The only unrealistic part is that he's sticking around to watch intently instead of immediately leaving and delegating monitoring the student to the resident.
In 26 years of training residents I thought I knew all the best lines (eg tell me you want this patient dead, then everything you've done so far will begin to make sense to me) but "are you sure you are right handed" is *chef's kiss*
I bonded with my new eye doctor when she entered the exam room followed by her scribe. “You have a Jonathan!” I blurted out. They both laughed and the scribe gave me The Nod. Score! I am now confident my glaucoma is in good hands.
I have managed to get all my doctors hooked on your website. It’s fun to go to my different doctors and talk about your episodes that we have seen. They really enjoy your humor. It’s nice to see them take a break from being so serious and I feel like laughing together creates a nice connection between us. Thanks for the laughs. All the best to you and your family❣️
"You know I gotta say you suture like a senior resident", I thought I was going to hear the surgeon compliment someone other than himself for the first time. You got me in the first half
Oh, how I remember the pimping! “Did you go to an American medical school?” (💭yes…this one). “Do you gals like depriving men of jobs, when most of you will be wasting your training by having babies?” (35 years and three babies later, still working). “You women don’t have the upper body strength to do obstetrics “ (💭little hands are deft and skilled when working in small spaces). Most of our mentors were great, and the oncologists that pimped us on Cancer staging at 5 am rounds kept us on our toes for sure. But there were always a few sadistic types in the old days.,. Keep those vids coming, eyeball bro! Your Health Care month was superb and realistic. But your character driven sketches make us docs laugh and shake off our PTSD as we wait on hold doing our Peer-to-Peers.
“Do you gals like depriving men of jobs, when most of you will be wasting your training by having babies?” "Absolutely! I, for my part, want to have _your_ job!" “You women don’t have the upper body strength to do obstetrics“ "Correct, that's why midwives are a myth and not the standard obstetrical care for millenia."
I worked with an attending who loved to tell people "I've seen it done better, but never slower" and watch their faces go from happy to sad as the meaning sunk in 😂😂😂
A surgeon once asked me about a song that came on the radio: "who is the guitarist and what kind of guitar does he play?". Thankfully it was a procedure being done under spinal anesthesia so the patient was awake and able to feed me the answer.
Authority [Challenging: Failed] "This guy is clearly trying to push you so you learn to assert yourself. So assert yourself, now! Scream!" - Scream? Why? - *Crying* AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!
Oh the things I‘ve learned in general surgery: The frescos of the Sistine chapel and the art of fresco painting in general. Stylistic devices namely oxymoron and pleonasm and which of the two describes the situation we were in best. (I forgot the context it was a bilateral inguinal hernia operated minimally invasive) Interprets of the songs playing on the radio (that one got easy after some time, because the surgeon always asks when Phil collins, Elton John or the number one hit at that time was playing (lady Gaga and Bradley cooper - shallow). And occasionally the question: „Which two things are most important for positioning the patient?“ Answers: gravity and the anesthesiologist with the remote control Reflecting on this in hindsight, it’s a pretty good strategy to make you doubt yourself. Not only your qualification in the medical field, but your qualification for existing in general😅
Really? Are you sure? what will be the gain of that? I find the questions and the answers quite educating. Like learning naval history while operating.
Mount Wycheproof in Victoria, Australia is often considered the world's smallest mountain. It stands at 141 feet (43 meters) above the surrounding plain.
I'm following you from El Salvador. Before I saw your videos, I believed that these situations happened only in Latin America. You transported me 20 years ago during my Surgery Rotations. Thank you for your videos!
My first rotation as a third year was trauma. First case was a MVC with liver lac. The attending opened the abdomen, grabbed those things at the end of my arms, and shoved them deep into this guy's peritoneum. "Explore the space, man...just feel around and explore the space."
When I was on surgery as a medical student, an attending surgeon, during surgery started doing this to me at about that speed. Then he stopped and named another surgeon and told me that if that other surgeon ever pimped me like that I should tell him that I’m paying $$$ for him to teach me. So another day I was in surgery with that other surgeon and he started and I told him that the previous surgeon told me to tell him that I’m paying $$$ for him to teach me. The surgeon laughed as was intended. However, months later, while on another rotation, I got called into the office of the chief of surgery. Seems the resident in the OR at the time of the joke told the chief something different than what actually happened. The chief wanted to fail me from that rotation. I tried to tell him what happened and who the surgeons were. It ended with me passing the rotation but being on academic probation for the rest of my third year. Over 30 years ago and it’s still a raw nerve.
@@rebeccacrockett8334 except it wasn't the attending that was offended, it was the resident who really needed to mind their business. I'm glad it worked out in the end.
I quite vividly remember the first day of my otorhinolaryngology rotation. Me and one other student volunteered to go to the OR while the rest of med students went for the rounds. We have peacefully observed the first ten minutes of thyroidectomy - until the head of the department came in. He wasn't even supposed to operate that day, he just came to flex his academic muscles. He spots us, makes a dash for us, and after a sentence or two about the surgery he starts to hit us with the most unhinged and unrelated questions imaginable - "What is the largest animal cell in the world?" "Can a whale suffer from decompression sickness?" "What government did Lenin make his revolution against?" "What sort of eggs cannot be sold in the farmers market?" - all the while he has us cornered behind a storage box, far away from the operating table. After an hour or so of asking questions neither of us knew the answers for, he was visibly satisfied with himself and his scholarship, he just as suddenly disappeared.
Aw man, hang in there! Always remember the triangle of safety in a lap chole, make sure every post op admit is low risk for DVT/PE, fill your pockets with dressing supplies and scissors before rounds, and just keep practicing with sutures. They were all in your shoes at some point and no one has the right to belittle you. I was lucky with my team but I've heard horror stories.
Surgery can be hard. A friend who had no problem with dissection or anatomizing a cadaver, froze at his first surgery and was unable to make an incision. He said after three tries the surgeon put both hands on top of his and made the cut "You have to press down like this"
30+ years of scrub nursing here.....can tell you, it took a lot of anti bullying campaigns and interventions to improve surgeons to this level...... previously they really would throw instruments at anyone who displeased their colossal egos. Not kidding.
I can't even begin to tell you how accurate this is! My previous consultant (I'm an intern) treated me the same way! Irrelevant questions during surgery, judging me in every possible way😂, asking what my future goals are😂.... but he gave me a compliment on my suturing skills that I would never forget..."You are more advanced than most senior house officers here!" ❤ Coming from someone as judmental as him, it was huge!
You just described my entire sugrery practise in 2 minutes lmao. I love your satire of the healthcare system. It's important that we're reflecting upon ourselves with funny but thoughtful sarcasm. I'm so glad my friends recommended your channel. Wishing everything good for you man! 😁
I'm not a physician but I work with them, and after reading these "pimping" comments, I'm both laughing, and astounded at the level of thick skin you must have to develop to get through it. God bless all of you! BTW, Dr. Glauc - your characterizations of the various specialties is scary accurate!
As a med student our attending surgeon once made everyone stop before the surgery began, face the flag and sing the star spangled banner. He also laid into another student in front of the patient and family for failing to report gynecomastia on the physical exam. This video is quite accurate 😂
That was beautiful. All that totally happens, for those wondering. Back when I started, I remember the first rotation.. we did fifth-roots of numbers, characters in stories or plays, capitals... Skipped all the music stuff in the OR... And the surgeon always used a 'got a postcard from my ex vacationing in the islets of langerhans' just to see.
I had one resident ask me to time him when he closed. I told him that I always wanted to see time crawl lol. An attending used to ask residents where the word 'saboteur' came from. He was so pissed when I knew. So freaking random.
The one thing that strikes me the most about your videos is that everywhere in the world, the world of medicine is the same! Keep the videos coming, eye bro!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 This is literally what happens !! We all have been at the receiving end of such comments, and these have really helped to shape us. And, they are evergreen topics for laughs at our reunions !!
I actually remember doing my surgical rotation with a psychiatrist major. He told me that the surgeon told him to close the suture and then walked away. So the poor psychiatrist tried his best and pleaded wih anaestesiology to wait and let the patient sleep a bit more. 😅😅😅😅
"You suture like a senior resident." For a second there, I thought he was gonna say he sutures like a feeble old man with severe arthritis and the shakes.
One day in a OB/GYN rotation I was assisting in a cesarean section and it turned out the patient had horrible varicose veins around the uterus. Obviously it was almost impossible to get them to stop bleeding after the OB/GYN nicked one. It took a while to get hemostasis and I told the doc: "Don't worry doc, sooner or later all patients stop bleeding one way or the other". Good thing I had an attending with a sense of humor! Patient is stable, 0 pulse BP -/-.
A young surgeon said that to me as I was compressing an arterial bleeder. Then I got to assist a great Prof. of Surgery whose pts. often seemed not to bleed at all since his dissections were so meticulously precise.
@@wholeNwon I knew an oncologist like that. Removing an entire breast without a single drop of blood. I agree that it's impressive when you see it done. We swapped gloves (as oncologists do once the tumor is out) and not a drop of blood on the gloves, either.
The first question directed to me was, "Do you know the significance of today's date?" The great professor (portrait hanging in the hall) was finishing the case at the time. He usually did meticulous closures himself. The question was posed to the first assistant and passed to the second assistant, senior student and then way down to me at the end of the table. I had the response he wanted and was quickly moved up the table.
Doctor, I think adding IT would be a great character. We're as overworked as family medicine, but everyone except radiologists think we're superflous when we're actually critical to every single part of the hospital and every single thing you do in it. Most doctors treat us like residents, and we're all rather horrified how computer illiterate doctors are.
"we're actually critical to every single part of the hospital and every single thing you do in it." Yeah, this would be a great character. Incredible hubris. Absolutely obnoxious. But the only problem is that SNL already perfected the caricature: ruclips.net/video/25J3u3P-HHg/видео.html
And we private practitioners can’t afford a loyal scribe. Our loyal Dragon software needs careful oversight, and typing is just death by a thousand clicks.
I was roasted like crazy for my 4 weeks of general surgery. Non-stop pimping from residents and attendings, grilled to the bottom of my soul. Thought I failed but got a really good eval and was surprised lol
@@jillefeldme9452 Actually my professor often did saying that it was the only part of one of his masterpieces that the pt. saw, so it was very important.
I remember walking into the OR as a fresh 3rd year med student on my first rotation and within 5 seconds the attending barks at me “WHAT IS THE LIGAMENT OF TREITZ??”
the world's smallest mountain is mount wycheproof in australia! it is 482ft above sea level! fun fact: it has a mineral named after it called Wycheproofite which is pretty soft and fibrous, but it's not an asbestos mineral iirc. the tallest mountain on earth is NOT everest and is actually Mauna Kea in Hawai'i. Everest is the tallest ABOVE sea level but Mauna Kea is about 4000ft taller. It's just below sea level for the most part! I'm a geology student who knows absolutely nothing about medicine but i found you and love your videos! I'm just happy I can answer one of general surgery's questions :) hopefully I won't get yelled at for bringing in MY lab samples to the OR!
Yup. I hope things are better than 30 years ago. I would have made a great general surgeon but I couldn’t deal with the abuse. I went into OB which wasn’t much better, honestly. I’m surprised you didn’t ask your med student to hold a Deaver retractor in an impossible position for countless hours. Of course, back in the day, we were ordered to basically stand on top of the surgeon who would spout out a running monologue about how he loved feeling our tits up against him. I remember when I was chief resident on Gyn and I carefully assigned the most misogynistic attending to all male residents and a burly male junior resident came to me crying and asked to be reassigned. Turned out that the misogynist was racist too.
Hey, OB bro! I too trained in the boys’ club 35 years ago. We had a few misogynistic bastards back mentoring us few “girls” in the art of women’s health care. Glad we have taken over our specialty. Sad that Administration sucks all the joy out of it . 🥂
@@wholeNwon The Deaver requires upper body strength. It must be lifted upward and the handle is just narrow metal. It’s worst when the assistant is shorter than the surgeon. And it’s designed for someone with upper body strength of a fit young male. It’s bad news for a female who is more studious than athletic.
So I still remember my surgery exam during med school and the questions like "what was the main cause of death during mediaval wars" and "translate this latin sentences that have nothing to do with medicine" and I am kind of stunned it is the same for surgeons worldwide
I'm laughing out loud about the progression to questions outside of the field of medicine. There are SO many surgeons that do that. You only missed the quote they always quote to justify their unjustifiable questions: "A physician who only knows about medicine is not a good physician". Which is kinda true, but 3 random trivia questions do not determine your general knowledge ffs!
I don't understand how surgeons can just pull random trivia information out during mid-surgery and expect us to know what it is. 😂 Worse is during mid-handover and the entire department stares at you.
I didn't think I could miss fictional characters played by one person so much
Don't. Just get back to work frauds.
They aren't fictional.
Screenwriter Guy and Producer Guy from Pitch Meetings would like a word. 😂
We need to meet Earl, the "FUN" Police.
Some may call him Fun-Earl.
Poor Cecum has never recovered from his father's questionable naming decisions.
I was sure it was Ileum...
Sigmoid embraced their name.
Or his brother, Sig.
appendix has an inferiority complex
@@philipstevenson5166meh, we could do without him just fine
The only unrealistic part is that he's sticking around to watch intently instead of immediately leaving and delegating monitoring the student to the resident.
He wants to make sure it’s done correctly 😂
Or better yet, to anaesthesia
You can't judge if you're not there to watch, how is surgery supposed to feel superior if he just leaves
He really wanted to achieve maximum pain 🔥
Where’s the fun in that? Half the joy is watching the kid squirm
Little does General Surgery know that his kids graduated college 5 years ago
Lives at the hospital and hasn't been home in six years.
One of them IS the med student.
😂😂😂
I thought that was neurosurgery
And his wife has taken up with her divorce attorney.
No pressure there, Med Student. 😂😂
"They look like hands... but why dont they work like hands?"
I was once told "the M in medicine stands for "movement"..."
“….in psychiatry” had laughing hard enough to wake my kid up. And I spent 2 hours getting her to sleep
I understand this struggle, but sometimes it's worth the laugh.
Fortunately I only quietly laugh-wheezed, and my baby didn't wake up. XD
Same
Was it worth it?
Funnily enough, I've done more stitching in my psychiatry residency than i ever did as a surgery intern.😂
@@mensowvm2We need the full story! How is that even possible?
"At this point its a race between you and the fibroblasts, and the fibroblasts are winning" 😂😂😂
My fav line in this one. As a budding internist who dreaded surgical rotations, this SO would have been me!
I honestly laughed so hard when he said this
Harvey Cushing once said something similar about Halsted. On it goes.
In 26 years of training residents I thought I knew all the best lines (eg tell me you want this patient dead, then everything you've done so far will begin to make sense to me) but "are you sure you are right handed" is *chef's kiss*
Name checks
Savage lmao
Yes, that one is definitely real
Please tell use more of the best lines you've heard
"We are on the side of the patient, you are on the side of the disease. Come, join us"@@sjfrench8034
"Med student was engaged, interested, asked relavent and clinically meaningful questions. Impressive knowledge of subject matter. Strong work."
Evaluation: 3/5
3 is generous
😂
4 is for surgeons and 5 for god..
3 means they're commensurate with their level of training... Having personal experience on both sides of the evaluation
@@lawrencetchen if I see the phrase "level of his training" on more time lol....
Today I had a one-year post-op evaluation for bilat cataracts.
I wore my “Loyal Scribe” shirt.
The doc nodded in approval.
I bonded with my new eye doctor when she entered the exam room followed by her scribe. “You have a Jonathan!” I blurted out. They both laughed and the scribe gave me The Nod. Score! I am now confident my glaucoma is in good hands.
I had a laser eye surgery a few months ago and the opthalmologist and I laughed about Dr Glauc the whole time!
I have managed to get all my doctors hooked on your website. It’s fun to go to my different doctors and talk about your episodes that we have seen. They really enjoy your humor. It’s nice to see them take a break from being so serious and I feel like laughing together creates a nice connection between us. Thanks for the laughs. All the best to you and your family❣️
Thank you for your service to the medical profession!
My family doctor does too😊 I will ask her if she think I'd win vs the fibroblasts lol
I put my psychiatrist on to you.
That's sweet. I sincerely hope you don't have to see so many doctors soon.
@@em8066
Thank you. I have Lynch Syndrome, so I’ll be seeing them until…❤️
Well for starters the med student is already contaminating the OR by wearing his white coat and must be kicked out lol 😂
"You know I gotta say you suture like a senior resident", I thought I was going to hear the surgeon compliment someone other than himself for the first time. You got me in the first half
Oh, how I remember the pimping! “Did you go to an American medical school?” (💭yes…this one). “Do you gals like depriving men of jobs, when most of you will be wasting your training by having babies?” (35 years and three babies later, still working). “You women don’t have the upper body strength to do obstetrics “ (💭little hands are deft and skilled when working in small spaces). Most of our mentors were great, and the oncologists that pimped us on Cancer staging at 5 am rounds kept us on our toes for sure. But there were always a few sadistic types in the old days.,.
Keep those vids coming, eyeball bro! Your Health Care month was superb and realistic. But your character driven sketches make us docs laugh and shake off our PTSD as we wait on hold doing our Peer-to-Peers.
“Do you gals like depriving men of jobs, when most of you will be wasting your training by having babies?”
"Absolutely! I, for my part, want to have _your_ job!"
“You women don’t have the upper body strength to do obstetrics“
"Correct, that's why midwives are a myth and not the standard obstetrical care for millenia."
@@johannageisel5390great comeback sis! xD
ah yes, the classic “you are taking up a dude’s space.” my mom is a surgeon and i’m a computer engineer and ah the familiarity 😂
Eyeball bro 😂😂
Wherever the pale, male, and stale got their audacity, they need to go put it back!
I worked with an attending who loved to tell people "I've seen it done better, but never slower" and watch their faces go from happy to sad as the meaning sunk in 😂😂😂
A surgeon once asked me about a song that came on the radio: "who is the guitarist and what kind of guitar does he play?". Thankfully it was a procedure being done under spinal anesthesia so the patient was awake and able to feed me the answer.
Brilliant! Bwahaha😂
Oh my gosh that's hilarious!
"Pick a thought in your brain and say it."
"AAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Screaming is a thought, right?
Neurology would disagree just on principle
@@zyebormpsychiatry, psychology, and neuroscience would then proceed to roast him since he has a shame kink 😂
Authority [Challenging: Failed]
"This guy is clearly trying to push you so you learn to assert yourself. So assert yourself, now! Scream!"
- Scream? Why?
- *Crying* AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!
Hajajajajaja
“You suture like a senior resident…in psychiatry.” That’s some shade right there, lol. How I’ve missed these characters.
Not even senior resident anaesthesia but psychiatry
Oh the things I‘ve learned in general surgery:
The frescos of the Sistine chapel and the art of fresco painting in general.
Stylistic devices namely oxymoron and pleonasm and which of the two describes the situation we were in best. (I forgot the context it was a bilateral inguinal hernia operated minimally invasive)
Interprets of the songs playing on the radio (that one got easy after some time, because the surgeon always asks when Phil collins, Elton John or the number one hit at that time was playing (lady Gaga and Bradley cooper - shallow).
And occasionally the question: „Which two things are most important for positioning the patient?“
Answers: gravity and the anesthesiologist with the remote control
Reflecting on this in hindsight, it’s a pretty good strategy to make you doubt yourself. Not only your qualification in the medical field, but your qualification for existing in general😅
Some of us don't need any help doubting our qualifications for existing in general 😂
Really? Are you sure? what will be the gain of that? I find the questions and the answers quite educating. Like learning naval history while operating.
Mount Wycheproof in Victoria, Australia is often considered the world's smallest mountain. It stands at 141 feet (43 meters) above the surrounding plain.
This is spot on. My friend just finished her surgery rotation and was asked to recite the Gettysburg address.
1542 E. Main St.?
I'm following you from El Salvador. Before I saw your videos, I believed that these situations happened only in Latin America. You transported me 20 years ago during my Surgery Rotations. Thank you for your videos!
same here for Europe
My first rotation as a third year was trauma. First case was a MVC with liver lac. The attending opened the abdomen, grabbed those things at the end of my arms, and shoved them deep into this guy's peritoneum. "Explore the space, man...just feel around and explore the space."
buahaha
whoa
Weird
When I was on surgery as a medical student, an attending surgeon, during surgery started doing this to me at about that speed. Then he stopped and named another surgeon and told me that if that other surgeon ever pimped me like that I should tell him that I’m paying $$$ for him to teach me. So another day I was in surgery with that other surgeon and he started and I told him that the previous surgeon told me to tell him that I’m paying $$$ for him to teach me. The surgeon laughed as was intended. However, months later, while on another rotation, I got called into the office of the chief of surgery. Seems the resident in the OR at the time of the joke told the chief something different than what actually happened. The chief wanted to fail me from that rotation. I tried to tell him what happened and who the surgeons were. It ended with me passing the rotation but being on academic probation for the rest of my third year. Over 30 years ago and it’s still a raw nerve.
That is disturbing.
It happened a lot to women and minorities. Our very presence was an affront to them.
Name and shame-the Med Student Mafia will take care of the rest.
Yep. You learned quickly what shit to NOT say to ab attending huh...
@@rebeccacrockett8334 except it wasn't the attending that was offended, it was the resident who really needed to mind their business. I'm glad it worked out in the end.
I quite vividly remember the first day of my otorhinolaryngology rotation. Me and one other student volunteered to go to the OR while the rest of med students went for the rounds. We have peacefully observed the first ten minutes of thyroidectomy - until the head of the department came in. He wasn't even supposed to operate that day, he just came to flex his academic muscles. He spots us, makes a dash for us, and after a sentence or two about the surgery he starts to hit us with the most unhinged and unrelated questions imaginable - "What is the largest animal cell in the world?" "Can a whale suffer from decompression sickness?" "What government did Lenin make his revolution against?" "What sort of eggs cannot be sold in the farmers market?" - all the while he has us cornered behind a storage box, far away from the operating table. After an hour or so of asking questions neither of us knew the answers for, he was visibly satisfied with himself and his scholarship, he just as suddenly disappeared.
I’m literally on my surgery rotation right now and this is so accurate! I’ve never felt so stupid and useless. 😂
Aw man, hang in there! Always remember the triangle of safety in a lap chole, make sure every post op admit is low risk for DVT/PE, fill your pockets with dressing supplies and scissors before rounds, and just keep practicing with sutures. They were all in your shoes at some point and no one has the right to belittle you. I was lucky with my team but I've heard horror stories.
Relax, from experience, I can tell you it’s just the beginning 😂.
@@zundee4182Bruh. Save the truth nightmares for later…hmmm?! 🤦🏻♀️😂
Surgery can be hard. A friend who had no problem with dissection or anatomizing a cadaver, froze at his first surgery and was unable to make an incision. He said after three tries the surgeon put both hands on top of his and made the cut "You have to press down like this"
And that kids is who I met your mother
I had a strong aversion to making incisions in the eye. So, of course, my first residency offer was in ophthalmology at a great eye hospital.
Lost it at "Are you sure you're right handed?"
30+ years of scrub nursing here.....can tell you, it took a lot of anti bullying campaigns and interventions to improve surgeons to this level...... previously they really would throw instruments at anyone who displeased their colossal egos. Not kidding.
"a race between you and the fiberblasts" is the most brilliant and savage takedown like...ever. 👍
“I’d let you finish, but I want to see my kids grow up” is just pure gold
I can't even begin to tell you how accurate this is! My previous consultant (I'm an intern) treated me the same way! Irrelevant questions during surgery, judging me in every possible way😂, asking what my future goals are😂.... but he gave me a compliment on my suturing skills that I would never forget..."You are more advanced than most senior house officers here!" ❤ Coming from someone as judmental as him, it was huge!
"They look like hands, but why don't they work like hands" had me laughing hard. Made my morning better.
He's bothering to acknowledge your existence and allowing you to close the incision?? Damn best surgery rotation ever
You just described my entire sugrery practise in 2 minutes lmao.
I love your satire of the healthcare system.
It's important that we're reflecting upon ourselves with funny but thoughtful sarcasm.
I'm so glad my friends recommended your channel.
Wishing everything good for you man! 😁
I swear I had a surgeon who could tell you all of Bob Dylans favorite sandwiches..
Must be a board exam question. Lmao
My guess is that he didn't know human anatomy as well.
I'm not a physician but I work with them, and after reading these "pimping" comments, I'm both laughing, and astounded at the level of thick skin you must have to develop to get through it. God bless all of you!
BTW, Dr. Glauc - your characterizations of the various specialties is scary accurate!
As a med student our attending surgeon once made everyone stop before the surgery began, face the flag and sing the star spangled banner. He also laid into another student in front of the patient and family for failing to report gynecomastia on the physical exam. This video is quite accurate 😂
That was beautiful.
All that totally happens, for those wondering.
Back when I started, I remember the first rotation.. we did fifth-roots of numbers, characters in stories or plays, capitals... Skipped all the music stuff in the OR...
And the surgeon always used a 'got a postcard from my ex vacationing in the islets of langerhans' just to see.
The fibroblasts line broke me 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I had to google it to get it, no regerts 🤣🤣🤣
I had one resident ask me to time him when he closed. I told him that I always wanted to see time crawl lol. An attending used to ask residents where the word 'saboteur' came from. He was so pissed when I knew. So freaking random.
I know basically nothing about medicine, but as a tool maker i can appreciate the hazing of the apprentice.
'And the fibroblasts are winning'.. Savage! 🤣
The one thing that strikes me the most about your videos is that everywhere in the world, the world of medicine is the same! Keep the videos coming, eye bro!
I just finished my surgery rotation. Perfect timing!
One of the psychiatrists in my subspecialty clinic has told me the horror stories of her surgical rotation. So this sounds about right.
"I would let you finish, but I would like to see my kids grow up."
Damn doc! You didn't have to do him like that! 😅😂
This reminded me of several moments in my own 3rd year surgery rotation. VERY insightful!
Nature has restored.... General surgery scaring off the poor residents!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 This is literally what happens !! We all have been at the receiving end of such comments, and these have really helped to shape us. And, they are evergreen topics for laughs at our reunions !!
I actually remember doing my surgical rotation with a psychiatrist major. He told me that the surgeon told him to close the suture and then walked away. So the poor psychiatrist tried his best and pleaded wih anaestesiology to wait and let the patient sleep a bit more. 😅😅😅😅
Chuckling along until time to close the incision - next lines so funny I damn near spewed my PB&J! Thank you, Doc G. I needed that.
I do enjoy seeing medicine, and those that practice at it, through your creativity. =D
"You suture like a senior resident."
For a second there, I thought he was gonna say he sutures like a feeble old man with severe arthritis and the shakes.
"I would let you finish, but I want to see my kids grow up." That one got me good.
Oh, the fibroblast insult. I had almost forgotten that. Thanks for restoring a trauma.
He’d have a lot more fun if you sent him to Pathology.
I AM A SURGEON
I'm now wondering if the first 46 people to like this were all pathologists as well.
You are perfect!!! Makes this journey much more bearable! :)
I got pimped about music from the 1950s and 1960s the most on surgery rotation. That said, I really enjoyed it.
"Those things at the end of your arms. They look like hands but why don't they work like hands?" 🦖🤣🤣🤣
One day in a OB/GYN rotation I was assisting in a cesarean section and it turned out the patient had horrible varicose veins around the uterus. Obviously it was almost impossible to get them to stop bleeding after the OB/GYN nicked one. It took a while to get hemostasis and I told the doc: "Don't worry doc, sooner or later all patients stop bleeding one way or the other". Good thing I had an attending with a sense of humor! Patient is stable, 0 pulse BP -/-.
A young surgeon said that to me as I was compressing an arterial bleeder. Then I got to assist a great Prof. of Surgery whose pts. often seemed not to bleed at all since his dissections were so meticulously precise.
@@wholeNwon I knew an oncologist like that. Removing an entire breast without a single drop of blood. I agree that it's impressive when you see it done. We swapped gloves (as oncologists do once the tumor is out) and not a drop of blood on the gloves, either.
As a surgery resident currently on break I loved this so much
I start my surgery rotation after the weekend 🎉😂 Thanks for prepping me Dr G!
The first question directed to me was, "Do you know the significance of today's date?"
The great professor (portrait hanging in the hall) was finishing the case at the time. He usually did meticulous closures himself. The question was posed to the first assistant and passed to the second assistant, senior student and then way down to me at the end of the table. I had the response he wanted and was quickly moved up the table.
I laugh every time I see these. It’s great. Probably the best medicine ever. Thanks doc.
The number of times I laughed out loud and had to rewind in just over a minute is... * chef's kiss *
I have nothing to be with medicine other then working in I.T. and these crack me up.. Mint..
Doctor,
I think adding IT would be a great character. We're as overworked as family medicine, but everyone except radiologists think we're superflous when we're actually critical to every single part of the hospital and every single thing you do in it. Most doctors treat us like residents, and we're all rather horrified how computer illiterate doctors are.
IT character “did you turn it off and on again?”
Cardiology: “yes, he underwent a cardioversion earlier today.”
IT: “I meant…the computer…”
"we're actually critical to every single part of the hospital and every single thing you do in it." Yeah, this would be a great character. Incredible hubris. Absolutely obnoxious. But the only problem is that SNL already perfected the caricature: ruclips.net/video/25J3u3P-HHg/видео.html
And we private practitioners can’t afford a loyal scribe. Our loyal Dragon software needs careful oversight, and typing is just death by a thousand clicks.
"I know you docs think that a bolus of normal saline fixes everything, but it really doesn't help your printer"
Um. IT doesnt have a giant malpractice target on their back
...Surg didn't say WHO was going to have fun.
A senior resident, ... of a nursing home.
I was roasted like crazy for my 4 weeks of general surgery. Non-stop pimping from residents and attendings, grilled to the bottom of my soul. Thought I failed but got a really good eval and was surprised lol
You almost couldn't tell why doctors are so stressed all the time.
Damn, this explains so much about my Division Chief's character.
As a former medical student - this is accurate.
"those things at the end of your arms, they look like hands but why don't they work like hands?" that was brutal
The funniest part of this video is the attending surgeon staying for the closure!
Never happens.
@@jillefeldme9452 Actually my professor often did saying that it was the only part of one of his masterpieces that the pt. saw, so it was very important.
Thankfully he toned it down for us non-meds.
I missed these over the 30 days episodes
I once had a surgeon ask me those exact questions during my third year in a modified radical mastectomy procedure. Crazy times
In these moments even if the surgeon asks me "pick a thought and say it" I feel so paralized I cannot even say my own name
Now you can have ready “I was just admiring your dexterity “
Omg, this is so good, and accurate in so many levels. And weirdly universal.
I was expecting Psychiatry to.pop up at the last minute and say " Hey"
I actually got a “I would let you finish but anaesthesia is glaring at me”
Before 😂😂😂😂
Ohhhh the psychiatry burn. He’s gonna hear that from across the building. 😂
Laying here with a shattered shoulder,, dreading surgery in a few days, amd can't stop laughing at this even though it hurts.
So true! My first MOS was a 91D operating room technician, and I remember watching cocky med students get humbled time and time again. 😂
MOS? 91D? I'm a retired physician who doesn't recognize these. Help, please and thanks. 😮
"It was that day that I realized that being humiliated and demeaned was part of becoming a surgeon...."
I remember walking into the OR as a fresh 3rd year med student on my first rotation and within 5 seconds the attending barks at me “WHAT IS THE LIGAMENT OF TREITZ??”
I once had a surgery attending stand behind me and count while I sutured, letting me know how much each minute of OR time costs.
Tell them the patient needs to live with it for the rest of their life
the world's smallest mountain is mount wycheproof in australia! it is 482ft above sea level! fun fact: it has a mineral named after it called Wycheproofite which is pretty soft and fibrous, but it's not an asbestos mineral iirc. the tallest mountain on earth is NOT everest and is actually Mauna Kea in Hawai'i. Everest is the tallest ABOVE sea level but Mauna Kea is about 4000ft taller. It's just below sea level for the most part!
I'm a geology student who knows absolutely nothing about medicine but i found you and love your videos! I'm just happy I can answer one of general surgery's questions :) hopefully I won't get yelled at for bringing in MY lab samples to the OR!
Thanks for the new content😊
Yup. I hope things are better than 30 years ago. I would have made a great general surgeon but I couldn’t deal with the abuse. I went into OB which wasn’t much better, honestly.
I’m surprised you didn’t ask your med student to hold a Deaver retractor in an impossible position for countless hours. Of course, back in the day, we were ordered to basically stand on top of the surgeon who would spout out a running monologue about how he loved feeling our tits up against him.
I remember when I was chief resident on Gyn and I carefully assigned the most misogynistic attending to all male residents and a burly male junior resident came to me crying and asked to be reassigned. Turned out that the misogynist was racist too.
I scrubbed in on a case with Dr. Deaver but didn't hold that retractor. He was a nice man.
Hey, OB bro! I too trained in the boys’ club 35 years ago. We had a few misogynistic bastards back mentoring us few “girls” in the art of women’s health care. Glad we have taken over our specialty. Sad that Administration sucks all the joy out of it . 🥂
@@wholeNwon
The Deaver retractor is a torture device. Lol.
@@GoodnightJLH For whom?
@@wholeNwon
The Deaver requires upper body strength. It must be lifted upward and the handle is just narrow metal. It’s worst when the assistant is shorter than the surgeon. And it’s designed for someone with upper body strength of a fit young male. It’s bad news for a female who is more studious than athletic.
So I still remember my surgery exam during med school and the questions like "what was the main cause of death during mediaval wars" and "translate this latin sentences that have nothing to do with medicine" and I am kind of stunned it is the same for surgeons worldwide
I'm laughing out loud about the progression to questions outside of the field of medicine. There are SO many surgeons that do that.
You only missed the quote they always quote to justify their unjustifiable questions: "A physician who only knows about medicine is not a good physician". Which is kinda true, but 3 random trivia questions do not determine your general knowledge ffs!
As a surgeon, this is 100% true.
I don't understand how surgeons can just pull random trivia information out during mid-surgery and expect us to know what it is. 😂 Worse is during mid-handover and the entire department stares at you.
They practice!
I love the last one, senior resident from psychiatry☺☺☺
“It’s a race between you and the fibroblasts “. Dying!!
As a former psychiatry registrar I can confirm that suturing was actually part of the job. The last suture I did was a butt - you don't wanna know.
Now I know that surgeons' egos are the same all over the world (greetings from Poland).