I am literally, *literally* on my Anesthesia core right now, after just finishing Psych... this is scary accurate. Not the anesthesiologist telling me "okay, perform a lifesaving maneuver" and me having a goddamn heart attack for 20 seconds before I realized the O2 hose fell out when they raised the bed
"Surgeon, I just saved your patient from dying to about quadruple the calculated blood loss, so you think I know how to check for sufficient relaxation?" - Actual quote from my anesthesiology rotation...
@@julian-jh8mp The fact that I don't really remember, should tell you enough 😂 but I think it was something along the lines of "Nobody likes a smart-ass" 🤷♂️
Dude I love the detail of him saying "psychs cool, let's do some intubations". Like no talking down, no "couldn't be me" just "that's cool bro, here's the cool thing that I do" As an anesthesiologist I like to think we're one of the low-ego specialties so it's honestly kind of touching to see this detail. It's beyond clear that you chose the right path with psych, your percetiveness and empathy are off the charts, which is truly what makes your content so great, aside from the 10/10 production value ❤
LOL. At 45 seconds: the cord management. One of the most stressful things as an anesthesia resident especially with the ICU patients where you have an EVD, central line, art line and basic monitors hahaha
Glaucomflecken is medical comedy that appeals to general public, Preston is medical comedy that appeals to healthcare providers. There's a place for both. But yea, Preston goes all out on production value.
Damn, we're always depicted as monsters in every medical scetch ever. Although it's well deserved and I have constantly had to swallow insults during operations, while anesthesiologists are out there being cool to each other, I wish there were scetches from the surgical perspective. And believe me, there is one, we're actually really nice sometimes given the circumstances. Internists calling consults for wounds they've never seen, having a sbo or cholecystitis laying on their service for three days before doing a CT exactly before I wanna go home and basically calling and saying "hey guess what you're gonna be doing this afternoon, ok im going home, peace". We will eventually find a funny person that will make comedy out of this.
in my experience, the most experienced surgeons are cool, stoic and focused. they speak loudly because they have to lead. most of the times they are nice to the staff and they know the anesthesiologist's name. the annoying ones are usually the noobs who think they ARE the actual experienced surgeons. they are not. this also applies to good anesthesiologists too. in real high risk cases, you never see an anesthesiologist sit and play sudoku. none of us sit when it's an pediatric ent shared airway case, or complex vascular case, or CABG, or liver transplant or caesarian section for fetal bradycardia. We would probably even anticipate exactly what height of the table the surgeons want before they ask for it, and yes: in those cases, the anesthesiologists are just as malignant as the surgeon. and especially so if patients start developing cardiac arrest or if a fire hazard crisis occurred in the OR, we will be even louder than the surgeons. that's when you know who really is in charge of the OR and patient safety.
@@huzaifahabdulwahab1499luckily in my 3 years of residency I never had a can't ventilate, can't intubate situation, but I'm guessing anesthesia would become very loud in that case
the residents in surgery are the scariest and most stressed out but the consultants are usssssuallly nice (sometimes they are mean) and im going into anaesthetics rotations tomorrow so ill update this but apparently i got the mean bitch doctor for the first day :(
The surgeon screaming about tension/countertension bit is perfect
I am literally, *literally* on my Anesthesia core right now, after just finishing Psych... this is scary accurate. Not the anesthesiologist telling me "okay, perform a lifesaving maneuver" and me having a goddamn heart attack for 20 seconds before I realized the O2 hose fell out when they raised the bed
"Surgeon, I just saved your patient from dying to about quadruple the calculated blood loss, so you think I know how to check for sufficient relaxation?" - Actual quote from my anesthesiology rotation...
how did the surgeon react? lmao
@@julian-jh8mp The fact that I don't really remember, should tell you enough 😂 but I think it was something along the lines of "Nobody likes a smart-ass" 🤷♂️
I felt that "sure" in my bones lmao
But anesthesiologists are always the nicest docs on rotation aren‘t they 😍
definetly!
Dude I love the detail of him saying "psychs cool, let's do some intubations". Like no talking down, no "couldn't be me" just "that's cool bro, here's the cool thing that I do" As an anesthesiologist I like to think we're one of the low-ego specialties so it's honestly kind of touching to see this detail. It's beyond clear that you chose the right path with psych, your percetiveness and empathy are off the charts, which is truly what makes your content so great, aside from the 10/10 production value ❤
As an anesthesiologist, this is so accurate lol. The patient wasn't bucking, it's just some crazy breathing.
Hilariously accurate how they watch dr glauc
I lost it at the cable untangling and the give 10 cc of this...
As an anaesthesiologist I can say this is very accurate, thank you for this masterpiece 😂
Med student fron Montreal here and I can’t believe how accurate your videos are lollllll
table DAOWN !!!😭
LOL. At 45 seconds: the cord management. One of the most stressful things as an anesthesia resident especially with the ICU patients where you have an EVD, central line, art line and basic monitors hahaha
Aw he seems chill
This fucking microwave and the ipad setup is legendary
Ain't no way people missed the "PUSHIN P" part. GenZ fosho 😂
Is that instant curry? Lol
Bro is that UNC hospital Starbucks? Giving me PTSD from residency….the only good part of my day back then
Yeah it is haha, did med school there
The end got it 🤣
I always start with opium followed by ready
Absolut masterpiece
OKAY IM TAKING OVER
Dawg, this shit is hilarious.
Ur Cubs fan!😊
No way I always start with ratio as well
Subscribed for the production value that blows glaucomflecken out of the water.
@llamababiez hell yeah true
Damn why can’t we just admit both are funny why it always gotta be a competition
Glaucomflecken is medical comedy that appeals to general public, Preston is medical comedy that appeals to healthcare providers. There's a place for both. But yea, Preston goes all out on production value.
@@knightstormbringerYou nailed it
Today is Feb 29, 2024 btw :) hope you ate ur Trader Joe’s
Damn, we're always depicted as monsters in every medical scetch ever. Although it's well deserved and I have constantly had to swallow insults during operations, while anesthesiologists are out there being cool to each other, I wish there were scetches from the surgical perspective. And believe me, there is one, we're actually really nice sometimes given the circumstances. Internists calling consults for wounds they've never seen, having a sbo or cholecystitis laying on their service for three days before doing a CT exactly before I wanna go home and basically calling and saying "hey guess what you're gonna be doing this afternoon, ok im going home, peace". We will eventually find a funny person that will make comedy out of this.
“We’re actually really nice sometimes given the circumstances” is the funniest thing I’ve read today haha
in my experience, the most experienced surgeons are cool, stoic and focused. they speak loudly because they have to lead. most of the times they are nice to the staff and they know the anesthesiologist's name. the annoying ones are usually the noobs who think they ARE the actual experienced surgeons. they are not.
this also applies to good anesthesiologists too. in real high risk cases, you never see an anesthesiologist sit and play sudoku. none of us sit when it's an pediatric ent shared airway case, or complex vascular case, or CABG, or liver transplant or caesarian section for fetal bradycardia. We would probably even anticipate exactly what height of the table the surgeons want before they ask for it, and yes: in those cases, the anesthesiologists are just as malignant as the surgeon. and especially so if patients start developing cardiac arrest or if a fire hazard crisis occurred in the OR, we will be even louder than the surgeons. that's when you know who really is in charge of the OR and patient safety.
@@huzaifahabdulwahab1499luckily in my 3 years of residency I never had a can't ventilate, can't intubate situation, but I'm guessing anesthesia would become very loud in that case
the residents in surgery are the scariest and most stressed out but the consultants are usssssuallly nice (sometimes they are mean) and im going into anaesthetics rotations tomorrow so ill update this but apparently i got the mean bitch doctor for the first day :(
the anaesthesia docs are really weird. but i give off a weird vibe so i think it might just be me