “please turn out that light, James”

    • @vampxrialive
      @vampxrialive Рік тому +84

      That is sad, He is one of my cousins I think my dad told me and this makes me sad to hear.

    • @t_ub
      @t_ub Рік тому +55

      @@vampxrialive bro what?

    • @siftervinnie2inNFS
      @siftervinnie2inNFS Рік тому +73

      @@t_ub In English as long as you can trace back to a common ancestor you get Xth cousin X times removed.

    • @Carl_Gustaf_Emil_Mannerheim
      @Carl_Gustaf_Emil_Mannerheim Рік тому +17

      I do remember that sad Valentine’s Day

    • @cakepudding3220
      @cakepudding3220 Рік тому +5

      How do you know? Was you there?

  • @LeslieMcDonald-gf1ip
    @LeslieMcDonald-gf1ip 8 місяців тому +106

    I always have a feeling that Dr. Mike is one of the few people that can talk about literally anything in such an interesting way and nothing ever gets boring.

    • @Laura-kl7vi
      @Laura-kl7vi 7 місяців тому

      He gets things wrong quite often though. Not medical things but the things around it. Like sometimes history. There are some mistakes even in this video. It feels sloppy to me. He's an extremely popular creator and a very busy person but he needs to pay better attention to the details because some of us want to watch him, and enjoy a video then BAM he comes out with this whopper of a nonfact or lazy statement and it takes you totally out of it and you stop the video and comment...

  • @abigaildenman1648
    @abigaildenman1648 11 місяців тому +171

    While in college I took a class over the First Ladies and there was so much mystery surrounding Hardings death that people believed his wife might have poisoned him. If I remember correctly there was enough wrong in their relationship that made the idea of Florence poisoning him a pretty entertaining rabbit hole to dive into.

    • @lelouchvibritannia4028
      @lelouchvibritannia4028 11 місяців тому

      There's also a statistic saying that female murderers are far more likely to poison their victims than violent males as men are physically stronger and therefore more confrontational.

  • @aidanlentoski8850
    @aidanlentoski8850 Рік тому +1445

    Crazy fact!
    The son of Abraham Lincoln, Robert Todd Lincoln, was a witness to three presidential assassinations in his lifetime.
    Even though he was not in the theater when his father was shot, he was rushed to his father’s deathbed during his final moments. Later in his life, he was an eye-witness to the assassination of James A. Garfield, and was in Buffalo, New York when William McKinley was shot.
    Not only this, but Robert himself was saved by John Wilkes Booth’s brother, Edwin (this was before Abraham’s assassination). This happened at a train station in New Jersey when Robert leaned up against a stopped train that was just about to start up again. Edwin Booth grabbed Robert’s shirt collar and yanked him up before he fell into the train.
    Now where’s a movie about that guy’s life?

    • @kolumbiana1530
      @kolumbiana1530 Рік тому +27

      Well how many people you think will be offended by a movie of a son of a murderer, I'd watch, but the poor actors would be hated

    • @RealBaconNinja
      @RealBaconNinja Рік тому +13

      Holy sh*t this is a dad documentary

    • @scott12346
      @scott12346 Рік тому +81

      @@kolumbiana1530 son of a murderer?? The son of Lincoln wasn’t the son of a murderer and booth’s brother wasn’t the son of booth…

    • @CristianLopez-zw1uz
      @CristianLopez-zw1uz Рік тому +5

      @@scott12346 I am pretty sure he changed it before we arrived and it wasn't this originally

    • @thompsonnguyen9875
      @thompsonnguyen9875 Рік тому

      @@lukesawesomeepicchannel7776?

  • @Danymok
    @Danymok Рік тому +3995

    "Death had to take Roosevelt sleeping, for if he had been awake, there would have been a fight"
    That is a badass quote for a badass president

    • @Tigressa101
      @Tigressa101 Рік тому +71

      I think the only problem ever with Theo was the whole banana capitalism, but other than that he was a perfect human being.

    • @flyboy152
      @flyboy152 Рік тому +76

      He was the Chuck Norris of his day.

    • @lego6397
      @lego6397 Рік тому +4

      I know right?

    • @adwaithsarun9067
      @adwaithsarun9067 Рік тому

      ikr

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd Рік тому +4

      Which one? I think it could be applied to FDR as much as Teddy

  • @olivethestrange1635
    @olivethestrange1635 10 місяців тому +227

    Fun fact: John Wilkes booth had studied the play the was being performed that night at ford theater, and was waiting for the biggest laugh to fire his gun, so it wouldn’t be quite as noticeable when he assassinated the president. The only reason the rest of the theater (other than Lincoln’s booth ) had noticed is because Lincoln slumped in his seat. ( keep in mind, hand held guns of this time were not as powerful or loud, so it was easier for the gun shot to be covered up by laughter)

  • @JackieOwl94
    @JackieOwl94 11 місяців тому +455

    Fun fact: Lincoln also had a connective tissue disorder called Marfan Syndrome. It’s genetic and causes his signature facial structure and extreme height. My stepfather and his family has this condition and share the same facial structure as Lincoln, where his son needed to have his blood vessels fixed to supply enough blood without bursting, since it also causes weak blood vessels.

    • @mysteryheart53
      @mysteryheart53 10 місяців тому +16

      Dang! I never knew he had Marfan Syndrome!

    • @Killbayne
      @Killbayne 8 місяців тому +12

      I figured that he had a distinct appearance but I didn't know it was from a condition

    • @noemieg674
      @noemieg674 8 місяців тому +5

      Wow I’ve never heard of that! Thank you for the knowledge!!!

    • @visionhawk4403
      @visionhawk4403 8 місяців тому +10

      I'm from Kentucky, just like Lincoln, and I've seen a fair few people around the state that looked like Lincoln. Really tall and with a very similar face. I wonder if it was a regional thing back then. I mean it's supposedly genetic if I remember correctly. Weird.

    • @richstrobel
      @richstrobel 7 місяців тому

      I wonder if Sheldon Cooper was the first to say "fun fact." I've seen it quite a bit on UA-cam. Marfan Syndrome doesn't sound so fun.

  • @marenawheatley5260
    @marenawheatley5260 Рік тому +5978

    For everyone who’s confused about the fact that Mike said there have been 45 presidents when Biden is the 46th- It’s because Cleveland served two non-consecutive terms and is counted twice. 45 people have been president, but there have been 46 separate administrations.
    Basically Mike did not just say ‘Let’s go Brandon”

    • @MrWolf-su8es
      @MrWolf-su8es Рік тому +58

      Who is Brandon??

    • @jennifertarin4707
      @jennifertarin4707 Рік тому +292

      @@MrWolf-su8es a NASCAR driver who made a speech and now everyone uses his name in a negative manor to describe Pesident Biden

    • @Dudeonwheels
      @Dudeonwheels Рік тому +62

      Thanks for the clarification. I forgot about that fact about Cleveland.

    • @sweetrocks610
      @sweetrocks610 Рік тому +1

      @@MrWolf-su8es there was a nascar event and the crowd was chanting “F*ck Joe Biden”, and the broadcasters tried to cover it up by saying the crowd was chanting the phrase “Let’s Go Brandon”

    • @MrWolf-su8es
      @MrWolf-su8es Рік тому +31

      @@jennifertarin4707 im am so confused Brandon is the NASCAR person thingy. And "lets go Brandon" is a bad thing right?

  • @ECHO-87
    @ECHO-87 9 місяців тому +30

    Fun fact:due to using Mercury for plates people thought tomatos were poisonous so someone tried to poison washington with a tomato and washington stated that it was one of the best soups he ever had

    • @herisuryadi6885
      @herisuryadi6885 8 місяців тому +5

      I think it was lead, not mercury

    • @ECHO-87
      @ECHO-87 7 місяців тому +3

      @@herisuryadi6885 yeah it was i got the materials mixed up

  • @visionhawk4403
    @visionhawk4403 8 місяців тому +10

    This was incredibly informative! I learned so much! Thank you!

  • @ainz_1526
    @ainz_1526 Рік тому +1925

    Still blows my mind that John Tyler who was born 1790 still has a grandson alive today in 2023 who is 94 yrs old.

    • @happyfacefries
      @happyfacefries Рік тому +84

      It's because he had children when he was older

    • @leviturnquist32737
      @leviturnquist32737 Рік тому +58

      Does it blow youre mind like abe lincolns brain?

    • @Keysanddollars
      @Keysanddollars Рік тому +242

      @@leviturnquist32737 that wasnt even funny, not because its offensive, it just wasnt funny

    • @leviturnquist32737
      @leviturnquist32737 Рік тому +7

      @DJ u know whats not funny you . U literally have roblox in ur name and ur telling me what isnt funny

    • @happyfacefries
      @happyfacefries Рік тому +73

      @@leviturnquist32737 can u speak English

  • @SoniasWay
    @SoniasWay Рік тому +2021

    If Dr Mike was my teacher, I would have become a doctor too. He makes learning so much fun

    • @Hi-cm1cj
      @Hi-cm1cj Рік тому +19

      Fr. He would actually make School 10x better.

    • @Ninonator3
      @Ninonator3 Рік тому +28

      You probably wouldn't have though. It takes a bunch of hard grueling years to become a doctor. It's not something only having a good teacher will get you through. But I get what you mean.

    • @ScpDrRisha
      @ScpDrRisha Рік тому +2

      True... If he was my teacher it would be heaven!

    • @Jman-gm8yc
      @Jman-gm8yc Рік тому +4

      I would rather listen to Dr. Mike than any of my teachers because it’s way more interesting

    • @user-zp3xc4to1t
      @user-zp3xc4to1t Рік тому +6

      Im pretty sure there are/were people in your school that are pretty nice and making hard things easy and fun. The main problem is the problematic people that ruins your mood. Never let them do it, just let them come and go away from your learning journey

  • @izzzthewizzz
    @izzzthewizzz 11 місяців тому +2

    Your channel is awesome, funny & informative ❤ Lots of love and support from Portugal 🇵🇹

  • @yobanamera1
    @yobanamera1 5 місяців тому +10

    Fun Fact:
    Abraham Lincoln died 12 days after one of the worst tragedies of cruise ( boat) history, I think the boat tragedy happen before the Titanic in 1912 😅
    Nice video by the way, the way you took your time to tell us all this facts of each president are amazing! Love it, LOVE IT! ❤👍🏻

  • @carelsby
    @carelsby Рік тому +1264

    Kennedy’s assassination was also the most complicated post-death fiasco. Not even including the mystery of who killed him. His wife basically refused to let a funeral home take care of his body (there was a lot of anti-funeral-home sentiment at the time) and opted to let the Navy do it, and they really dropped the ball because they didnt know wtf they were doing. The way kennedy’s body was treated was an absolute nightmare.

    • @breadcrusader67
      @breadcrusader67 Рік тому +77

      Wow, imagine letting the Navy take care of your body, those guys probably (accidentally) dropped the body in the water 😆

    • @danielleoliver1734
      @danielleoliver1734 Рік тому

      He lobotomised his sister, lacking sympathy

    • @maxclips3152
      @maxclips3152 Рік тому +123

      Not quite what happened it was more so the U.S. was not letting her make the post death decisions I'd reccomend watching "ask a mortician's" video in this it's very interesting

    • @reddrivers5269
      @reddrivers5269 Рік тому +30

      It seems as they had info, that steered them away from being involved.
      2 different rifles were fired during the “assassination”. One by Oswald, the other by George Hickey (S.S. Man in the trailing vehicle). 2 different class of projectiles hit the president. First was a full metal jacket, went straight through, by Oswald. And a frangible, which shreds apart after impact, causing the most damage, shot ACCIDENTALY by Hickey. The one that ended Kennedy’s life. He had stood up holding the AR, right before his driver floored it, causing his to fall back and discharge the weapon.
      It was reported the SS had frangible rounds, but no count was done on their inventory. Gunpowder was smelt at ground level, wafting as the presidential convoy sped by. And the S.S. was caught washing away evidence, off the limo. Also, some point during the transportation of Kennedy’s body, the vessel he was in, was switched for a different one. The SS discontinued use of that style of AR, the next day.
      The whole thing was accidental, but of course, conspiracies are more appealing to the fantasies of grown men.

    • @cursedcontent4207
      @cursedcontent4207 Рік тому +41

      @@breadcrusader67 Would that make him a... marine corpse?

  • @00kidney
    @00kidney Рік тому +576

    Doctor Mike talking about history and making it interesting and fun was exactly what I needed right now to make my day better! 🤩

    • @HyperHrishiHD
      @HyperHrishiHD Рік тому +2

      *Yes.*

    • @Hboyplayz1
      @Hboyplayz1 Рік тому

      👁️👅👁️

    • @band_its1518
      @band_its1518 Рік тому +1

      Agreed. Im pregnant and unable to sleep, watching some Dr. Mike makes me feel much better

    • @NemesisFromResidentEvil
      @NemesisFromResidentEvil Рік тому +2

      If you steal someone else's comment again, I will report you.

    • @vampxrialive
      @vampxrialive Рік тому

      @@NemesisFromResidentEvil it isnt a big deal please take a chill pill

  • @JamesGowan
    @JamesGowan 4 місяці тому +1

    Subbed & Liked! Enjoyed the video! Good work & God bless in ‘24!

  • @CapybaraTheexplore_
    @CapybaraTheexplore_ 7 місяців тому +1

    Thank you so much for breaking this down for me now I really understand and it’s also really interesting

  • @evilsharkey8954
    @evilsharkey8954 Рік тому +537

    Garfield is the one who really suffered torture. Washington was dead in days. Garfield took months to die of his incompetent doctors’ filthy hands and butchery.

    • @WolfWelder69
      @WolfWelder69 Рік тому +65

      It's really horrible. Imagine having a 3.5 inch wound cut to 20 inches, thats agony.

    • @ea.fitz216
      @ea.fitz216 Рік тому +32

      Look on the bright side…
      He died on a Monday 😂

    • @splashy2152
      @splashy2152 Рік тому

      @@ea.fitz216 НИКОГДА БОЛЬШЕ ЭТОГО НЕ ГОВОРИТЕ! ЭТО ТАК НЕУВАЖИТЕЛЬНО ОМГ

    • @ea.fitz216
      @ea.fitz216 Рік тому

      @@splashy2152 Speak British goddamnit.

    • @damonika09
      @damonika09 Рік тому +44

      @@ea.fitz216 oh my god, that’s probably why Garfield the cat hates them too. Lmao 😂

  • @SacredAssault
    @SacredAssault Рік тому +359

    What some people don't know is that Franklin Pierce witnessed his son be partially decapitated in a horrific train crash (which was the third child he and his wife had lost) and also had to witness the death of his wife due to tuberculosis. It's honestly not surprising at all that he turned toward alcohol later in life, that would've been awful.

    • @missi44
      @missi44 11 місяців тому

      If 3 of your kids die in separate incidents i think youre just neglectful parents

    • @spiffygaming1383
      @spiffygaming1383 11 місяців тому +51

      @@missi44one got killed in a train crash, how is that due to neglectful parents?

    • @meghanpoorman-hb2sj
      @meghanpoorman-hb2sj 11 місяців тому +61

      @@missi44it wasn't uncommon for children to die young during that time. what a weird comment

    • @AzureDelilah
      @AzureDelilah 9 місяців тому +9

      ​@@missi44wtf?

    • @deleetiusproductions3497
      @deleetiusproductions3497 9 місяців тому +23

      @@missi44 This was the 1800s. Children. Died. Young.

  • @lisacrutcher6256
    @lisacrutcher6256 7 місяців тому +1

    I thought you were just another reactor and doctor and not anything special but when I watched one of you videos on my feed I needed more your videos are so interesting informing and fun keep up the good work

  • @jodijohnson23
    @jodijohnson23 8 місяців тому +9

    Honestly, can we applaud Mike who is Russian for researching all this. I find that people who aren’t from this country end up knowing more about our country than we do.

    • @Laura-kl7vi
      @Laura-kl7vi 7 місяців тому

      Mike is American. You don't have to be born here to be American. He's a naturalized citizen and came here as a small child. He is "from" here.

    • @jodijohnson23
      @jodijohnson23 7 місяців тому

      @@Laura-kl7vi I didn’t say he wasn’t American. And yes, he is from here and he is from Russia. There is no hate behind what I’m saying. So I don’t get why you said that. I’m just saying that I love that he did all this research. I’m saying that those of us who were born here can often take our country and our awesome history for granted.

  • @katwalk678
    @katwalk678 Рік тому +706

    I once attended a lecture at an emergency nurses association conference that discussed famous deaths in history and would they have survived now Based on modern medicine. It was incredibly fascinating.

    • @thekidfromiowa
      @thekidfromiowa Рік тому +3

      Garfield

    • @entity107
      @entity107 Рік тому +13

      So this entire lecture was dissing past doctor's

    • @user-ir6xh2mx9d
      @user-ir6xh2mx9d Рік тому +4

      Is there a digital version of that lecture? If so please let me know, I'll be very thankful.

    • @katwalk678
      @katwalk678 Рік тому

      @@user-ir6xh2mx9d I wish there was!

  • @NerffedLivin
    @NerffedLivin 8 місяців тому +1

    I LOVE your videos thanks!!! ❤

  • @HyperFocusMarshmallow
    @HyperFocusMarshmallow 9 місяців тому +7

    It would be cool to have this kind of overview for leaders of other countries. Not sure how that would stick with what I presume is a predominantly American audience. A lot of countries are quite a bit older than the USA though so maybe it would be hard to fit in a short video.
    (Edit: also research might be more difficult if the best sources is in languages you don’t know.)

  • @LenNeko1998
    @LenNeko1998 Рік тому +436

    It still wild to me that Jimmy Carter is still alive at 97, and if I recall correctly, still does vollunteer work and either until recently, or still, builds homes for the poor. I havent seen anything health related for him in a while. But still crazy, I hope I can age as well as he has.

    • @woodrowwilson4815
      @woodrowwilson4815 Рік тому +23

      He diagnostic with brain cancer, but now he removed the cancer and his health were improving.

    • @kerrijansson2919
      @kerrijansson2919 Рік тому +55

      @@woodrowwilson4815 The interesting thing about Carter's brain cancer was that it actually originated as skin cancer and later spread to his brain. The funny thing is that his doctors initially diagnosed his brain cancer as being idiopathic (meaning no known cause), but later successfully traced it to a previously undiagnosed skin cancer on his head. Both has been removed and treated with great success.

    • @kerrijansson2919
      @kerrijansson2919 Рік тому +34

      He has cut back on that due to mobility difficulties (it happens when people get that old) but he's still sharp as a tack.

    • @wilnerolivier7971
      @wilnerolivier7971 Рік тому +30

      @@kerrijansson2919 He'll be 98 on October 1st!! He has definitely slowed down as you said because of mobility issue as a result of being of advanced age.

    • @proevo685
      @proevo685 Рік тому +13

      He's the Queen Elizabeth of America.

  • @MannyBrum
    @MannyBrum Рік тому +1796

    I wonder if in 200 years doctors will look at medical procedures today the way Dr. Mike looks at balancing the humors.

    • @elwoodstelhommme8745
      @elwoodstelhommme8745 Рік тому +64

      Goodness...imagine what we will know

    • @yea9132
      @yea9132 Рік тому +21

      @@elwoodstelhommme8745 how to be immortal 😂

    • @datadiva9353
      @datadiva9353 Рік тому +142

      Ones like chemo and radiation almost certainly. They are the best tools we have for treating cancer, but they are insanely hard on the body. Though one benefit current medicine has is that it IS based on the scientific method of hypothesis and observation. The stuff about the humors was a lot more based on philosophical thought experiments than reality. One of the experiments Galileo did was dropping balls of different weights off the leaning tower of piza, and observing they fell at the same rate. Thus contradicting Aristotle (I think), who said the heavier one would fall faster. And observing how fast balls fall is a lot easier than understanding the inner working of the body.

    • @reddrivers5269
      @reddrivers5269 Рік тому +18

      More than likely, doctors will be a bit more like mechanics. In the sense that they’ll be replacing organs & body parts, with something better that what we’re born with, rather than fixing/healing us.
      Resulting in having to get replacements/upgrades, every once in a while. Giving medicine and therapy a huge blow, but opening up new opportunities.

    • @downhomesunset
      @downhomesunset Рік тому +12

      @@reddrivers5269 I always call them “terminator parts” and I don’t think we are far off. People have lost arms and they replace them and are able to hook up nerves!

  • @bentleybutidk
    @bentleybutidk 8 місяців тому +1

    I’m really happy a medical looked into these things

  • @TiffanyGearhart1987
    @TiffanyGearhart1987 10 місяців тому +15

    1:43 he didn’t need to call out my boy like that😢

    • @Kaysiegreeness
      @Kaysiegreeness Місяць тому

      I love james madison, he was so small💀

  • @pointingsoyjak4271
    @pointingsoyjak4271 Рік тому +568

    The wildest part about Adams’ death was that as he was dying, he said something to the effect of “Jefferson lives on” or something relating to Jefferson still being alive, I can’t exactly remember, he said all this without knowing Jefferson had died five hours earlier
    Edit: it was “Thomas Jefferson survives”

    • @woodrowwilson4815
      @woodrowwilson4815 Рік тому +13

      He says "Thomas Jefferson survives".

    • @pointingsoyjak4271
      @pointingsoyjak4271 Рік тому +5

      @@woodrowwilson4815 thanks

    • @Claubuza
      @Claubuza Рік тому +23

      News was slow back then.

    • @maplethemann
      @maplethemann Рік тому +71

      I always imagine John Adams entering the afterlife right after saying that, seeing Jefferson, and being all like "wtf are you doing here"

    • @BaptistJoshua
      @BaptistJoshua Рік тому +1

      I have hoped he somehow knew Thomas Jefferson had become a Christian. Jefferson was a believer in the idea of God, but had rejected Christ.

  • @Diriector_Doc
    @Diriector_Doc Рік тому +175

    8:10 Alexander Bell's metal detector did not do anything to help search for the bullet. The device worked, but it was detecting the springs in the mattress, not the bullet.

    • @watareyoutalkingabout
      @watareyoutalkingabout Рік тому +22

      He also was not allowed to search the actual side the bullet was on because the doctors were sure it wasn't on the other side.

    • @Gabronthe
      @Gabronthe Рік тому +6

      Sadly I don't think Alexander Bell understood the different types of metals and metal families.

    • @LenNeko1998
      @LenNeko1998 Рік тому +10

      In fact, it's even theorized that had they not used the metal detector at all, his chance of survival would have skyrocketed. They made several insicions based on the springs and on the bullets.

    • @ThawBerry
      @ThawBerry Рік тому +2

      Wait is it bad that I found it funny that it did not detect the bullet but the springs 😭

    • @BaptistJoshua
      @BaptistJoshua Рік тому +1

      If this is true, can you imagine Bell's response after they turned President Garfield into Swiss Cheese, because of the bedspring?
      Alexander Graham Bell: "...Oh."

  • @Kaysiegreeness
    @Kaysiegreeness Місяць тому +3

    9:34 Benjamin dressed up as santa claus for his family and set up the first christmas tree in the whitehouse

  • @DaveLopez575
    @DaveLopez575 6 місяців тому +2

    Love this knowledge 😊

  • @joekonderla8842
    @joekonderla8842 Рік тому +285

    The fact about JFK was interesting and very sad. Apparently the reason why he looked so tanned and healthy was due to his adrenal gland treatment . he also lived on uppers and downers - which by no means was rare in the early 60’s You can actually listen to publicly released phone calls with his doctor with JFK saying “can you bring me more of those blue pills.” The dr doesn’t ask anything and says “I’ll send the prescription to the White House this morning.”

    • @ExtraVictory
      @ExtraVictory 11 місяців тому +13

      Come on now lmfao. You don't have to be the most powerful man in the world to get treatment like that. Any billionaire or even multi millionaire will do. People hire their own private doctors who won't ask too many questions and fill up on whatever they wanna get

    • @ExtraVictory
      @ExtraVictory 11 місяців тому +6

      If the president asked for 200mg Oxy, 40mg Morphine, 60mg Adderall, and 200mg modafinil this morning he would have them by tonight even in 2023. The worst that would happen is a doctor would assign someone to make sure he can't OD not refuse to give the scripts

    • @ExtraVictory
      @ExtraVictory 11 місяців тому +9

      I was born in Japan but am also American by birthright citizenship (from my mom) and I've had prescriptions for 2 different controlled substances most of my life, Adderall for daily use and modafinil for use as needed. didn't get asked any questions either, because my parents are semi important people (minor diplomats from Germany and the USA) and Japanese doctors spent like 3 seconds with me and said "here now you will perform well like your parents"

    • @stephanietinaza2121
      @stephanietinaza2121 11 місяців тому

      you know how much me my mom love JOHN F KENNEDY he deserves to be alive ❤️❤️ dr mike where did you get married i want to see him

    • @SteakCutFries
      @SteakCutFries 10 місяців тому +7

      @extra victory: so a few things- we know a lot more about prescription medications, dependence, dangerous interactions, and addiction than we did in the 1960s. Also since the npharmaceutical companies have developed a million more medications that are much more preferred and now used way more than "scheduled" drugs. Your case is more of the exception than the rule - I have kids and they don't just throw them on Adderall anymore, they go to other new meds first. And also, helllllooo Adderall shortage 😒 but I digress. Yes. You are correct, people with wealth and/or perceived importance have a much easier time finding doctors who will just prescribe what they're asking for. However, presidents are waaaaay too visible these days, recorded all the time, and along with the insanely horrific toxic political climate right now, it would be WAY HARDER to pull off a JFK situation in 2023. Presidents were afforded much more privacy back then, the press would defer to important politicians rather than be looking for any cracks in the foundation to expose and exploit for their own benefit- gotta get those clicks, and outrage and angertainment are the name of the game in political news today. Somebody somewhere would sell them out, or it would end up the worst case secret in Washington. That's my belief anyway, obviously I could be completely wrong - I know there are ALLLLLLLL KINDS of things that happen without us knowing, all kinds of things being hidden from us all the time, especially when it comes to the health of Presidents ... but ... I still don't think it would be as easy to get away with JFK prescription dependencies or Nixon level alcoholism these days. Presidential campaigns and Presidencies are just so different now and so much more visible.

  • @medic_memer
    @medic_memer Рік тому +61

    5:52 "Abraham Lincoln: Gun, next"

  • @dominiclukwanzi7396
    @dominiclukwanzi7396 8 місяців тому +4

    Fact :John Tyler has a living grandson

  • @rockah12
    @rockah12 8 місяців тому +2

    I BELIEVE that Leon Czolgosz's surname is pronounced "Show-goltz". Deeply fascinating turn of events, that. McKinley actually asked the mob to NOT attack Czolgosz, and asked them to break the news that he had been shot very gently to his wife Ida, who started having epileptic seizures after the deaths of their two young daughters. He always tried to have her by his side in case she had a seizure. She went on to outlive him by six years.

  • @MultiMackD
    @MultiMackD Рік тому +1152

    Interesting story about JFK, his back issues required him to have a special chair for it. My grandpa was part of the Marine company tasked with delivering it to the White House. Actually got to meet Kennedy, even tried for a handshake but secret service said nope and "allegedly" sandwich his hand with their bodies lol. I jokingly say to my mom that they're the reason he has carpal tunnel 😂

    • @Carebearritual
      @Carebearritual Рік тому +56

      you saw what a handshake did to mckinley!!

    • @lisabradford8180
      @lisabradford8180 Рік тому +7

      Grandpa shoulda sued! 😃

    • @MultiMackD
      @MultiMackD Рік тому +51

      @@lisabradford8180 I say allegedly because I'm not 100% that was the exact case lol.
      Plus the carpal tunnel thing is just a gag between me and my mom lol. He actually got it from being a truck driver

    • @lisabradford8180
      @lisabradford8180 Рік тому +3

      @@MultiMackD 👍 👍

    • @revenger211
      @revenger211 Рік тому +1

      @@Carebearritual that was a gun, about a century earlier..

  • @zFalconx
    @zFalconx Рік тому +39

    Doubt anyone will see this, but 10th President John Tyler currently has a surviving grandson.
    Harrison Ruffin Tyler born November 9, 1928, is the son of Lyon Gardiner Tyler, (August 24, 1853 - February 12, 1935) and Grandson of John Tyler (March 29, 1790 - January 18, 1862).
    Seems quite insane that 3 generations can cover over 230 years.

    • @BaptistJoshua
      @BaptistJoshua Рік тому +2

      I heard that recently. Now just imagine the dates of deaths and births in Genesis. People could know many generations later.

  • @jordanbaszner904
    @jordanbaszner904 11 місяців тому +11

    3:37 he had the longest speech and shortest term

  • @Sara78976
    @Sara78976 8 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting video!

  • @kateyare4708
    @kateyare4708 Рік тому +394

    "Medieval torture" really rang a bell with me. My DH has been treated for stage 4 cancer for the past 3 years, and recently began a newly-approved treatment involving infusions of radioactive isotopes. Aside from some fatigue, he has none of the horrible side-effects of chemo or traditional radiation. I remarked to him how nice it is to have come out of the middle ages and be living in the 21st century again.

    • @debbyvibbert3177
      @debbyvibbert3177 Рік тому +8

      My uncle lived additional 14 yrs after prostrate then colon diagnosis use of same radioactive isotopes. Moffitt Medical .diagnosis in 96 passed 2010.Sending prayers for healing.

    • @apetty5918
      @apetty5918 Рік тому +14

      Cancer treatments really are middle age torture. Glad there is some new hope! Prayers for healing

    • @minetruly
      @minetruly Рік тому +11

      Can you tell me enough about this for my dad to be able to bring it up to his oncologist?

    • @Red-gk3kr
      @Red-gk3kr Рік тому

      Chemo kills people, and they know it. Here's the breakdown: sin inevitably causes cancer. Chemo sends one through rigorous suffering in an attempt to humble their spirit, over a length of time, before they pass anyway.

    • @misshulabuloothe1st953
      @misshulabuloothe1st953 Рік тому +1

      @@minetruly
      Have you done any research on this since the op hasn’t answered you yet?

  • @cortster12
    @cortster12 Рік тому +445

    How do you feel about the fact future generations may look back at our medical practices with similar eye rolling scorn as we do for people hundreds of years ago? It's sorta fascinating to think about.

    • @SharpForceTrauma
      @SharpForceTrauma Рік тому +46

      Right? Like can you imagine how appalled people will be about radiation and chemo treatments for cancer in the future?

    • @safirak7988
      @safirak7988 Рік тому +38

      I hope that will be the case, medicine needs to constantly evolve, so looking back and not being a little taken aback would almost feel like we did not improved much.

    • @Leafsdude_
      @Leafsdude_ Рік тому +4

      @@safirak7988 Indeed. If we're not looking back and seeing the past as unadvanced, that means we've not advanced much in the future. Stagnation in any tech is a bad thing for humans. Considering the stakes, that's especially so for medical tech.

    • @CK-hc5oh
      @CK-hc5oh Рік тому +3

      Unless humanity doesn't destroy himself completely until we get there, yea.

    • @coachbrandon01
      @coachbrandon01 Рік тому +5

      My great grandpa was born in the 1870's, and I grew up with him in my house. He lived a quality life over a hundred years. His natural healthy diet and exercise kept him in good shape. It was his lack of medications that made an impression on me. On occasion, he would have a shot of bourbon to keep the system clean. While medical science is improving, people take for granted how much genes play a role in your health and well being. Staying balanced with your own natural systems. I was taught to stay away from medicine if at all possible. Not because it did not work, but because of the complications and side effects. This info comes from way back then. They were a very tough breed who endured pain way better than we do, now. Their diet and lifestyle was farming, so everything was done with a natural home grown solution. Cough medicine was liquor. Burns treated with aloe, etc...

  • @MrSkipper609
    @MrSkipper609 11 місяців тому +1

    Hey Doctor Mike.
    Awesome History Update 👍
    Is it just me or where did Rutherford Hayes go?

  • @ilovetotri23
    @ilovetotri23 4 місяці тому +1

    Great video! Thanks!

  • @SharpForceTrauma
    @SharpForceTrauma Рік тому +182

    Fun fact, the metal detector didnt actually help Garfield either, because of another wondrous new invention of the early Victorian era: The spring mattress, which he was placed on when he was shot. If i recall correctly this led the doctors to open up even more surgical wounds to search for the bullet in the wrong places.

    • @Christopher-ii6tr
      @Christopher-ii6tr Рік тому

      Drake doctor surgeons do the same stupid stuff today. Except they call it exploratory surgery and people usually die in a mere few hours or days. If the surgeons don't kill them the person usually ends up screwed up for years till the day they die.

    • @AlastorTheNPDemon
      @AlastorTheNPDemon Рік тому +3

      Oh nooooo

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Рік тому +3

      Duck, I thought he was just a silly orange thing but that cat had a tragic biography smh

    • @sazfretz1945
      @sazfretz1945 11 місяців тому

      Guiteau shot him, but his doctors killed him. He would have been a very good president had he lived.

  • @PWNINSWAGMASTER
    @PWNINSWAGMASTER Рік тому +209

    Im so happy this video was made in the sense that not enough people know about Jefferson and Adams dying the same day exactly 50 years post DOI. It was inpiring American history to learn and seems to be a symbol of both the will of FFs and friendship.

    • @NSarg04
      @NSarg04 Рік тому +21

      It's even less known that they were rivals as well and despised each other. Adams' last words were "Thomas Jefferson still survives" thinking that his rival finally "won" not knowing Jefferson died hours earlier

    • @soccerchamp0511
      @soccerchamp0511 Рік тому +16

      @@NSarg04 Actually, they were very close friends for a long time after serving together in the Continental Congress and while on their diplomatic missions in Europe after the Revolutionary War. Then they became rivals during their political days as Vice Presidents and Presidents because they had strong differences of opinion on how the new government should operate and whether to support the French Revolution or not. However, their friendship was actually rekindled after Jefferson's presidency, so they died as good friends. And Adams said "Thomas Jefferson survives." most likely because they were such good friends and because Adams thought Jefferson was a surviving writer of the Declaration of Independence.

    • @allahnah
      @allahnah Рік тому +10

      Funnily enough Adams never even celebrated the fourth of July cause he signed it on the 2nd so he didn't consider it the real day. Cool facts.

    • @betteryourlife865
      @betteryourlife865 Рік тому +5

      I learned about them dying on the same day from a book called mysteries of the unexplained.

    • @PWNINSWAGMASTER
      @PWNINSWAGMASTER Рік тому

      @@allahnah Signed what? I believe he was in the Netherlands during America’s victory.

  • @Air_Pilote
    @Air_Pilote 8 місяців тому

    As a big fan of Lemmino, it felt really cool when you said (regarding JFK's assassination) "Who fired the bullet? Well that's a video for a different channel".

  • @nikolal.8053
    @nikolal.8053 Рік тому +214

    I am disappointed that a doctor took more time and effort to put sources in the description when talking about history than some "historians" on YT. Good job Dr. Mike.

    • @Alejandra4994
      @Alejandra4994 Рік тому +7

      Yes! and even added corrections too, top that historians. 😊

    • @scientia.veritas
      @scientia.veritas Рік тому +1

      Johnny Harris slander let's gooo

  • @nathanmooney8206
    @nathanmooney8206 Рік тому +159

    You should do more videos like this that was extremely fascinating. I am a huge history buff and I love learning different historical facts.

  • @rustbeltrobclassic2512
    @rustbeltrobclassic2512 10 місяців тому +1

    I really enjoyed this.. not often i can say that about social media platforms, but this was really interesting

  • @blubber9047
    @blubber9047 Рік тому +200

    Funny story, John Wilkes Booth’s brother actually saved Abraham Lincoln’s eldest son from getting ran over by a train and was granted a presidential award for his bravery before Lincoln was killed (some details are blurry for me but this story is true)

    • @elisabetlagato1520
      @elisabetlagato1520 Рік тому

      The whole Booth family was made up of famous actors (especially Edwin Booth, the fellow that saved Lincoln’s son) I've heard it described before as being like “if Liam Hemsworth murdered Obama,”

    • @MusicxxRose
      @MusicxxRose Рік тому +10

      Yes! I learned that from the show Timeless then researched it

  • @CrazyxCactus
    @CrazyxCactus Рік тому +176

    I’m surprised Dr. Mike didn’t take a little longer with Theodore Roosevelt and talk about the attempted assassination on his life. The Colonel, having been well read (reading on average one book a day), was well informed on the circumstances surrounding Garfield’s death and the agony he endured.
    After being shot, Theodore (hated being called Teddy) realized he wasn’t coughing up blood so was confident he would be okay (no internal bleeding). He continued on to deliver a 90 minute speech before being convinced to go to the hospital. He refused to let doctors operate and stick their fingers and/or probe the wound.
    The wound was simply treated, sewn back up, and he lived with the bullet inside him up to his death.

    • @Gabronthe
      @Gabronthe Рік тому +10

      It wasn't the first time he's been shot at.

    • @dietotaku
      @dietotaku Рік тому +24

      That dude was an absolute badass, we could use more like him in politics today.

    • @MsAubrey
      @MsAubrey Рік тому +16

      I’m also surprised Reagan’s assassination attempt wasn’t mentioned either.

    • @MsAubrey
      @MsAubrey Рік тому +3

      @@dietotaku agreed

    • @elizabethm7163
      @elizabethm7163 Рік тому +9

      Obviously we all die but at the same time I'm always surprised Theodore Roosevelt did. 😂 Like nothing kept that guy down.

  • @Doggo-rule
    @Doggo-rule 9 місяців тому

    I love this and I love your vids you have really inspired me one thing that’s Sus is that one of the presidents died at 69 💀

  • @Harshstew21
    @Harshstew21 7 місяців тому

    Love the medical and history lesson

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Рік тому +299

    A medical TV show that would be great for you to review next is Doc Martin, it's a British comedy drama, he was a surgeon and now is a GP (family medicine Doctor same as you), the show is medically accurate, and to top it off it is hilarious

    • @Lionstar16
      @Lionstar16 Рік тому +15

      Can't wait to see Doctor Mike's reaction at Doc Martin's bedside manner - or lack of it :)

    • @khalilahd.
      @khalilahd. Рік тому +9

      So true! I hope he sees this

    • @celestiialdreams
      @celestiialdreams Рік тому +3

      @@khalilahd. you're literally everywhere 😭

    • @Hi-cm1cj
      @Hi-cm1cj Рік тому +5

      @@khalilahd. He most likely will. This comment is one of the top comments.

    • @LieslHeston
      @LieslHeston Рік тому +3

      Absolutely!

  • @acardoza86
    @acardoza86 Рік тому +107

    Lots of stroke deaths back in the day, and surprisingly living well into their 70s. Would love a follow up vid on your thoughts on these trends. Great vid!

    • @Claubuza
      @Claubuza Рік тому +19

      Keep in mind that lifespan averages are brought down by infant/child deaths. People who survive into adulthood have a decent chance of reaching old age.

    • @diehardnygiantsfan6569
      @diehardnygiantsfan6569 Рік тому +1

      90 in 1826 is pretty impressive imo

    • @uncletaylorify
      @uncletaylorify Рік тому

      90 is not bad in this time frame lol

  • @lucypreece7581
    @lucypreece7581 8 місяців тому +3

    I was believed for many years the FDR suffered from Polio which made him wheelchair bound in his later years but recent studies actually think it was an auto immune condition called Guiilane Bahrre Syndrome which is a condition that is caused by a mild infection in the body such as a chest infection and it where the immune system starts attacking the nerve endings in the arms and legs and this is likely what caused FDR to need a wheelchair because in extreme cases of it the person can be left paralysed. My brother had it about 10 years ago. He recovered from it but still suffers some side effects. I just think it's interesting how medical developments and more knowledge can change an entire perception on what we think.

    • @QuaintMelissaK
      @QuaintMelissaK 15 днів тому

      FDR’s health scared both Churchill and Stalin while they were at the Conference at Yalta.

  • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
    @JohnSmith-zw8vp 8 місяців тому +4

    14:05 -- Interesting how Reagan said to Nancy "Honey I forgot to duck" when in fact Kennedy could NOT duck. I will never understand for the life of me why WHY they left him wide open in an open top convertible...as AVGN would say, "What were they thinking!?!?"

  • @billygregory1547
    @billygregory1547 Рік тому +389

    Honestly the doctors at the time were like “hey bud ur gonna die soon” and so the president was probably like “no I’m gonna die on July 4th no matter the cost”

    • @charityquill4965
      @charityquill4965 Рік тому +42

      The deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson are also interesting because before either of them died, they exclaimed that the other one still lives. Given that they had reestablished their friendship for a bit, after decades of a grudge, it honestly amazing and kind of touching

    • @michaeloptv
      @michaeloptv Рік тому +19

      Jefferson’s final words were “it’s the fourth”. So he was pushing to make sure he made it.

    • @charityquill4965
      @charityquill4965 Рік тому +18

      @@michaeloptv flawed as some of our founder fathers were, they sure did love our country ;_;

    • @datroof2262
      @datroof2262 Рік тому

      And doctors nowadays are like "hey bud ur gonna take this experimental 'vaccine' that's not a vaccine so not under the Nuremburg code"...or something to that effect.

  • @saf16
    @saf16 Рік тому +33

    Thank you Dr. Mike for putting some knowledge in my brain.

  • @cynthiavalencia724
    @cynthiavalencia724 11 місяців тому +3

    11:44 if I remember correctly, this kinda happened in the handmaids tale when Fred was hospitalized. His wife (and handmaid Offred), made decisions on behalf of him without the country knowing. While he wasn’t president, he did have an important role in the “government”. That storyline was very interesting!

  • @IJustFiguredThisOut
    @IJustFiguredThisOut 8 місяців тому

    I keep thinking my phone is getting unplugged from the charging cable with that sound that keeps happening in the background.

  • @thatocelot879
    @thatocelot879 Рік тому +48

    Alexander Graham Bell actually tested the metal detector again after Garfield's death and found that it would've found the bullet if Doctor Willard Bliss (yes, his legal first name was Doctor) had allowed him to use the device on Garfield's left side. Outside of this, the incident leading to Garfield's death was even considered by some at the time to be medical malpractice. Not only did they probe Garfield with hands and unsterilised tools, Bliss had also forbidden any of physicians besides himself and two surgeons that Bliss had summoned from working on Garfield. Later, Bliss started to rectally feed Garfield when his condition got worse. After Garfield's death, Bliss had attempted to collect $25000 ($700000 in 2021) for his services. They instead offered him $6500 ($180000 in 2021), which he refused.

  • @spaceyote7174
    @spaceyote7174 Рік тому +33

    Correction: John Adams did not sign the Declaration of Independence on July 4. The Declaration was officially declared on that date, but the majority of signatures, including almost certainly his, were made a month later, on August 2 1776.

  • @russsnyder2026
    @russsnyder2026 10 місяців тому +9

    It’s crazy that Washington was basically tortured to death by his doctors because he had strep throat

  • @milesmckean
    @milesmckean 9 місяців тому +1

    William Henry Harrison is suspected of dying of cholera as well, not pneumonia.

    • @matthewhedrichjr.5445
      @matthewhedrichjr.5445 4 місяці тому

      Harrison died of either a. typhoid fever or possibly the pneumonia.

  • @I.Z.Phooto
    @I.Z.Phooto Рік тому +67

    I love the content you make. It amazes me how you manage to be a doctor and a UA-camr at the same time. People will talk about how hard it is to do one or the other and here you are doing both

  • @zacharydebacco5718
    @zacharydebacco5718 Рік тому +104

    The medical history of Teddy Roosevelt alone could be an amazing investigation in itself. This was awesome. Few points I’m even surprised me, and I will share them in my class. Very fun!

    • @vampxrialive
      @vampxrialive Рік тому

      Im glad you find my Cousins medical history amazing!! I find their whole history amazing.

  • @nmoney6655
    @nmoney6655 8 місяців тому +2

    Crazy that I am from Baltimore Maryland and I don’t really think about how much my city has done

  • @relaxresell3121
    @relaxresell3121 2 місяці тому

    Very educational. Thanks

  • @googane7755
    @googane7755 Рік тому +324

    It's actually insane how many easily preventable deaths are here on this list, especially due to poor understanding of medicine at the time where the president was better off being left alone.

    • @Archon006
      @Archon006 Рік тому +1

      what's your pfp? i know it's an old animation, do you remember it's name?

    • @googane7755
      @googane7755 Рік тому +2

      @@Archon006 It's funny how many times I got asked this question. It's from the guardian.

    • @Archon006
      @Archon006 Рік тому +1

      @@googane7755 thanks

    • @BaptistJoshua
      @BaptistJoshua Рік тому +3

      There is give and take. They knew things most doctors are no longer taught, but were faaaaar superior to what is taught today, and they had lack of correct knowledge that we know better today.

    • @Tigressa101
      @Tigressa101 Рік тому

      I mean the Black Plague was preventable. A majority of the Plague victims could have survived if they practiced good hygiene every day but at the time, it wasn't common to bathe constantly, even among royalty, so the fleas carrying the disease just spread it like wildfire with no one knowing why. Medicine, science, and common sense marches on.

  • @Claubuza
    @Claubuza Рік тому +71

    Surprised that you didn't mention James Madison's various health problems (some of which may have been psychosomatic) and how he spent his whole life thinking he could die at any moment only to live to a decently old age.

  • @AbbeyBel-hc8xq
    @AbbeyBel-hc8xq 7 місяців тому

    This shot has navigated right into my heart.

  • @ThrowbackRacing
    @ThrowbackRacing 11 місяців тому

    Really cool and original video! 👍🏻

  • @devonfletcher4729
    @devonfletcher4729 Рік тому +45

    Love how this is a medically in depth parallel to Mr. Beat's video of how all the presidents died. Awesome video!

    • @wizardgamer9610
      @wizardgamer9610 Рік тому +3

      I even came here just to get a deeper dive than Mr Beat's video too.

    • @samjam77
      @samjam77 Рік тому

      Same

  • @nicholegallo1090
    @nicholegallo1090 Рік тому +28

    Roosevelt actually died in the chair that he once rocked his son in, his son, having just died in the war, was likely the emotional cause of Roosevelt death causing his heart, to give out.

  • @yousefa6541
    @yousefa6541 8 місяців тому

    Doctor, may I suggest you check this off midline neck lump ?

  • @MathiusThatBe
    @MathiusThatBe 26 днів тому

    "Who fired the bullet? Well that's a video for another channel" hahaha Mike is one of usss

  • @jimmyreed2405
    @jimmyreed2405 Рік тому +98

    I have followed this guy since roughly mid 2018. I've seen his back logs of videos from morning routines, dogs, mission trip, reviews, Covid-19, & Wednesday Checkups....and I am comfortable saying that this is my favorite video of his! I hope Dr. Mike & Bear can do a video on presidential pets! I only know Checkers was Nixon's dog lol

    • @anasazidarkmoon
      @anasazidarkmoon Рік тому +7

      I'm pretty sure Teddy Roosevelt actually kept an alligator in the White House.

    • @michaellovely6601
      @michaellovely6601 Рік тому +5

      President Nixon also had an Irish Setter.

    • @Hb1290Logos
      @Hb1290Logos Рік тому +1

      The Obamas had Bo, and of course there's the Bidens' dogs Champ (RIP) and Major

    • @tiestokygoericprydz3963
      @tiestokygoericprydz3963 Рік тому

      Cool

  • @christinaify
    @christinaify Рік тому +107

    Yes!! If you made a series out of famous historical deaths which were before modern medicine and said your take on what happened, I would be ALL OVER THAT.

    • @Alyy_Cat
      @Alyy_Cat Рік тому +3

      If he ever did a collab with ask a mortician and did this that would be incredible

  • @joegaming8101
    @joegaming8101 8 місяців тому +1

    Jfk: "this back brace sucks but it might just save my life!
    *little did he know..*

  • @levithatfish
    @levithatfish 8 місяців тому +1

    The metal detector used on Garfield detected the springs in the bed, which led them to opening him up where the bullet wasn’t, which most likely made his death come sooner

  • @jbbush7474
    @jbbush7474 Рік тому +84

    3:20 Martin Van Buren's death is probably as similar to James Monroe's death as he contracted a common cold or the flu. The disease started to spread and infect the heart and the airway causing him to have asthma and a heart attack. He nearly almost died the same day as Monroe, Adams and Jefferson but died 20 days later.

  • @TziporaRaphaella
    @TziporaRaphaella Рік тому +65

    As a history and medical geek this is one of my all time favorite videos of yours and it just hit all my nerdy buttons. My dad, who was a history teacher, loves to talk about how we are apparently distant relatives of William Howard Taft and how as a kid he thought that was so cool. Until he learned that Taft’s weight was his most defining feature. It’s a rumor that apparently isn’t true that Taft got stuck in the bathtub of the White House, but apparently that can’t be true because the White House had to custom order a bathtub sized just for him. That’s the only other medical/ presidential history I know besides some very interesting things about all the drugs JFK’s docs were providing him. Forget the balancing humors stuff- the uppers and downers and a pill for everything free for all the wealthy and powerful especially had access to in the mid-20th century is one of the time periods in US medical history I find most interesting. And so many lessons about addiction popped up then that we still haven’t fully embraced or learned our lessons from.
    Annnyway. Thank you for making my geeky heart sing too. 😉

    • @alfredopasta7138
      @alfredopasta7138 Рік тому

      There’s no real proof that Taft got stuck in the bathtub. Sure, he did order a custom-sized bathtub, but it could have been that he was just afraid he would get stuck, or he was having some issues getting out of his bathtub but didn’t necessarily get stuck in it.

    • @vampxrialive
      @vampxrialive Рік тому

      Im a distant relative of Franklin D. Roosevelt and I think he is my fifth cousin offhand so welcome to being relatives of famous people!! (My nana also almost met Elvis Presley)

  • @youmakemehappy7
    @youmakemehappy7 8 місяців тому

    These videos remind me of school project presentations. Lol😊.

  • @lukyhrab
    @lukyhrab 2 місяці тому

    Dr Mike,you have teached me alot about the body.Thank you Dr Mike!

  • @mchaela4045
    @mchaela4045 Рік тому +68

    I grew up in the same town Franklin Pierce grew up in so I was able to go to the house he grew up in and the tour guide taught me one of the most interesting (and sad) things about a president ever. All of his kids died really young. Which may explain his alcohol adiction.

    • @ethanstyant9704
      @ethanstyant9704 11 місяців тому +7

      And some of them in really horrific ways

    • @mysteryheart53
      @mysteryheart53 10 місяців тому +2

      Poor Franklin hope he's doing better now

  • @margaretbehre6461
    @margaretbehre6461 Рік тому +13

    SO COOL. Love the history and medicine combo. I’d love to see more of this kind of content!

  • @britt__legit
    @britt__legit 8 місяців тому

    FYI- James K. Polks house is in Columbia, TN. Not Nashville. It’s one of the few things my hometown is known for… that and Mule Day 😅

  • @SomeOrdinaryJanitor
    @SomeOrdinaryJanitor 8 місяців тому

    that's an incredibly badass statement to say death had to come for him in his sleep, for if he was awake, there would have been a fight.

  • @fbbWaddell
    @fbbWaddell Рік тому +13

    I only watched this out of boredom. You somehow made this very interesting and now I want to know more. You are definitely a talented content creator.

  • @MusicxxRose
    @MusicxxRose Рік тому +9

    Really great video! Love the mix of history and medical knowledge in an easy succinct way

  • @TheSuperappelflap
    @TheSuperappelflap 8 місяців тому

    Fun fact: Wilkes Boothes' shot to Kennedy's head is probably the best researched noscope in human history :P

  • @KChild78
    @KChild78 7 місяців тому +2

    I wish this video was divided into sections because one of my classmates is reading a book called “chasing Lincoln’s Killer” and I wanted to find out how he died.And honestly, I dont even know if he was even a president.😅