Here in the United States, When I went through nursing school (1960/70's) it was the scrub nurse's responsibility to help the surgeons prepare which included holding the gown
I worked for a dental specialist in the 1980s in Canada. Paper charts. We noted difficult patients as "PIA" - pain in the a**. Sometimes in bold, on the front
I hear nurses talking about personal info on other patients ALL THE TIME. I've told quite a few nurses to take their nurse talk to the break room while I was laying in my bed. I knew why half the people were in around me most of my visits
I think the point was the guy in that scene was a sexist egotistical doctor who had a history of giving the lady doc a hard time, and this was a little act of revenge on her part
The movie with the throat examination was about how impersonal the medical profession can act toward patients. Some doctors and systems treat patients like cattle in a barn. So, the guy being examined is a doctor that is a cold jerk of a doctor. Then, he gets cancer and has to go through all the cold, heartless treatments. So, the examination is supposed to be stoic, lack empathy, cold, overly procedural, and almost cruel. So, it appears the actress apparently did a great job. The male doctor comes out of it all with a new appreciation of being a patient. It makes him a better doctor by the end of the film. It's a pretty good movie. Being in the medical field, and a sometimes patient, I could relate to both sides.
I really like Dr. Khan! I’d REALLY love to see him react to clips from ER(especially THAT helicopter scene iykyk), Catch Me If You Can, M*A*S*H, Grey’s Anatomy, F Is For Family(especially the part when they speak about malaria & syphilis), Dr Strange, Dr Death(with Alec Baldwin), and even injuries from video games! One that comes to mind is in The Last Of Us part 1 & it’s continuance in The Last Of Us Left Behind, that would be really great! I particularly would love to see him react to the eventful clips in ER! There’s a lot of moral dilemmas brought up in all these movies/tv shows I mentioned & it would be fascinating to hear his take. Love these types of videos guys!
You guys should do some scenes from M*A*S*H the TV show. Focusing on the aspect of "Meatball Surgery" and how the Doctor feels about their circumstances
I remember the movie The Doctor. The patient thought she was terrible, even though she reminded the audience of the patient, himself a doctor with deplorable bedside manner.
1) In the UK you generally have to scrub up yourself, but that's not the case elsewhere e.g. US. 2) People do tend to jump a bit when you shock them. Not off the table like that but they do - odd that he thinks they don't. 3) MRI for a gun shot wound with random bullet/debris still inside? And MRI is too slow for true emergencies anyway - CT. 4) Aneurysms very frequently do have clots associated with them due to the abnormal blood flow, before any surgery has taken place. 5) In general, he says a lot of 'that x piece of bad practice would never happen' when what he should be saying is it never happen, but sometimes does. What a nice guy he seems like though, I'm sure he's a great GP.
male doctors constantly demean and dismiss their female patients so the seinfeld clip was more accurate than you'd think. i always advise women to seek female doctors.
Not really. You have to treat each patient the same regardless of background initially. Otherwise, you will accidentally skip things or not inform them about things they may not know. Also, you need to treat each patient like a breathing, feeling, scared individual. Once you get the lay person explanation completed you can go into more detail at the level of the doctor who happens to be a patient. Even fellow doctors don't know what another person in the medical field does day to day. Assuming they know more than Joe Blow about a specific issue leads to a possibly uninformed patient. I never tell any medical people I see what I do for a living as I've found they stop explaining things. If I knew what was wrong I wouldn't be seeing them.
Here in the United States, When I went through nursing school (1960/70's) it was the scrub nurse's responsibility to help the surgeons prepare which included holding the gown
Can't express how happy I am that somebody other than Conde Nast is doing these style of videos
I worked for a dental specialist in the 1980s in Canada. Paper charts. We noted difficult patients as "PIA" - pain in the a**. Sometimes in bold, on the front
I hear nurses talking about personal info on other patients ALL THE TIME. I've told quite a few nurses to take their nurse talk to the break room while I was laying in my bed. I knew why half the people were in around me most of my visits
Thank you 😊 can this doctor come back?
Oddly enough, when I went to college for medical assisting, our instructor had us watch The Doctor to show us how NOT to talk to patients!
I think the point was the guy in that scene was a sexist egotistical doctor who had a history of giving the lady doc a hard time, and this was a little act of revenge on her part
The movie with the throat examination was about how impersonal the medical profession can act toward patients. Some doctors and systems treat patients like cattle in a barn. So, the guy being examined is a doctor that is a cold jerk of a doctor. Then, he gets cancer and has to go through all the cold, heartless treatments. So, the examination is supposed to be stoic, lack empathy, cold, overly procedural, and almost cruel. So, it appears the actress apparently did a great job.
The male doctor comes out of it all with a new appreciation of being a patient. It makes him a better doctor by the end of the film. It's a pretty good movie. Being in the medical field, and a sometimes patient, I could relate to both sides.
I really like Dr. Khan!
I’d REALLY love to see him react to clips from ER(especially THAT helicopter scene iykyk), Catch Me If You Can, M*A*S*H, Grey’s Anatomy, F Is For Family(especially the part when they speak about malaria & syphilis), Dr Strange, Dr Death(with Alec Baldwin), and even injuries from video games! One that comes to mind is in The Last Of Us part 1 & it’s continuance in The Last Of Us Left Behind, that would be really great! I particularly would love to see him react to the eventful clips in ER! There’s a lot of moral dilemmas brought up in all these movies/tv shows I mentioned & it would be fascinating to hear his take.
Love these types of videos guys!
Elaine would be all right in Australia. A new GP can only access notes from a patient's previous GP if the patient consents.
You guys should do some scenes from M*A*S*H the TV show. Focusing on the aspect of "Meatball Surgery" and how the Doctor feels about their circumstances
I was really wanting to see how Dr Spaceman rated.
I remember the movie The Doctor. The patient thought she was terrible, even though she reminded the audience of the patient, himself a doctor with deplorable bedside manner.
“Obviously these scenes are depicted with the patient and the doctor in the same room which would never happen but here goes...”
1) In the UK you generally have to scrub up yourself, but that's not the case elsewhere e.g. US.
2) People do tend to jump a bit when you shock them. Not off the table like that but they do - odd that he thinks they don't.
3) MRI for a gun shot wound with random bullet/debris still inside? And MRI is too slow for true emergencies anyway - CT.
4) Aneurysms very frequently do have clots associated with them due to the abnormal blood flow, before any surgery has taken place.
5) In general, he says a lot of 'that x piece of bad practice would never happen' when what he should be saying is it never happen, but sometimes does.
What a nice guy he seems like though, I'm sure he's a great GP.
I don't think even medical professionals would find that joke funny. Well, perhaps if the medical professional was a Dad.
I'm confused, my Lateral Flow Test didn't come with these video clips...
Is there any truth in the mirror on the forehead and smoking a cigar?
Thalidomide
Could she have been checking if his tonsils/adenoids were swollen?
male doctors constantly demean and dismiss their female patients so the seinfeld clip was more accurate than you'd think. i always advise women to seek female doctors.
In fairness, knowing she's dealing with ANOTHER doctor may have her feeling she needn't pull her punches.
Not really. You have to treat each patient the same regardless of background initially. Otherwise, you will accidentally skip things or not inform them about things they may not know. Also, you need to treat each patient like a breathing, feeling, scared individual.
Once you get the lay person explanation completed you can go into more detail at the level of the doctor who happens to be a patient. Even fellow doctors don't know what another person in the medical field does day to day. Assuming they know more than Joe Blow about a specific issue leads to a possibly uninformed patient. I never tell any medical people I see what I do for a living as I've found they stop explaining things. If I knew what was wrong I wouldn't be seeing them.