Yes! It's basically a miracle in a bottle. It attaches to your opioid receptors, reversing and blocking the effects of opiods at the same time. Not only that, but it has no effect on people who are not overdosing, and the only possible side effects are withdrawl symptoms and very rarely allergic reactions. It can take someone from dead to walking and talking in 2-3 minutes. Narcan is AMAZING and I highly reccomend anyone who can gets it, learns how to use it, and keeps it on them in case of emergency. There are tons of places where you can get free Narcan in case of emergencies, either online or in person. It is truly a miracle.
@@MDaggatt I know because during a placement I cared for someone who’s body was storing morphine and they were really drowsy before and more awake after the Naloxone which is why here in the UK they always have Naloxone prescribed alongside the morphine
@@BookswithKaitlyn Yeah I was just commenting in case other people reading didn't know how it works. I'm so glad that's the case in the UK. I wish the US required narcan be prescribed along with opioids.
@@MDaggatt It is at least more readily available these days to anyone who wants it. Prescribing narcan would be wise though in a lot of ways though people would ideally have to have some training on how it works. We don't need cancer patients being slammed into precipitated withdrawal because their loved ones thought mistook a nap for an overdose.
Injuries from car crashes, construction site accidents, and more? Eh, just another day at the hospital. Virus outbreak or surgery for special toys shoved up holes or in the body? Now that is an interesting work week for the month.
I was recently ODed on morphine while at the hospital. I lost most of my memory of that day. I remember walking after lunch, then the next thing I knew, I came to in an unfamiliar hospital, surrounding by a bunch of unfamiliar healthcare workers. Thankfully, I actually had a friend there with me, who once was allowed back in the room, explained what happened to me. Apparently, she helped me get to the hospital after I injured my back. I was given IM morphine as part of my treatment, but very quickly felt off. I’d been given that dose, that way before and was fine. But this time I said I knew something was wrong. She called for help and the RN & NP came in and checked my vitals. They were all fine but I slowly kept feeling worse. They moved me to a different place in the ER. A nurse came in to check my vitals, got visibly a bit nervous and left the room. She quickly came back to start an IV and fluids. This is when I started going in and out of consciousness. Apparently I didn’t react at all to her, or the IV, even when she would ask me questions. She called for another nurse to come in and help check Orthostatic vitals. I passed out a couple times while they did this. They then when to get the doc as I was Tachycardic and Bradypenic. I’d also become completely unrealistic, cold, and kept trying to talk to someone who wasn’t there. Around this point they started to try to warm me up as well as get my breathing better. I vaguely remember briefly coming to during them warming me up and then very quickly passing out again. My respirations decreased even further, and my friend was asked to leave the room. Then alarms went off. My respirations hit 0/min. They gave me Narcan and O2, continued to warm me up, and stay with me. I started kinda stirring, and remember them trying to wake me up more. They were squeezing my trap and rubbing my sternum, but it wasn’t working. Eventually, I did come around more. I felt oddly calm. I recognized that I was in a hospital I’d never seen before, it was 3 am (yes, I was unconscious for a while before crashing. I was admitted at 7 pm, and given morphine around 12am. ) but I was still out of it enough to not panic or anything. Looking back on it is pretty scary. I later found out there was an error and I was given way too much morphine. I was observed for a while and then we felt comfortable enough to release me. I ended up getting home around 8 am.
@@stephenking5852 Short answer insurance liability if anything bad happens and some finds out about "recycled morphine" forget how safe it was or what procedures were used some one is getting thrown under the bus.
@@stephenking5852 the second the seal is broken, its considered contaminated if not for use. Its to prevent infection and spread of anything that could infect more patients. Also a large bucket of open opiods is a dangerous thing.
Heh. My sibling got once a shot with wrong series at the age of 2. I was 4 and I still remember her scream in pain. The shot made her little arm swallow more than after a normal shot. The doc needed to stop and send back all the meds and order brand new ones. I don't know exactly what happened, but I think the company messed up with the fluid in the shot and some kids developed allergic reactions.
Seriously, It was the first thing that came to mind for me. Why would you assume an entirely different drug being in your medical supplies rather than them just being misdosed?
@@dbojangles1597 the injectors are supposed to come pre inspected at the right dosage and concentration from the manufacturer, and contain what they say. Volume is easy to inspect for, contents is harder because of the thousands of things it could be ( a clear liquid could be anything from Saline to a powerful opioid or worse). So the liklihood of a mixup of the contents is more likely.
@@tiredatm3009 As a nurse, idk why people expect chest compressions to be done correctly on actors who do not need chest compressions. You need to go deep to do it right and possibly risk rib fractures, which I don't think these actors want. Maybe a solution can be dummies (which cost quite a bit) or keep camera on actors doing chest compressions correctly but not on patient so it looks real.
I don't think there's any expectance for an ER to be very sterile considering people can projectile vomit or shits blood right there and then. A bit more sterile than usual maybe, but as sterile as a surgery theater? You'd need a miracle janitor for that.
@Brenda Walton not intentionally, the syringes came from a medical supply company, and to other hospitals, they never would've caught it had it not been for the female doctors.
A shipment of overfilled syringes is a huge liability for the supplier. I worked for a couple medical instrument companies. There's supposed to be quality control inspections before shipment. Medical suppliers are regulated by the FDA, ISO, and OSHA.
@@jamedlock83 dude, if you knew the amount of recalls, nature of the recalls, or how long it took for the recalls to be initiated, you'd never trust a hospital again.
2mLs... how many milligrams are dissolved in each mL in the country this is filmed? Is it 10 mg/mL? I can't see it being less than that and causing such a big emergency.
Randomly has a whole ward go tachy then wants to talk about their mom... yeah no, that's not how doctors work. Real doctors DREAM about having a problem like this to solve.
If nobody gonna talk about no one did chest compression? Like if a patient is crashing unresponsive not breathing and has no pulse start doing CPR like you can see the nurses bagging but CPR always comes firsts.
Never been more thankful to be allergic to morphine. (i also cant have demerol or codeine.) so going to see a doctor, thats the first thing on my chart when someone asks about my past drug reactions.
@@patrickmcguire7896 I knew it I knew it I was like hm he seems so familiar but my mind was black haha even tho I’m currently watching Lost in the moment
Sadly this happens almost routinely in the US. Hospitals and drug companies expend a lot of money keeping it off the front page but it doesn't take much looking to find incidents.
It won’t reverse the anesthesia just the narcotics…and a small enough dose will just pull them out of an overdose but not so much that it wipes out every bit of narcotic in the body
general anesthesia doesn't actually do anything for pain, it just puts the patient to sleep. narcan only reverses the effects of opioids, not hypnotics..
Did...they just shove narcan into a surgery patient with a steering column in his chest who was under anesthetic? I mean, sure it's better than a morphine overdose, but...wouldn't there be consequences to the narcan to follow up on?
interesting show but I cringe everytime I see one of those Doctor's who has been flying around the ward from patient to patient just smash their way into the operating theatre - no scrubbing or even changing the coat.
Maybe one of the coworkers said the forbidden word and that word is quite for example coworker: wow it's quite. Patient: enters CODE BLUE 🔵. Me: really Josh 😒 you know we should never say or think that forbidden 🙊 word.
The look on her face when she saw the fluid patch on the blue cloth she figured out that the syringes 💉 that were delivered to the hospital was overfilled with Morphine that's what caused 14 patients to Overdose. Doctor: looks at the blue cloth in horror 😨😨 then comes back with the right dose of Morphine three minutes later. Patient: recovers from crashing. Doctors and Nurses: sigh of relief 😮💨😮💨😮💨😮💨.
Medical staff should always be inspecting stock after every shift and when we get new stock. I don't blame them for missing this because the dosage looks to be covered by that other plastic bit.
@@strangerinastrangeland3613 eh, most people that are called antivaxers are all vaccinated, except for the covid vaccine. So i don't think it's the right word
I love watching medical shows, they make my anxiety spike up.
Same
Because that’s great emotional regulation.
U just spoke for all of us
same :)
Kids these day
ANxIeTy!!
For anyone curious Narcan is a brand name and the actual drug is Naloxone which is the drug that reverses opioid effects
Yes! It's basically a miracle in a bottle. It attaches to your opioid receptors, reversing and blocking the effects of opiods at the same time. Not only that, but it has no effect on people who are not overdosing, and the only possible side effects are withdrawl symptoms and very rarely allergic reactions. It can take someone from dead to walking and talking in 2-3 minutes. Narcan is AMAZING and I highly reccomend anyone who can gets it, learns how to use it, and keeps it on them in case of emergency. There are tons of places where you can get free Narcan in case of emergencies, either online or in person. It is truly a miracle.
@@MDaggatt I know because during a placement I cared for someone who’s body was storing morphine and they were really drowsy before and more awake after the Naloxone which is why here in the UK they always have Naloxone prescribed alongside the morphine
@@BookswithKaitlyn Yeah I was just commenting in case other people reading didn't know how it works. I'm so glad that's the case in the UK. I wish the US required narcan be prescribed along with opioids.
@@MDaggatt it's mainly done so that if a doctor isn't around or can't be easily contacted then the nurse can administer the medication
@@MDaggatt It is at least more readily available these days to anyone who wants it. Prescribing narcan would be wise though in a lot of ways though people would ideally have to have some training on how it works. We don't need cancer patients being slammed into precipitated withdrawal because their loved ones thought mistook a nap for an overdose.
Every time I See Freema I think of Martha. It’s so fitting that she’s a doctor too. Also her hair looks amazing.
me too!!!
Are you thinking of doctor who? 😊
Me too! 😊
@@ChezMymy I am too
Female doctor: see anything interesting here?, Male doctor: hmm..... no. * severely injured pepole in the backround * 💀💀💀 lol.
i assume you mean people but you mistyped
He probably sees that everyday, nothing interesting
Injuries from car crashes, construction site accidents, and more? Eh, just another day at the hospital.
Virus outbreak or surgery for special toys shoved up holes or in the body? Now that is an interesting work week for the month.
@@Fisheee123 he is a trauma surgeon and tries to stay free if a life threatening injury comes in
Lol
That looks like a very interesting episode I'd love to test what happened next
I was recently ODed on morphine while at the hospital. I lost most of my memory of that day. I remember walking after lunch, then the next thing I knew, I came to in an unfamiliar hospital, surrounding by a bunch of unfamiliar healthcare workers. Thankfully, I actually had a friend there with me, who once was allowed back in the room, explained what happened to me. Apparently, she helped me get to the hospital after I injured my back. I was given IM morphine as part of my treatment, but very quickly felt off. I’d been given that dose, that way before and was fine. But this time I said I knew something was wrong. She called for help and the RN & NP came in and checked my vitals. They were all fine but I slowly kept feeling worse. They moved me to a different place in the ER. A nurse came in to check my vitals, got visibly a bit nervous and left the room. She quickly came back to start an IV and fluids. This is when I started going in and out of consciousness. Apparently I didn’t react at all to her, or the IV, even when she would ask me questions. She called for another nurse to come in and help check Orthostatic vitals. I passed out a couple times while they did this. They then when to get the doc as I was Tachycardic and Bradypenic. I’d also become completely unrealistic, cold, and kept trying to talk to someone who wasn’t there. Around this point they started to try to warm me up as well as get my breathing better. I vaguely remember briefly coming to during them warming me up and then very quickly passing out again. My respirations decreased even further, and my friend was asked to leave the room. Then alarms went off. My respirations hit 0/min. They gave me Narcan and O2, continued to warm me up, and stay with me. I started kinda stirring, and remember them trying to wake me up more. They were squeezing my trap and rubbing my sternum, but it wasn’t working. Eventually, I did come around more. I felt oddly calm. I recognized that I was in a hospital I’d never seen before, it was 3 am (yes, I was unconscious for a while before crashing. I was admitted at 7 pm, and given morphine around 12am. ) but I was still out of it enough to not panic or anything. Looking back on it is pretty scary. I later found out there was an error and I was given way too much morphine. I was observed for a while and then we felt comfortable enough to release me. I ended up getting home around 8 am.
Question: instead of recalling the over-filled morphine syringes, why not just squirt out the excessive amounts into a recycling container?
@@stephenking5852 Short answer insurance liability if anything bad happens and some finds out about "recycled morphine" forget how safe it was or what procedures were used some one is getting thrown under the bus.
@stephenking5852 Because an auto-injector is like an EpiPen, you don’t push the plunger, it gives the entire dose at once.
@@stephenking5852 the second the seal is broken, its considered contaminated if not for use. Its to prevent infection and spread of anything that could infect more patients. Also a large bucket of open opiods is a dangerous thing.
"(Crashed) faster than a drunk on a mountain bike"
Look that's funny 😂🤣 not for the people in the hospital beds being overdosed....
There's always an explanation to all issues.
i was literally just watching doctor who and then i come back to martha jones 💀💀💀
Same. Love what she did with her hair.
I like medical dramas because they teach young and older patients how to keep calm
I like that nurse's blue hair.
Same tho. I like that hairstyle
Saamme.
worst part is by the time they figured it out you can be sure ppl had died because of it
This show definitely teaches you how to keep a cool head in times of crisis.
I wasn’t expecting to see the actor for Dr Han here oml
Oh damn... that husband did scared/worried face way too well there.
Heh. My sibling got once a shot with wrong series at the age of 2. I was 4 and I still remember her scream in pain. The shot made her little arm swallow more than after a normal shot. The doc needed to stop and send back all the meds and order brand new ones. I don't know exactly what happened, but I think the company messed up with the fluid in the shot and some kids developed allergic reactions.
I know this is a tv show, however we need thse brains, collaboration what every else they have for today and future doctors
Try Narcan. Never mind she did it right after I typed that.
Seriously, It was the first thing that came to mind for me. Why would you assume an entirely different drug being in your medical supplies rather than them just being misdosed?
@@dbojangles1597 the injectors are supposed to come pre inspected at the right dosage and concentration from the manufacturer, and contain what they say. Volume is easy to inspect for, contents is harder because of the thousands of things it could be ( a clear liquid could be anything from Saline to a powerful opioid or worse). So the liklihood of a mixup of the contents is more likely.
Every episode on youtube doesnt even fully finish and thats what annoys me most
They are called shorts for a reason, yes they are annoying and this new trend to shorts of movies and TV shows is pushing out the original stuff.
Martha Jones Voice of the nightingale 0:31
Nice to see Johnny Gat saving lives rather than ending them. 😂😂😂
MARTHA JONES!!! CONSTANTLY SAVING LIVES!!!
I WAS LOOKING FOR A COMMENT ABOUT THIS
Guess her marriage to the last incarnation of Lucifer Morningstar didn't work out
lauren’s druggie ways helped for once
Never doubt us druggies we know just by taste touch or smell what a drug is
Now this is a show
For that Dr. Shen aka Johnny Gat, seeing att that blood is another day at the office
Ooooh someone at the factory is getting fired.
Leena is my name! God bless her, I was scared when she called my name!!
0:21 You see anything that interests you today?
hmm nope 😂
They are so calm lol when people are coming in looking like they have been dragged through a hedge
Depending on the hospital a day like this is normal
@@MrLeast900 yeah
DOCTORS ARE SUPPOSED TO STAY CALM.
This is when you get the most bloodthirsty lawyer to sue someone into the Stone Age.
0:26 Live Dr Han reaction
I AM A SURGEON DR HAN 😡😡
I kept trying to place Dr Helen and it hit me! She played Tattycorum on Little Dorrit!!! Omgggg I loved her character ❤❤❤
love it makes me fill like i was there helping
My momma works with food and knows recall levels and that would be a higher level recall than a 2
anyone gonna point out how calmly she just numd her mouth with morpheme wouldnt that make her slur her words
WTF THAT'S DR HAN!
so much for sterile field
Nothing on this show is accurate besides chest compressions and the result of mistakes.
@@fbbWaddell even the chest compressions were not strong and consistent enough lmao
@@tiredatm3009 As a nurse, idk why people expect chest compressions to be done correctly on actors who do not need chest compressions. You need to go deep to do it right and possibly risk rib fractures, which I don't think these actors want. Maybe a solution can be dummies (which cost quite a bit) or keep camera on actors doing chest compressions correctly but not on patient so it looks real.
I don't think there's any expectance for an ER to be very sterile considering people can projectile vomit or shits blood right there and then. A bit more sterile than usual maybe, but as sterile as a surgery theater? You'd need a miracle janitor for that.
she’s so perfect. ❤ i love you so much sky🫶🏼
They were accidentally overdosing their patients!
@Brenda Walton not intentionally, the syringes came from a medical supply company, and to other hospitals, they never would've caught it had it not been for the female doctors.
A shipment of overfilled syringes is a huge liability for the supplier. I worked for a couple medical instrument companies. There's supposed to be quality control inspections before shipment. Medical suppliers are regulated by the FDA, ISO, and OSHA.
for one, this is fake. . . Syringes are NOT pre-filled with anything, except the saline solution. . .
@@jamedlock83 dude, if you knew the amount of recalls, nature of the recalls, or how long it took for the recalls to be initiated, you'd never trust a hospital again.
I was in a hospital 2 years ago and pumped with like 15 drugs. I’m lucky I didn’t die. 🥵
What season and episode is this???
Season 2 Episode 18
Aka check the description
goddam that's terrifying
Nosocomial infection is the medical term for getting sick at the hospital.
I guess Daniel Dae Kim only made a guest spot on this show, cuz I haven't seen him anywhere else 😮
I love how they show all these different types of doctors race sexuality disabilities colored hair tattoos I just loveeee it❤😊😊
disabilities??
@@daraley1098 doctor from 0:59 to 1:02
@@voidreo4827 Dwarfism isn’t a disability any more than having blue eyes is a disability.
Yeah. There are other people in the world other than straight white men in their 50s.
@@voidreo4827 How is being a little person a "disability"?
Let go girrrrrl!😂 I see wear you at😅😂❤
Why dont they lower the beds while doing cpr?
"Heads up CPR" is showing promising results for neurological outcomes in cardiac arrest. It was the only accurate thing about this clip.
Martha from dr who!?!
Yes! Freema Agyman. She plays Dr. Helen Sharpe.
They still vitals on their monitors. Why they doing CPR?
Effect,it’s a tv show,not everything is done right(shh don’t tell,but most of it is done wrong!)
2mLs... how many milligrams are dissolved in each mL in the country this is filmed? Is it 10 mg/mL? I can't see it being less than that and causing such a big emergency.
That was the most diverse cast I ever seen shame none of them resemble anything close to a competent physician.
@Angel Pascual racially
They dont look competent bc they’re diverse?
Its a show not actual medical school.
@@Feedback72 no they dont look competent because the show is poorly written lol
its almost like they're actors
Good the women caught it in time
Randomly has a whole ward go tachy then wants to talk about their mom... yeah no, that's not how doctors work. Real doctors DREAM about having a problem like this to solve.
Waiting for labs.
If nobody gonna talk about no one did chest compression? Like if a patient is crashing unresponsive not breathing and has no pulse start doing CPR like you can see the nurses bagging but CPR always comes firsts.
Never been more thankful to be allergic to morphine. (i also cant have demerol or codeine.) so going to see a doctor, thats the first thing on my chart when someone asks about my past drug reactions.
Who is the male nurse with tattoos? Is he a head nurse?
Hey that doctor looks familiar he looks like the guy from five-o
He is, he was also in Lost
@@patrickmcguire7896 I knew it I knew it I was like hm he seems so familiar but my mind was black haha even tho I’m currently watching Lost in the moment
Has this ever happened IRL? This doesn’t seem realistic. Drug companies would recognize pretty fast their stock was so far off
Sadly this happens almost routinely in the US. Hospitals and drug companies expend a lot of money keeping it off the front page but it doesn't take much looking to find incidents.
@@XaifaxVT wow that almost feels evil
@@norahe1953 It is , but sadly not illegal. All those documents you sign when checking in? Most include a boatload of NDAs for just such an occasion.
Doesn't giving naloxone to a patient under general anesthesia present its own set of problems?
Only reverses opioid analgesics and only a certain amount.
It won’t reverse the anesthesia just the narcotics…and a small enough dose will just pull them out of an overdose but not so much that it wipes out every bit of narcotic in the body
general anesthesia doesn't actually do anything for pain, it just puts the patient to sleep. narcan only reverses the effects of opioids, not hypnotics..
And doctors wonder why im so antsy around narcotics.
ok anyone know the name of the actor with the blue hair? or the character name ig
Amanita!
Man, I’d definitely be the doctor tasting it to see what drug it was. Good old bitter morphine.
Dr Martha Jones?
I knew someone was going to say thar
Of course there's someone in there with blue hair that spiked lol
2:41 Wow
Funny thing is, how does she know what morphine taste like it does beg the question… so this is where Martha went after she left unit lol.😊
Did...they just shove narcan into a surgery patient with a steering column in his chest who was under anesthetic? I mean, sure it's better than a morphine overdose, but...wouldn't there be consequences to the narcan to follow up on?
0:26-0:31 can he…can a doctor just do that?
completely forgot that one of them was a dwarf
He seems to be a good actor.
What does CC stand for?
Cubic centimetres.
It’s a unit of volume
Go Nat love you on TWD
interesting show but I cringe everytime I see one of those Doctor's who has been flying around the ward from patient to patient just smash their way into the operating theatre - no scrubbing or even changing the coat.
hi
That doctor has to be the laziest ever and a drain finically on the hospital resources
Everyone of these shows are trying to be the new greys anatomy and failing miserably.. lol
Where is the hole show broadcast on
I don’t need you to ask. I will tell you anyway
LOVE YOU BTS ARMY LOVE YOU JIUNGOKOOK JIMIN SUGA RM JHOPE JIN taehyung LOVE YOU too ❤️ 😍 💖 ❣️ 💕 💘 ❤️ 😍
Because they drive recklessly
why does she know what Morphine taste like?
I was wondering the exact same 😂
who was filling the injectors.
Whoever is the one, is definitely getting fired, along with who's doing checks
@@ttyngordon and sued
Prefilled from the supplier.
Crackheads maybe
A machine at the supplier,all meds have to come from somewhere
Bruh..💀
Maybe one of the coworkers said the forbidden word and that word is quite for example coworker: wow it's quite. Patient: enters CODE BLUE 🔵. Me: really Josh 😒 you know we should never say or think that forbidden 🙊 word.
The look on her face when she saw the fluid patch on the blue cloth she figured out that the syringes 💉 that were delivered to the hospital was overfilled with Morphine that's what caused 14 patients to Overdose. Doctor: looks at the blue cloth in horror 😨😨 then comes back with the right dose of Morphine three minutes later. Patient: recovers from crashing. Doctors and Nurses: sigh of relief 😮💨😮💨😮💨😮💨.
Spelled “debridement”, pronounced “de-breed-ment.”
Why is the Asian doctor the same in every medical show?
Better question: why does she know what morphine tastes like?
Wow US has a pre filled morphine???
Uh no,not in Washington State anyway…
.
DR HAN, wtf
This is like Chicago med on a budget with wokeness attached haha
That male doctor just came and look around and walk off.. never help... what a lazy doctor... he should be fired
Second ✌️
I'd rather watch reruns of the Oprah show. Fucking painfull acting.
First
SECOND OMGG
fourth
They are showing you what’s to come for those who took the JAB
🙄
Medical staff should always be inspecting stock after every shift and when we get new stock. I don't blame them for missing this because the dosage looks to be covered by that other plastic bit.
Brought to you by Pfizer. Get your booster!!!!
I got my flu shot, instead. No miserable arm pain.
Found the antivaxer.
eh, worth the risk. arm pain? sure, but when I got it it was just one day of fever and like 3 days of mild cough that improved throughout the day.
@@strangerinastrangeland3613 eh, most people that are called antivaxers are all vaccinated, except for the covid vaccine. So i don't think it's the right word
🤡