Maja the registrar is awesome. I always think doctors who go to another country and learn a completely second language, along with all the medical terminology required... Are a special kind of dedicated.
Service dogs are extremely expensive. Depending on what the dog is trained to do, the price runs between $3,000 up to $50,000. (Canadian funds as I'm in Canada) I have a friend who has one and she doesn't need the high life saving skills (heart, seizures etc) and she only paid $6000.
@@Raintalon89 Yup. In Canada a Seizure Detection Dog costs a minimum of $25,000 (CDN). People who pop on saying "oh he should get one...blah blah blah"; lordy, google first. lol
Service dogs are extremely expensive. Depending on what the dog is trained to do, the price runs between $3,000 up to $50,000. (Canadian funds as I'm in Canada) I have a friend who has one and she doesn't need the high life saving skills (heart, seizures etc) and she only paid $6000.
Always the best storytelling, poignant & caring, everything linked to a theme, drawing the viewer into the drama, into the frame. Beautifully constructed for the compassionate observer. This is life.
I was born with epilepsy and now at 72. I learned to accept it and be sure I take my meds. My last seizure I was when I was 21 yet I get meds still. .I have had a stroke in my 40's and trouble walking as I have Parkinson's in the family hard of hearing
It was very interesting to see that they sent the person with seizures on their way through the hallways by themselves because he had just told them that the seizures were not well controlled. All I kept thinking of was he’s going to have a seizure in the middle of the hallway in this hospital and no one is going to know. He should’ve been escorted to the next department.
My uncle is an epileptic. He is also uncontrolled. Usually he needs to sleep after a seizure but he not likely to have another seizure immediately after.
Exactly what I thought. I honestly thought we were going to see him drop to the floor. If he had, he would’ve hit his head on that hard floor and that would’ve caused a lot of damage. Because of his reason for being at the hospital and then not escorting him for the x-rays, if he did have a seizure and really hurt himself he could’ve sued the hospital because of their neglect because he’s a patient of theirs.
When we lost my grandfather, My great grandmother, His Mother in law, having congestive heart failure, asked my mother, to take her to the ER. The receptionist had the worst time typing in 1895 as grandma's Birth year, after Grandma WALKED Into the Dept! This was in the late 80's.. Mother was patient, repeating as needed, yet G-ma was growing annoyed.. The poor receptionist needed someone else to finish the intake when grandma chirped up, 'My Goodness child, it's not that difficult, 1-8-9-5...' She never made 5ft but you DID NOT mess with Grandma...
Awesome story! I remember reading about a guy who was 76, had fallen and bumped his head. He said his mother would be coming to pick him up; the staff thought "Poor guy, all confused." Then in walked his 98-year-old mom to fetch him. She was still driving and very sharp.
@@josi4251 Thank You. G gma gave up her DL at 93. She gave great Uncle Stanton's old clothes to a kid, that, obviously, didn't have much. The eldest of her kids was born in 1911, so Probably during the Depression. One day a guy pounded on her door, demanding to talk to 'Florence about CHARITY!' that a Lot of folks in that Era DIDN'T Accept. G-ma looked him in the eyes and said she'd talk to him WHEN HE WAS SOBER, slammed the door on him.. Strong women on Mom's side of the family... She straightened up a racist Tax man in So. Calif, years later.
Daisy's grandpa crying broke my heart even more. I can not imagine not being there as a mom. I would be fighting to be with my baby. Its awful to see your baby hurt but to not be there...
The mom feinted at the scene. They probably had a separate medical team (ambulance) working on her and then had to clear her before she could leave. Plus the child was flown by helicopter for two reasons, one was distance to the closest medical facility, but the other is that it needs to be a medical facility that can treat her possibly life threatening injuries. Not all hospitals have those capabilities.
it would also come down to do you fight to go with her on the helicopter and delay treatment, or do you let her go on alone to receive probable life saving treatment as fast as possible. As difficult as it would be, the latter would be the decision to make. And it would be a difficult decision, even had mom not fainted.
Why judge without listening carefully? Why people are always jumping to judge a mother, especially women. She literally came as soon as possible. Mothers already feel so much guilt, no need to make them feel even worse.
Of all the years I’ve worked in the medical field, I’ve never seen medical staff be more compassionate toward the victims, the victims families and each other. It makes me want to move to London, no kidding. I hope they realize how blessed they truly are. God bless you all. 😊🙏❤️🙏
Oh momma, you absolutely did NOT fail your daughter, no you didn’t and don’t think that way again! To all these nurses and Drs, God keep you, send an Angel to each and every one of you…❤ Thank you for what you do ❤
Have you spent much time around large horses? Race horses have excitable temperaments and she absolutely did screw up and it almost cost them their child's life. Stop giving parents a free card; they are adults, mess up and in an obvious situation like this when caution should have been taken, she should understand that yes, it was her fault.
The little girl who was kicked by a horse, this was totally preventable. You never, ever allow small children to be around horses. Something as simple as getting bit by a horsefly can set a horse to kicking. I can't believe people who run stables wouldn't know better!!!
……Vicki, couldn’t agree more. I’ve been riding since I was 8, & was always cautious, around ANY horse. Dealt with racehorses’, & pacers’, too. The parents seemed none too bright. Shame little toddler was hurt bc of their stupidity………
Agreed. My daughter was in the Equestrian sport growing up and it's amazing how many adults aren't cautious with their little kids. Everyone was getting ready for an event, and one child might be in it, and they let the younger one wander around. I saw a young child kicked in the forehead, by a rear hoof, right in front of me. About seven years old, wandering around the legs of tall thoroughbreds? Insane. It was a massive gash right across her forehead. She was lucky the blow didn't kill her on the spot. Heck, I'm an adult and I don't hang around the south end of a horse I don't know.
@@hilaryc3203 ……never walked close behind a horse, always gave the same distance at its’ rear, as was the actual LENGTH of the horse, that way I knew I was not within kic
@@elizabethroberts6215 Since my daughter rode at competitions a lot, they would be really busy places with the riders getting ready and we saw a lot of moron parents putting their children at risk.
I’m so happy little Daisy was ok and didn’t need any surgery. She so fortunate to have one thing wrong and that was the cut to the forehead which needed stitches. She looked so adorable feeding the beautiful horse and then sitting on her lil horse at the end. When Florence‘s daughter was describing how her mom helped her with her earaches and she started tearing up, I felt that pain. My mom passed away in 2017 and we were terribly close because I’m a type one diabetic and I was nine years old when I was diagnosed. Mom took such great care of me even though she had four other children and we always had that closeness. When I lost my husband suddenly in 2021, the one person I needed to talk to and have her hug me and say everything was going to be OK, was my mom. Her not being here has really affected me. That one mother, whose son hurt his foot or leg, I felt was very uncaring. When she said she wouldn’t help him, I just shook my head and thought, thank goodness, I’m not that type of a mother.
Didn't you listen? Her skull was fractured all the way around, and they were concerned about the fracture by her eye socket. She had a bruise on the brain that could have turned into a dangerous brain bleed. From the outside, all they had to do was give her stitches, but it will take a long while for her skull to repair itself. That fracture could have been life changing, so there was a lot wrong. Why did you think she needed 2 1/2 months of regular check ups?
@@luanngordon8639 yeah I did think it wasn't stable enough for little one yet I just noticed the look on his face when mum got to hold her and in saying that we saw only a few moments of this situation with the family
My brother was kicked by a horse when he was 5. He flew 30 feet. His jaw was broken and his jaw had to be wired shut. His head swelled to the size of a basketball and turned black from bruising. The Dr's said if it had been 8cm over his head would have split in half. He's now 44 and fine except he has Aspburgers from the head trauma. Hope the baby is well ❤ love from Toledo Ohio USA
I see a huge difference in the surgeon's there vs the US. Your surgeon's don't think they're above an ER Dr. Most of our surgeon's and specialists think they're above coming down when called.
I just finished having an angioplasty last Thursday and I couldn’t say enough good things about my whole experience. I’m up here in Vancouver Canada, and it was at the Royal Columbian Hospital in new Westminster. They were the greatest. And now it’s decided I have to go in and have bypass surgery open-heart surgery at the same hospital so I’m confident that everything will go right there because the doctors and nurses are top-notch!!😍😍🥰🥰
I wondered about that if I saw right. I’m glad you mentioned it. Some cultures really don’t teach their kids that they don’t play with themselves in public. Imagine having all of us watching him do this and shaking our heads in disbelief that he would do something like that in public. It’s disgusting.
Alzheimer’s is the worst. Bit by bit, slowly and steadily it took my Mom away from me. It made me angry and broke my heart. My Mum died of a heart attack before Alzheimer’s totally destroyed her mind. It’s terribly sad to lose our Mothers. They are our champions; the one person who loves us unconditionally. I suppose I will always miss her. I hope your Mom stays with you for a little longer. She can talk to you and is quite an amazing woman and she has her beautiful daughter loving her. That’s wonderful.
What happened to seasons 4-7? I think you got 2 season 3 episodes. I don't know where you get these from and what is blocked by RUclips, you don't reply to comments. The end of season 2 showed them adding more cameras and cameras in the operating room but they didn't show any OR footage in the 2 or 3 episodes you posted and there was a lot more studio footage (talking to people on camera), how many of the extra cameras did they use in season 3?
@@catbriggs8362 Just like babes who die in the backyard pool. You do not let babies out of your sight! She said I thought she was by my side, meaning, I took my eyes off of her.
Yeah...a little one being around loose horses is just not worth the risk...the horses could get into a minor argy bargy with one another and connect with her just because she's in the line of fire....not meaning to hurt her at all...but the result is the same regardless. Simply not worth the risk...
That's not how that works though. Mom was there but you can't really ask her to put her daughter on a leash. Daisy just wandered off, something probably spooked the horse, and she just happened to be in the way. One of the skills a child who likes to be on the farm needs to learn is how to approach and be around the animals safely and that basically consists of learning to read the body language and react accordingly but you can't learn that if you're not allowed near them. Children trip over things in the forest, they get basketballs and footballs launched at their heads, they jump of swingsets, do flips on the trampoline, fall of bikes, get into car accidents, stick their fingers between a closing door, rough play until one gets hurt, and so on. It's just life.
@@katego370 you can and should put your child on a leash when around 1000 pound animals, you think getting permanent brain damage is better than a leash? A 1 year old isn't wise enough to "learn how to walk in a farm" just irresponsible parenting. She has time to learn how to be safe and you can learn that from a distance, you don't need to get your brains stomped out to learn it. All other things you mentioned doesn't involve a 1000 pound animal with a mind of it's own who can go rampant. You can make all sorts of ridiculous excuses but it all comes down to bad parenting.
@@DarkLumiya So do you also require parents to literally chain their children to their belts while they're getting the shopping cart or managing bags of groceries to ensure they cannot run off and get hit by a car? This is an unrealistic alternate version of reality. I've spent half my life around horses, including over a decade at a riding school bustling with kids and adults of all ages around ponies and horses. Parents should not leave their children unattended with a horse and neither was this child. That does not preclude them from accomplishing simple tasks in their presence while keeping an eye on the child. However, any parent who has ever cooked dinner around their kid knows that "keeping an eye on them" does not literally mean never standing there, staring at the kid while the food is burning, that's not how life works. Introducing children to activities that are inherently risky is and always will be risky. Children surf, swim in the ocean, ride horses, do gymnastics, run down the stairs, and jump on trampolines. Sometimes they get hurt. That doesn't mean the parents were reckless.
I disagree with all the commenters. I agree with you. The parent was derelict and should not have let the child be out in that case. That’s why they are called parents. They are supposed to parent the child, protect the child. The mum was trying to do too much and she sacrificed her child’s safety.
Daisy's mother is an absolute twit , horse's are big strong animals why would you let someone so precious as your child be so vulnerable . My children were never left alone with our horse's always very supervised and never never left alone
I think it's common for any parent whose child's been seriously injured or even abducted to have the thought I let her out of my sight for 2 minutes... But reading some of the comments here it's like these are perfect people who never make an error that leads to an accident even a serious one...
Uhh why do folks watch this to comment on what horrible idiots the parents or the patients are. Be reassured if you must that the parents or the patients are likely to blame themselves for their accidents. What if a stranger saw video of you at an unguarded moment when you made a mistake and judged you harshly?
Stupid people allowing a two year old near a horse onher own. I am a horse owner.......safety always comes first....she could have been killed this would have been manslaughter
As a Canadian I'm so terrified that none of us will ever be treated with this level of care/compassion or medical intervention in our senior years, ever have the chance to grow old and die of natural causes, or feel safe as we age. The new Canadian euthanasia program pretty much ensures that no Canadians will ever get close to being centenarians. And all Canadian seniors/ disabled and most vulnerable are terrified!
I can understand your fear as I'm an old Canadian. I won't go into a hospital here, and I fear and don't trust doctors as well... especially after the last few years.
I’m an older Canadian, and have had fabulous care. Albeit sometimes long wait times. Remember these films start after the waiting period / triage. Our Health services need more funding and more support.
you do know we cannot answer those questions, right? What I could think of regarding the old lady: she must have been on bloodthinners, and we all bump our legs sometimes, and when a person is on bloodthinners, they can go all black and blue
It's "voice-recognition" tech, which is so bad I don't know why they bother with it. It's only good for a laugh, e.g. the doctor talking on the phone saying "I'm a horse." Dunno about anyone else, but if I go to A&E I don't want to be treated by horses. Their fine motor skills are terrible. It's the hoof thing.
Maja the registrar is awesome. I always think doctors who go to another country and learn a completely second language, along with all the medical terminology required... Are a special kind of dedicated.
So dedicated! Plus her descriptions make me laugh, "anything juicy coming out?" LMAO.
That poor guy on the crutches. An injury on top of a mother like that.
It would be lovely if Mike could get a medical alert dog who could give him enough warning before a seizure to get to a safe position.
Great idea!
Service dogs are extremely expensive. Depending on what the dog is trained to do, the price runs between $3,000 up to $50,000. (Canadian funds as I'm in Canada) I have a friend who has one and she doesn't need the high life saving skills (heart, seizures etc) and she only paid $6000.
Uh, if he has $15,000 USD minimum. Ish. Lol. Those dogs are expensive!
@@Raintalon89 Yup. In Canada a Seizure Detection Dog costs a minimum of $25,000 (CDN). People who pop on saying "oh he should get one...blah blah blah"; lordy, google first. lol
Mum looks incredible for 100. Poor love
The granny made me cry, I Iost my mom in 2020, this resonated with me deeply.
Its too bad Mike doesn't get an assist dog. They are trained to detect when a seizure is coming on to the person they're with.
I was thinking the very same thing!❤
Service dogs are extremely expensive. Depending on what the dog is trained to do, the price runs between $3,000 up to $50,000. (Canadian funds as I'm in Canada) I have a friend who has one and she doesn't need the high life saving skills (heart, seizures etc) and she only paid $6000.
God bless the lady that is 100 yrs old ❤❤❤❤❤
Always the best storytelling, poignant & caring, everything linked to a theme, drawing the viewer into the drama, into the frame. Beautifully constructed for the compassionate observer. This is life.
I’m so glad Daisy is recovered ❤
I was born with epilepsy and now at 72. I learned to accept it and be sure I take my meds. My last seizure I was when I was 21 yet I get meds still. .I have had a stroke in my 40's and trouble walking as I have Parkinson's in the family hard of hearing
Oh my goodness my heart is breaking for these families. It’s so so painful.
Thank goodness that little girl was ok . Great documentary, great doctors and nurses.
Turn your phone volume off (on vibrate) when you are at the doctor’s office or hospital.
We're used to people forgetting tbh. There's so much going on, a cellphone ringing is nothing
It was very interesting to see that they sent the person with seizures on their way through the hallways by themselves because he had just told them that the seizures were not well controlled. All I kept thinking of was he’s going to have a seizure in the middle of the hallway in this hospital and no one is going to know. He should’ve been escorted to the next department.
My thoughts also! Bit scary,
My thoughts too that was very dangerous and unprofessional to let him walk around alone.
I disagree. He was in Urgent Care, not ER. He likely drove himself there.
My uncle is an epileptic. He is also uncontrolled. Usually he needs to sleep after a seizure but he not likely to have another seizure immediately after.
Exactly what I thought. I honestly thought we were going to see him drop to the floor. If he had, he would’ve hit his head on that hard floor and that would’ve caused a lot of damage. Because of his reason for being at the hospital and then not escorting him for the x-rays, if he did have a seizure and really hurt himself he could’ve sued the hospital because of their neglect because he’s a patient of theirs.
This one made me cry. Sweet little Daisy. I have a granddaughter her age and a grandson that just learned how to walk and they are my world.
This such a well done series... even the music is so proper!
When we lost my grandfather, My great grandmother, His Mother in law, having congestive heart failure, asked my mother, to take her to the ER. The receptionist had the worst time typing in 1895 as grandma's Birth year, after Grandma WALKED Into the Dept! This was in the late 80's.. Mother was patient, repeating as needed, yet G-ma was growing annoyed.. The poor receptionist needed someone else to finish the intake when grandma chirped up, 'My Goodness child, it's not that difficult, 1-8-9-5...' She never made 5ft but you DID NOT mess with Grandma...
Funny!!
@@mickieswendsen1302 Thanks! There are a few stories about G Grandma. She wasn't rude but a lack of common sene and she'd let you know...
Awesome story! I remember reading about a guy who was 76, had fallen and bumped his head. He said his mother would be coming to pick him up; the staff thought "Poor guy, all confused." Then in walked his 98-year-old mom to fetch him. She was still driving and very sharp.
@@josi4251 Thank You. G gma gave up her DL at 93. She gave great Uncle Stanton's old clothes to a kid, that, obviously, didn't have much. The eldest of her kids was born in 1911, so Probably during the Depression. One day a guy pounded on her door, demanding to talk to 'Florence about CHARITY!' that a Lot of folks in that Era DIDN'T Accept. G-ma looked him in the eyes and said she'd talk to him WHEN HE WAS SOBER, slammed the door on him.. Strong women on Mom's side of the family... She straightened up a racist Tax man in So. Calif, years later.
Daisy's grandpa crying broke my heart even more. I can not imagine not being there as a mom. I would be fighting to be with my baby. Its awful to see your baby hurt but to not be there...
The mom feinted at the scene. They probably had a separate medical team (ambulance) working on her and then had to clear her before she could leave. Plus the child was flown by helicopter for two reasons, one was distance to the closest medical facility, but the other is that it needs to be a medical facility that can treat her possibly life threatening injuries. Not all hospitals have those capabilities.
@@katietheboneladyaa
it would also come down to do you fight to go with her on the helicopter and delay treatment, or do you let her go on alone to receive probable life saving treatment as fast as possible. As difficult as it would be, the latter would be the decision to make. And it would be a difficult decision, even had mom not fainted.
Why judge without listening carefully? Why people are always jumping to judge a mother, especially women. She literally came as soon as possible. Mothers already feel so much guilt, no need to make them feel even worse.
Of all the years I’ve worked in the medical field, I’ve never seen medical staff be more compassionate toward the victims, the victims families and each other. It makes me want to move to London, no kidding. I hope they realize how blessed they truly are. God bless you all. 😊🙏❤️🙏
You do realize that they’re aware that they’re being filmed?
Oh momma, you absolutely did NOT fail your daughter, no you didn’t and don’t think that way again!
To all these nurses and Drs, God keep you, send an Angel to each and every one of you…❤ Thank you for what you do ❤
So right. No matter how vigilant and careful you are, it only takes a split second.
Have you spent much time around large horses? Race horses have excitable temperaments and she absolutely did screw up and it almost cost them their child's life. Stop giving parents a free card; they are adults, mess up and in an obvious situation like this when caution should have been taken, she should understand that yes, it was her fault.
What a strange day! one patient is 1yr old and the other one is 100yr old.
The little girl who was kicked by a horse, this was totally preventable. You never, ever allow small children to be around horses. Something as simple as getting bit by a horsefly can set a horse to kicking. I can't believe people who run stables wouldn't know better!!!
……Vicki, couldn’t agree more. I’ve been riding since I was 8, & was always cautious, around ANY horse. Dealt with racehorses’, & pacers’, too. The parents seemed none too bright. Shame little toddler was hurt bc of their stupidity………
Agreed. My daughter was in the Equestrian sport growing up and it's amazing how many adults aren't cautious with their little kids. Everyone was getting ready for an event, and one child might be in it, and they let the younger one wander around. I saw a young child kicked in the forehead, by a rear hoof, right in front of me. About seven years old, wandering around the legs of tall thoroughbreds? Insane. It was a massive gash right across her forehead. She was lucky the blow didn't kill her on the spot. Heck, I'm an adult and I don't hang around the south end of a horse I don't know.
@@hilaryc3203 ……never walked close behind a horse, always gave the same distance at its’ rear, as was the actual LENGTH of the horse, that way I knew I was not within kic
@@hilaryc3203 ………contd………kicking distance of its’ hindquarters’……………
@@elizabethroberts6215 Since my daughter rode at competitions a lot, they would be really busy places with the riders getting ready and we saw a lot of moron parents putting their children at risk.
I had horses; never I left my kids for a second out of my eyes;
I’m so happy little Daisy was ok and didn’t need any surgery. She so fortunate to have one thing wrong and that was the cut to the forehead which needed stitches. She looked so adorable feeding the beautiful horse and then sitting on her lil horse at the end.
When Florence‘s daughter was describing how her mom helped her with her earaches and she started tearing up, I felt that pain. My mom passed away in 2017 and we were terribly close because I’m a type one diabetic and I was nine years old when I was diagnosed. Mom took such great care of me even though she had four other children and we always had that closeness. When I lost my husband suddenly in 2021, the one person I needed to talk to and have her hug me and say everything was going to be OK, was my mom. Her not being here has really affected me.
That one mother, whose son hurt his foot or leg, I felt was very uncaring. When she said she wouldn’t help him, I just shook my head and thought, thank goodness, I’m not that type of a mother.
Didn't you listen? Her skull was fractured all the way around, and they were concerned about the fracture by her eye socket. She had a bruise on the brain that could have turned into a dangerous brain bleed. From the outside, all they had to do was give her stitches, but it will take a long while for her skull to repair itself. That fracture could have been life changing, so there was a lot wrong. Why did you think she needed 2 1/2 months of regular check ups?
why couldn't dad hold his little girl! poor dad looked heartbroken the entire time
I think it could be because they didn't have spinal x-rays back yet, That is just my opinion,
@@luanngordon8639 yeah I did think it wasn't stable enough for little one yet I just noticed the look on his face when mum got to hold her and in saying that we saw only a few moments of this situation with the family
@@vivdunn3851 I felt so bad for that father! I was happy to see dad ask mom if she was OK, and then kiss her.
That's exactly what I was thinking, and what a lovely Dad he is right beside his wee Daisy the whole time, just the way he always wanted it.
Wonderful episode.
Thanks for the upload.
My brother was kicked by a horse when he was 5. He flew 30 feet. His jaw was broken and his jaw had to be wired shut. His head swelled to the size of a basketball and turned black from bruising. The Dr's said if it had been 8cm over his head would have split in half. He's now 44 and fine except he has Aspburgers from the head trauma. Hope the baby is well ❤ love from Toledo Ohio USA
I see a huge difference in the surgeon's there vs the US. Your surgeon's don't think they're above an ER Dr. Most of our surgeon's and specialists think they're above coming down when called.
I just finished having an angioplasty last Thursday and I couldn’t say enough good things about my whole experience. I’m up here in Vancouver Canada, and it was at the Royal Columbian Hospital in new Westminster. They were the greatest. And now it’s decided I have to go in and have bypass surgery open-heart surgery at the same hospital so I’m confident that everything will go right there because the doctors and nurses are top-notch!!😍😍🥰🥰
30:18 She only needed help around 96-97. Oh, that early eh!? lol
Born tough, in those days, like Daisy, now.
The grown man putting his hand down his pants and his mom had to tell him not to 🤦♀️ gross.
Dirty bastard😮😮
A mom of boys…no big deal . Lol
@@hollybiegel4345 lol except it’s not a boy. It’s a grown man.
I wondered about that if I saw right. I’m glad you mentioned it. Some cultures really don’t teach their kids that they don’t play with themselves in public. Imagine having all of us watching him do this and shaking our heads in disbelief that he would do something like that in public. It’s disgusting.
It’s too bad someone didn’t report him for doing that.
Alzheimer’s is the worst. Bit by bit, slowly and steadily it took my Mom away from me. It made me angry and broke my heart.
My Mum died of a heart attack before Alzheimer’s totally destroyed her mind.
It’s terribly sad to lose our Mothers. They are our champions; the one person who loves us unconditionally. I suppose I will always miss her.
I hope your Mom stays with you for a little longer. She can talk to you and is quite an amazing woman and she has her beautiful daughter loving her. That’s wonderful.
What happened to seasons 4-7? I think you got 2 season 3 episodes. I don't know where you get these from and what is blocked by RUclips, you don't reply to comments.
The end of season 2 showed them adding more cameras and cameras in the operating room but they didn't show any OR footage in the 2 or 3 episodes you posted and there was a lot more studio footage (talking to people on camera), how many of the extra cameras did they use in season 3?
I've seen most of season 3 on youtube but none of 4-7.Seasons 30 and 31 are also available.
@@lynnbean7200 I recommend 999 Critical Condition if you like the gorey side of medical shows. Operations, bones sticking out if the skin, etc
10:53 I know they love their child, but she is way too little to be playing around giant horses!
It's a horrible way for the parents to learn that lesson.
@@catbriggs8362 Just like babes who die in the backyard pool. You do not let babies out of your sight! She said I thought she was by my side, meaning, I took my eyes off of her.
Yeah...a little one being around loose horses is just not worth the risk...the horses could get into a minor argy bargy with one another and connect with her just because she's in the line of fire....not meaning to hurt her at all...but the result is the same regardless. Simply not worth the risk...
More care, supervision, is all. My Mom and Dad couldn't have prevented my younger sister from caring for the horses. It was in her blood, her breath.
@@mickieswendsen1302 we are talking about a toddler.
I can't understand how the adults around Daisy could let her walking around by herself around big horses for me that sounds careless of them 🤔
That's not how that works though. Mom was there but you can't really ask her to put her daughter on a leash. Daisy just wandered off, something probably spooked the horse, and she just happened to be in the way. One of the skills a child who likes to be on the farm needs to learn is how to approach and be around the animals safely and that basically consists of learning to read the body language and react accordingly but you can't learn that if you're not allowed near them. Children trip over things in the forest, they get basketballs and footballs launched at their heads, they jump of swingsets, do flips on the trampoline, fall of bikes, get into car accidents, stick their fingers between a closing door, rough play until one gets hurt, and so on. It's just life.
@@katego370 you can and should put your child on a leash when around 1000 pound animals, you think getting permanent brain damage is better than a leash? A 1 year old isn't wise enough to "learn how to walk in a farm" just irresponsible parenting. She has time to learn how to be safe and you can learn that from a distance, you don't need to get your brains stomped out to learn it. All other things you mentioned doesn't involve a 1000 pound animal with a mind of it's own who can go rampant.
You can make all sorts of ridiculous excuses but it all comes down to bad parenting.
@@DarkLumiya So do you also require parents to literally chain their children to their belts while they're getting the shopping cart or managing bags of groceries to ensure they cannot run off and get hit by a car? This is an unrealistic alternate version of reality.
I've spent half my life around horses, including over a decade at a riding school bustling with kids and adults of all ages around ponies and horses. Parents should not leave their children unattended with a horse and neither was this child. That does not preclude them from accomplishing simple tasks in their presence while keeping an eye on the child. However, any parent who has ever cooked dinner around their kid knows that "keeping an eye on them" does not literally mean never standing there, staring at the kid while the food is burning, that's not how life works.
Introducing children to activities that are inherently risky is and always will be risky. Children surf, swim in the ocean, ride horses, do gymnastics, run down the stairs, and jump on trampolines. Sometimes they get hurt. That doesn't mean the parents were reckless.
I disagree with all the commenters. I agree with you. The parent was derelict and should not have let the child be out in that case. That’s why they are called parents. They are supposed to parent the child, protect the child. The mum was trying to do too much and she sacrificed her child’s safety.
So rude answering the phone during a discussion with your doctor. Some people never learn.
Daisy's mother is an absolute twit , horse's are big strong animals why would you let someone so precious as your child be so vulnerable . My children were never left alone with our horse's always very supervised and never never left alone
Hey nurse, please don’t send your children to school with a sore throat or any other contagious illness. Thanks in advance.
……unfortunately, people tend to be stupid around horses’. That toddler should NOT have been anywhere near a horse, let alone a race horse.
Daisy's mother didn't step up to the plate.
Oh stop
I feel for the two year old girl but she’s one tuff girl 😊
What was that child doing around a horse??? Sheeech!
Both horse and child were out where they weren't supposed to.
Strange that they carried child to ER not knowing what her neck or head status was.
Yes, I was shocked at that too, you’d think pre X-ray the baby would be strapped to a stretcher.
I thought so, too.
Perhaps. But, I believe they wanted her to feel comforted by having physical contact.
All too easy to trip and drop a held child.
I think it's common for any parent whose child's been seriously injured or even abducted to have the thought I let her out of my sight for 2 minutes... But reading some of the comments here it's like these are perfect people who never make an error that leads to an accident even a serious one...
Personally I believe Mike should’ve been wheeled to xray n had someone with him n case of another seizure.
Uhh why do folks watch this to comment on what horrible idiots the parents or the patients are. Be reassured if you must that the parents or the patients are likely to blame themselves for their accidents. What if a stranger saw video of you at an unguarded moment when you made a mistake and judged you harshly?
The 100 yo lady has a face of a 60 yo. Best of luck Mum.
Maja reminds me of Jimmy Carr, she's the stamp of him 😂
WTF, is a 1 year old doing anywhere near a horse, period?
I absolutely love this show ❤
What happened to the step-grandfather Daisy came in with
What do you mean no whiskey,no gin?? Pretty sure people DO still drink them!!😂😂
Stupid people allowing a two year old near a horse onher own. I am a horse owner.......safety always comes first....she could have been killed this would have been manslaughter
Under age 2.
Yes pretty shocking...and a race horse -_-
……yep, lazy parenting, & their toddler paid the price.………
Very lazy parenting.
Such a small child should not have been around horses.
In Italia i medici di pronto soccorso fanno turni di 12 ore dalle 8/20
S10E03 "Always on My Mind"
As a Canadian I'm so terrified that none of us will ever be treated with this level of care/compassion or medical intervention in our senior years, ever have the chance to grow old and die of natural causes, or feel safe as we age. The new Canadian euthanasia program pretty much ensures that no Canadians will ever get close to being centenarians. And all Canadian seniors/ disabled and most vulnerable are terrified!
Come to America & it's known to not happen either.
I can understand your fear as I'm an old Canadian.
I won't go into a hospital here, and I fear and don't trust doctors as well... especially after the last few years.
@@CanMoose same here in Australia, I don't trust any hospital here anymore because of the last few years.
@@lealand423 that's easy to understand, and you'll live longer because of it.
I’m an older Canadian, and have had fabulous care. Albeit sometimes long wait times. Remember these films start after the waiting period / triage. Our Health services need more funding and more support.
Why does the older lady have bruises on her leg? Why didn't they put the little girl on a backboard
you do know we cannot answer those questions, right? What I could think of regarding the old lady: she must have been on bloodthinners, and we all bump our legs sometimes, and when a person is on bloodthinners, they can go all black and blue
A lack of circulation. My dad had that.
I'm 73, skin thins the older we get & I look like I've been beat from time to time.
She was SO small. By holding her close it protected her neck, and kept her warm
...cont'd...and comforted, so as to ward off SHOCK.
A one year old near a horse? Ok.....
The person responsible for your sub-titles should be fired!! I would be happy to a much better job for you all...
that's the RUclips subtitle system.... and yes, it's not always that good
Probably AI.
It's "voice-recognition" tech, which is so bad I don't know why they bother with it. It's only good for a laugh, e.g. the doctor talking on the phone saying "I'm a horse." Dunno about anyone else, but if I go to A&E I don't want to be treated by horses. Their fine motor skills are terrible. It's the hoof thing.
Sorry but Dr Maya scares me.
Daisy's " mother " "fainting" and still not being there.. that's suspicious...
People faint from emotionally traumatic events. Recovering from that well enough to drive a fair distance to the hospital would take a while.
Maybe she is feeling very bad and blaming herself. Our mind can be terrible to us!
Everyone reacts differently when traumatic events happen, especially when it's to your child.
Daisy Should not have been anywhere near a horse at her age. To See her back on a horse after her recovery is scary.
Get real. Horses are very obviously in her blood.@@bernadettescholl6000
How can you faint when your baby needs you the most? Seems like her mom wanted the attention
Maybe because the thought of loosing your baby makes you feel sick and faint? 🤦🏽♀️ Thats a horrible assumption
Daisy's parents should be arrested and prosecuted for child endangerment.