The Unexplored Radioactive Hospital | Evacuated 13 Years Ago
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
- Today, me and @decayingmidwest become one of the first, and only people to ever step foot inside this hospital that has been stuck in time for over 13 years. From dishes and beds still set out for the patients, to top of the line medicine and technology now plagued by radiation and black mold. We brave security and jail time to get one last look at this piece of history before it is gone for good...
ps: thank you so much for 200k! I never expected this in a million years! Enjoy my first ever full youtube video!
----------------------------------------------------------------
SUBSCRIBE ⬇️
/ @2swag.productions
----------------------------------------------------------------
TALK TO ME ⬇️
/ discord
----------------------------------------------------------------
FOLLOW ME ⬇️
/ 2swag.productions
/ 2swag.productions
/ zrikbnxh
----------------------------------------------------------------
Music Credits:
Café Rest Theme
• Silent Hill OST - Cafe...
White Noiz
• Silent Hill 2 OST - Wh...
Mall Scene
• Silent Hill 3 Mall Scene
As a Japanese, thanks for creating such a video! A friend of mine lost his entire hometown due to the tsunami (and the house he grew up in) and mother died prematurely due to insane stress and left the father a widower.
I’m so sorry to hear for you. Many healing, peace and love to you all ❤
While I was watching this, I was like dude I bet this would be a hit in Japan for people to get just a sense of looking at it, I mean people that were there might even be able to watch this video and I love it. creator is not the type to damage or destroy things so this is like how I feel like there’s white knight hacking like this is ethical trespassing.
@@emilyannamanda he was actually sent multiple death threats for this video.
people are fucked up.
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢 ❤❤❤❤
@@blaine1234how do you know????????????????????????????????????????
16:45 That is likely betadine spill.
24:17 is an anesthesia machine. It's used for monitoring of a patients vitals, and administering of anesthetic gasses and similar things.
Like how when we work, music helps us to focus, in surgeries, many times music is played to help focus, or the dvd's would be instructional things on procedures they are doing, similar story with the TV,s in the operating theatres.
25:24 is a suction machine. When a patient's wound has a lot of say, bleeding going on, the machines would be used to suck out the liquid, which would make the view easier for surgeons, allowing them to see what they are doing easier.
25:32 those monitors were likely used to display patient vitals, such as their oxygen saturation, their pulse, their blood pressure, their temperature, and their hearts electrical currents.
28:00 that rice sort of stuff, is used with the anesthesia machine. When the patient is having anesthetic gas pumped into them, it has to exit somehow, so it goes through some tubing and into that little chamber. It removes the anesthetic gas so that it is closer to being normal air, then pumped through tubing in the hospital which is then released into the atmosphere. It is used to make sure we aren't slowly injecting anesthetic gasses into the air.
37:18 Urology is the study of the urinary tract and urination, so, the urinary bladder, ureter, urethra, and the organs used when urinating (peeing) and their care and treatment.
37:34 As previously stated, urology is all about the urinary tract and similar organs. Given it's location, special chairs must be used. These chairs are used to have the legs of the patient up and to either side of the body to allow full room for examination and treatment.
39:06 The anesthesiology part isn't very big, given that anesthesiology is most often in the operating theatres. That was likely a room like an on call sort of room, where people could do work at the computer, and rest on the bed.
40:50 The surgeries would, given the dept. is respiratory, would be about the respiratory system. That includes the lungs, the trachea, etc.
45:00 I've seen this mistake in here a lot, so I'm pointing it out. That itself is not the x-ray machine. In a way, it's like a film viewer. You place the finished x-ray on the box on the wall, called a light box, and it shines light through the parts of the film that aren't as dark, and it makes it easier to see the x-ray. Nowadays, x-ray films are mostly digital.
45:17 This room would likely either be PACU or pre-procedural. PACU is the post anesthesia care unit, where patients go after surgeries until the sedative wears off enough that they're awake, then they're either ushered off onto a ward, or allowed to go home. Pre-procedural is an area where patients go before their procedures, while IV's are placed, monitors are attached, and they wait for the patient to be ready and/or a procedure room to be available.
48:17 An endoscope room is a room where endoscopies would be performed. And endoscopy is either upper or lower gastrointestinal tract. Upper endoscopy, also known as a upper gastroscopy is where a camera on a flexible pole is inserted through either the mouth or nose of the patient through their throat and into the stomach to take pictures and/or samples of the food-pipe, stomach, and very beginning of the small intestine. A lower endoscopy, also known as a colonoscopy is a camera on a flexible pole inserted into the rectum to take photos and/or samples from the large intestine and end of the small intestine.
1:01:41 That is a centrifuge. The blood vials are placed in the machine, and then it spins really fast, and it separates the blood plasma from red blood cells, and stem cells etc.
1:02:55 Simple syrup is commonly used in compounding. Or the creation of medications at a particular dosage, or mixture of medications. The medications would be weighed, then incorporated with the simple syrup to make a liquid medication that could be taken. The simple syrup was a syrupy liquid, that had no flavor and was simply like a sucrose or glucose syrup. Simple syrup made administration of oral medications easy with paediatric patients
You didn't give a good outside view of the hospital, but I'm pretty sure this is an urbex of the same hospital.
ruclips.net/video/qSrbEaZXLYE/видео.htmlsi=1XmzDNHX8ZXVa-RH
For any questions about anything I mentioned in this comment, or things you're unsure about in the video, comment and I'll try to explain it! 😊
You are literally the best😩👌
@@FutureDoco yo this is awesome thank you for explaining! Also this is a different hospital than the video you sent
@25:32 is actually monitors for the x-ray machine (image intensifier). I'm a radiographer.
I knew there would be a medical intellectual watching this
!!!
@@justcallmedan301 Ah yeah, thankyou for the correction!
I had thought it was a light box so that the radiographer could put the physical copy of the x-ray on it, and it would make viewing easier.
You not only explored it, but you told the story of the place it once was and the disaster that caused it to become abandoned in the first place. Most urban exploration channels fail to do that, we appreciate you and the story you told of all of those who had sadly passed. ❤
Really appreciate this! 🙏 Thank you
@2swag.productions please be careful, this is so scary, they are already starting the demolition of the radioactive old hospital, they can return at any moment. 😮 Did you take that thyroid medication before venturing in there? Do you want to have children some day? Next adventure PLEASE GET A CONSULTATION WITH YOUR DOCTOR BEFORE SURROUNDING YOURSELF WITH CANCER CAUSING MATERIALS.
@@2swag.productionswatch the Expedition Unknown show of when they visited Chernobyl. 😮😮
PLEASE BE CAREFUL. 🙏 🙏 🙏
@@2swag.productions😊
Bro it was good
Hard to explain but...until just now I've had severe PTSD from hospitals.
Last 17 years I've spent a lot of time in them. Exams, tests, and multiple spine surgeries. Exploring this angle of hospitals has lifted a ton of weight off me. Thank you truly!
Goodluck man
Same with me!! I had 3 spine surgeries and I am terrified of hospitals
28:04
Glad I could help!
@user-zl4xr8gy4u we got this! Right!? We just gotta keep keepin on. 🤜🤛
Most people who make these kinds of videos just show a clip of the room and move on. But, he actually goes through the room and shows all the cool stuff. (Plus, I love watching this kind of content, especially when I can tell that the creator is passionate about it. I really like how excited and curious he is about everything.😭❤)
Thank you so much 🙌
Agreeable 👍
@@2swag.productionsare you okay did the radiation do anything to you?
@@CaIllii he died i guess
@@berzniki.18 fr?
Absolutely captivating video! The scary atmosphere of the abandoned hospital, combined with the haunting proximity to Fukushima Daiichi, really brings the history of this place to life. Your exploration offers a unique look into the after effects of the disaster, while also capturing the incredible resilience of the area.
Fantastic work ❤️
@@Andre-vy7uf thank you so much! I’m really glad you liked the video!! 🙌
Y’all are the bravest people ever
Really interesting how these places in Japan like this hospital are completely frozen in time. Even better to see they are not broken or vandalized by people, since it is sealed.
Japan probably deals with the least vandalism ever. The gen pop is very respective of property
That is a Japanese cultural thing rather than it being sealed. As you can see, any teenager could get in.
If this was a known abandoned place in the US, it would be demolished
@@tylersanders2388and looted with graffiti everywhere. Western youth and ppl in general are so uncooth
I would think if it were not for fear of radiation and security patrols, the more likely thing that would happen would be people trying to steal narcotics and expensive electronic devices.
Thank you for this! I do wanna say, PLEASE take care with protection, this is a super dangerous place to explore without proper equipment. Your work is incredible, and it would be awful to have your projects cut short due to avoidable medical concerns. You're doing a good thing, filming documentaries, but you have to take care of yourself.
Really good advice considering radiation can take over 100 years to fully leave
@@asantaimeep a Believe the bombing of Japan, the accident after the earthquake in Japan all the nuclear bomb test etc over the last 90 years can be linked to the rising amount of cancers we are seeing . Radiation like this isn't going to stay in one place and with jet streams it can go anywhere.
.just think if it takes a 100 years to fully go away that means humans on a daily basis are exposed to it.
Sure they can Ban explorations, etc to keep direct exposure to a minimum but radiation isn't going to listen.
Yes 😢
Thank you!! I noticed not one of them had proper PPE on!
Because the radiation levels were nowhere near as dangerous as they were made out to be
This should all be written in history books, but sadly, it is considered as a bad action or humiliation. Glad to see all of this could be recorded abd documented after some time after the events. Keep it up!
@BeauxCarterchannel I read that too
As a hospital/theatre worker, I will try and help with identification of some of the things you found. It's really interesting to see hospitals from different cultures.
@16:20 It looks like it is the instrument and sterile processing room. They would clean used surgical instruments in there. The big machine in the middle, unfortunately, is not a body incinerator is an autoclave. The instruments on the wall would be spares to go into sets / replace broken items. And yep, they are chissles which would be used for orthopedic and maxillofacial surgery. Such a shame as there is a LOT of money just sitting on the shelf there.
@19:00 if you work in the theatre, you need to wear clogs. These get cleaned regularly in a clog washer to ensure that the theatre stays clean. The ones on that rack would have belonged to the staff :(
@19:40 The fancy door would help keep the air (Laminar flow) in the theatres nice and clean as staff walk in and out to the 'sterile area' Once again there is a LOT of money in the rooms, anesthetic machines, operating tables we are talking hundreds of thousands of dollars worth.
@26:00 These are sterile covers for the lights, they go over the center (camera parts) so they are clean for the surgical team to move them as needed throughout the procedure.
@28:10 the rice/pellets are a disposable substance called soda lime. It's used to absorb carbon dioxide in the anesthetic machine circuit which the patient breaths out. They also play a role in keeping the circuit moisturized and change color as it is used. As for the cameras, it looks like they have a call-in system were they can record the whole surgery / operating theatre to live stream to other teams. This is normal practice now to ensure remote help/advice is available when required.
@28:50 Each case is an instrument tray. Instruments inside are sterilized as they go through the autoclave. Once opened they are either used or re-processed as required. There will be a tag on them for the name of the procedure they are used for.
@34:50 This looks like an ophthalmology waiting room/clinic. The machines are used to take pressure readings and photos of retinas.
@40:50 As it's a small surgical unit, I would guess the treatment room would be used for minor procedures on patients under either sedation or a minor general anaesthetic. That would be why there is a anesthetic machine and diathermy machine present, but no real recovery room.
@48:00 Endocope / Endoscopy is when a clinician places a camera to have a look inside your body. This would commonly be done to your gastrointestinal system (bum / throat) the stacker you see is the screen they would use to see the image. The Fishing rods are the cameras themselves. They have gastroscopes (top end) and colonoscopes (botton end).
@51:00 This is an interventional radiology lab. It is where they would do angiograms, insert stents, drains and so on under x-ray guidance. Really expensive bit of kit and impressive they placed it in such a small space. The mold would be due to the radiation shielding in the walls (I guess)
@51:40 The anxiety I got when you entered this room was at 100!! This is an MRI scanner and arguably the most dangerous room in the hospital. If it was turned on, the strong magnets would have pulled everything metal off your body into the hole. Most likely its been quenched (turned off by venting the gas inside). Impressive and once again expensive bit of kit.
@52:15 This is a CT scanner. You can tell the difference due to its thinner size. Still really expensive :(
This is quite a big post, and I hope its helped a little bit. There is loads in there and it is a shame that the assets are just being left to rot and not be used :(
Very helpful
Thank you!!
Thanks for the clarification. I even learned something thanks to your post.
Why do you say "theater employees"? Is that a common technical term? (English is not my native language)
And yes, I am also surprised that two complete MRIs are standing around and not being shipped off to another village hospital. But it may be cheaper to buy a new one than to use an old one.
@@ebrylkation9538@ ebrylkation9538 It's a Uk term, maybe different countries have different systems and employee resource pools. Where I have worked, the skillset required to work in theatres is so different in comparison to other areas they would ensure their staff were allocated to just surgical to ensure that they kept these skills up and they had staff available to perform procedures.
This video like a movie about teenagers who explore a ghost town after an apocalypse. Nice movie.
Tge security are zombies :3
@@SatansRightHandyup :>
@@SatansRightHandwhy are you called that!?
@@Gabi8pro8 i genuinely do not remember
@@SatansRightHand ok
love how respectful you are towards everything, both the situation and by not destorying or causing destruction, great vid.
That’s like the best part of the video to me
I do not see this type of video documentation (careful & non-destructive) as reprehensible or criminal, but rather as investigative.
Have waited a long time for a video, have looked at ur guys short over and over again very happy you guys made a full long video:))
More to come! Thank you so much!
@@2swag.productionsI found u today and watched all ur vids
I too had seen a video a few months ago and then that day I watched all the videos 😂❤But I was waiting for a long video which has already come🥹♥️
6:55 yeah idk why but u really wanna go to prison😂😂for 30 days or 29 days 23 hours 59 min and 59 second😂😂😂😂
@@2swag.productions make one at the train dummy hospital
Hey just wanna clear somthing up rq, I’m pretty sure what you thought was the “morgue” or incinerator is more likely a autoclave and the disinfecting area of for the tools and hospital supplies they used. That big gray box is called an autoclave and basically used very high temps and steam to disinfect tools and stuff.
I agree, I was a dental nurse and we had a similar set up (on a much smaller scale of course) even the instruments were similar. Like the “scissors” which are actually forceps
You`re correct. When you find the morgue you will know you found the morgue 🥲
hearing all of those people's screams as they ran from the tsunami is truly terrifying bro
Yes i cant even belive what feeling it was the people who died i feel very bad for them😢
Fkn GLOVES dude lol. Wear them in places like that.
Sees biohazard boxes.... Touches them barehanded.
Cool video though.
These are real men 💪💪💪🤭
The amount of dedication it takes to make this is insane! Im also glad you were able to preserve at least a little bit of history from that day 😮
Japan can NOT catch a break😭🙏
Also radiation I guess
不法侵入し、刑務所に入るリスクがあるにもかかわらず、このタイムカプセルを共有し、このストーリーを共有してくれて本当にありがとう。私は関係者を知っていたので、これを見て寒気がしたが、人々はこの視点からこのひどい時代の出来事を知るべきだ。素晴らしいビデオ 👍
Finally - finally you uploaded video, not only short. I would prefer this rather than short so i would know what kind of place that was.
March 11 - 2011 it's really disaster for Japan, it leaves deepest trauma for the people's. More than 70.000 people's died or missing.
Many left behind in Fukushima prefecture because nuclear reactor leaking.
Your English is very enjoyable to read. It’s broken just enough to be charming and endearing while also effectively communicating your ideas ❤
It really is a tragedy though, the Fukushima incident I mean. Many lives were cut short like flowers yet to bloom. I only hope that the victims and families of the victims from this accident can one day find something resembling peace.
@@LoafofSourdough
I agree. I hope nobody gets offended by your comment. I didn't read it as anything judgmental.
I think different levels of alternative language fluency are amazing in themselves (learning languages is difficult: I know I suck at anything outside of English).
I'm always amazed by people communicating so concisely in languages that aren't their native one/ones. Just speaking in general, not necessarily only this comment.
There were around 20,000 dead from that disaster
😢😢😢
Very horrible event in Japan
i seriously appreciate not only the context of the place, but you paying your respects to those who weren't able to have a happy ending. i feel it's an important part of this type of hobby to pay honor and respects to the victims of the disaster who were trapped here.
My problem with exploration videos is that I think I'm playing a horror game and that at any moment a monster will jump on the screen as soon as he opens the door 💀
Ikr
I was waiting for a jump scare that just never came 😅😂
This is ur illustration bro go and explore new things
This channel seriously is the only one that actually shows everything of significant about this hospital, it was really incredible to see it all truly. I’ve seen others film, but not like this... this video is a treasure, a wonderful capsule. Ill be waiting and looking forward to more excellent content.
i was crying for 30 minutes “where is your friend?!” i was so concerned he got caught 5 minutes in😂
Same 😂😭
"Oh, a full biohazard bag."
*Touches it with bare hands*
Ye Oof
Real men 💪
Finally 2swag posts a full video 😩😩
Yo TP love your videos !!!!
TP!!! I LOVE UR VIDEOSSSS ❤❤
ALSO HIIIII
Yo its him
Yooo wat up tp
Holy shit- who would’ve guessed, an urban explorer watched another urban explorer
The “stop stop stop making noise” made me laugh. It’s your foot but it was so tense on not giving yourself away.
Great vid!
See its people like this. I love yall because you respect the space. I wish everyone was like this. I hate seeing places frozen in time and shortly after being completely trashed because people want to be dumb. All they do is take away from anyone elses experience and enjoyment of the space and that sucks.
This earthquake is very dangerous. The place where I live at the time was shaking a lot, so I immediately turned on my computer and checked the news. The news was quite shocking. I never want to experience something like this again. (The place where I live was safe. I'm still alive.)
By Japanese people
PS: I shared this video with many friends.
Hi there, which place of Japan do you reside in? And also are there any people who were able to return to their homes in Fukushima ? I really want to know man, I feel bad seeing their homes scattered and trashed 😢 I really wish they can go back and build their homes again
@17:55 -- not the morgue. You are in their Central Processing Department, where they wash, package and sterilize surgical equipment. The body incinerator is actually a giant sterilizer/autoclave. They also collect biohazard trash from surgeries to package it for pick up.
Exactly the comment I was coming to see if anyone else made LMAO
4:14 20:50
19:49 This is a disinfection chamber. It gets used in Hospitals when the doctors go into the operation room or an intensive care unit because It's very risky if any bacteria or germs get into the body while operating or people with a very bad imune system get sick while on an intensive care unit. The go into the chamber, desinfectant gets blasted out of the tubes and then they go out.
It's honestly just so cool and fascinating too see abandoned places and to just witness how it looks like time is still and frozen from when they were abandoned!! Wonderful video and respect to you for not trashing the inside and just good heartedly exploring it, examining history!
your voice is so soothing😭 love this sm, i appreciate how you went into depth about everything in the rooms. all of this stuff is really fascinating
Please make more of these. Barely edited and super fascinating footage makes for 10/10 youtube entertainment
dead fr , people be over editing and trying so hard to grab attention when something like this just being geniune and raw with minimal editing is way more enjoyable
Seriously I’ve seen videos talking about what to do next to entertain people and they are just honestly seeking genuine people and this is the type of thing genuine people watch, I have a real life and I’m still willing to sit and watch this on a Sunday morning 🧠😎
You earned my sub. The way it was presented , the way you respected the place a the balls to actually go here have just earned you a new subscriber. You sir are an urbex legend. Amazing video!
Let's goooo dude you've finally released this video! Keep it up brotha 🔥🔥
🙏
@@2swag.productionsto racism japanese people
@@2swag.productionsno joke
I live in Australia. At the time I lived in Brisbane but my grandad lived in Caloundra on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland. A gentleman here had a geiger meter set up in his backyard. It started going off and he was reading the radioactivity from the explosion here. Caloundra is 7, 295 kilometers from Fukushima.
I remember a friend of mine had a scintillation meter, and a portable spectrometer (I know a lot of nerds lol) and picked up some cesium from that time, not sure if it was from the winds carrying stuff from Fukashima or from Chernobyl but it was around april in 2011, so it could have been a spike from there, but there is still so much floating around from every other nuclear event it's hard to tell. This was near the seacoast, north east US.
the radiation was moved in the opposite direction to Aus and studies into it showed no radioactive caesium or iodine from the Fukushima accident was detected in Australia.
@@wheeman999 You googled that didn't you and copied and pasted it. Good on you for doing your own research. All I can say is wind changes direction and although it may not have been detected officially, he swears by his readings 🙂. Have a good night mate.
The lack of protection is the scariest thing in this video
Not only do abandoned buildings have disease from animals and mold but the amount of radiation there cannot be safe
I can’t believe he actually risked being in jail for this masterpiece it’s absolutely amazing to see history especially from abandoned hospitals from like 2011 it’s so like cool!
I don’t know Japanese but I am medically trained and noticed a lot of very expensive stuff. It was super interesting to watch! Thank you so much for preserving this place through this video. it’s truly amazing to see what happens with places frozen in time. never could have Imagine how my workplace could look if it would have been just abandoned in short notice
A Compendium of things I noticed;
10:54 - appears to be a triage area for the nurses; its right next to the nurses station at the beginning of the hallway headed to patient's rooms
12:14 - those are just desktop PCs
13:13 - that is probably a trauma/emergency room
13:32 - those are glass tipped medications; you snap the tip off with glass cutters for an already sized dose, as well as other various apparatus like an oxygen mask and a pressure meter
14:25 - these appear to be a potential unique type of syringe tip
16:40 - several others have already explained that that is an autoclave; a machine for sterilizing instruments, that liquid is probably oil or blood. please wear more protection from now on.
18:10 - those are used to hold your incisions in place and gently move things out of the way
18:33 - this is used to make presurgical measurements and markings
18:36 - those are forceps, they're used to hold things in place
19:00 - that's just a normal shoe rack so you don't contaminate sterile things and a sterile environment
19:49 - that's how you would normally enter the sterile environment and be decontaminated to clean and repackage tools
19:55 - that, is in fact, a big sink to wash hands before surgery
21:21 - those are most likely a souped up version of a magnifying glass used in surgery for better view during micromovements; it could also record footage of the surgery for later analysis like the light with a lens on it
22:23 - this appears to be a very large forceps; most likely used for surgeries in which the chest must be completely opened
22:50 - in the future it may not be such a good idea to open medical coolers that haven't been refrigerated in a decade, serious biohazard
23:05 - how do you expect them to lock in and work good without good jams? lmao
23:16 - you are correct; this table is made so it can be morphed to many different positions you may be in when surgery begins. not all procedures have you lie on your back.
23:24 - that appears to be a suction machine; there is blood in there from the patient who was in operation last and was not properly disposed of. as you might imagine, blood can and will get in the way of what you're trying to see when in surgery.
24:12 - while I can't say for certain *exactly* what those are, I would assume given the context that these are likely iodine solution which is usually used to sterilize open wound sites in general, whether surgical or when you go to get a piercing.
25:32 - these are most likely set up for imaging; in some procedures some incisions are made to insert very small cameras and other incisions are made to insert very precise needles, these two technologies work together to perform a lot of minimally invasive surgery and was a very big breakthrough for a lot of procedures
25:50 - those aren't gloves; they're a medication, the dosage is on the box, but someone who can read japanese will have to identify this one for me
26:00 - these look like bigger versions of the same suction storage you saw full of blood earlier; except these appear to potentially be the kind that hooks up directly to the wall supplied suction
26:51 - you are correct; those are leaden smocks for x-ray imaging
28:11 - others have also mentioned this as well; this is used to keep certain gaseous medicines dry and in gas form by absorbing moisture. the machine is used for giving general anesthesia.
35:02 - I believe this is either a tonometer or an autorefractor for ophthalmology, but it doesn't look like any of either I've ever seen or could find.
37:19 - urology is your pee care team; you'll see them about stuff related to that
37:35 - that is a gynecological chair, the stirrups are for a biological female's feet or legs to rest in for easy examination; this happens every time you visit a gynecologist pretty much.
37:38 - the way you said this almost broke my heart knowing that's not what urology is and someday you'll find out. this room was clearly used for gynecology or obstetrics instead of urology however based on the equipment in the room. no, they ain't doin surgery on your junk right there, just normal examinations. count yourself lucky dawg.
38:30 - given the fact that it seems like they repurposed a lot of urology for OB/GYN this is probably more likely used to display ultrasounds; an ultrasound display was present next to the gynecological chair, and it is extremely common imaging for monitoring uterine health and pregnancy as they pose no threat to your insides.
39:15 - this is an anesthesiology consultation room; it's common and standard to collect information on the patient before general anesthesia, as the dosages must be tailor-made to the individual
40:54 - most likely, this room was probably used for simple minimally invasive surgeries. it's very close to the front and to anesthesia. the "guns" on the lights are just handles without their replaceable sterile covers
41:50 - more surgery machines behind it; an anesthesia doser, a suction machine, a rolling sterile tray for tools and a nonsterile for used tools, iodine and bandages etc.
45:31 - it looks like a scale of some kind, but i also think it could be something else due to the amount of displays and inputs. the room appears to be a physical therapy and rehabilitation room.
46:04 - this is an extension of the previous room; this allows people with limited mobility to work on regaining it in an environment with less weight but slightly added resistance.
46:34 - in japan, english is taught in general schooling as a second language.
48:23 - endoscopy refers to the technique of inserting small cameras to examine parts of the body with the least amount of invasion.
48:40 - this is where the endoscopy takes place; you can see the displays for imaging and other important surgical tools and machines present. endoscopies are surgical procedures.
48:45 - these are the cameras which are inserted for an endoscopy.
50:27 - that is an imaging machine of some kind, most likely a large x-ray, it appears this frame is centered on the x-ray's wall-oriented beam. the bed is used to get top-down and side profile x-rays, you can see the top beam a moment later.
51:53 - those doors do stop you from entering especially when that machine is operating. the giant magnets in an MRI machine are incredibly dangerous when turned on, especially if you have something magnetic on you. the electromagnetic fields in the magnets are huge and that's how they get the imaging out of it.
52:24 - this appears to be a CT scan, not an MRI, which would explain the second room. it's not redundant, it's a different kind of imaging. it would make sense why this would be sealed away a bit more as well, as CT scans use computer-aided targeted x-rays. the presence of the leaden smock adds to these context clues.
53:16 - the reason they have so many x-ray machines is to suit different purposes; your local US hospital most definitely has newer versions of all of these. some are portable, for use in patients rooms or emergency use, while the bigger ones are for more detailed and diagnostic things such as bone fractures and such. even your local emergency care in the US will likely have all of these, even maybe the portable one.
56:41 - most likely, those are shoes belonging to the coroner and their assistants. they would likely remove these before entering sterile PPE in favor of operating slippers.
58:26 - this is where all of your blood, urine, fecal and other samples when you are being treated at a hospital are tested. this is a giant biohazard of a room as there are extremely strict regulations on sample storage which likely were abandoned with the lab. anything being cultured here or living in any samples has been left to culture for a decade plus by now, which is why the mold is so much worse here than other places.
59:29 - the machines you pass by here are a centrifuge (a giant fidget spinner you put smaller vials into which spin to separate RBCs from blood serum for testing) and what i am pretty sure is a blood swatching machine which perfectly smears blood samples onto a microscope slide, meaning there is no more human error in preparing slides of blood and no waste of sample.
1:00:00 - this appears to be images of a field of view of a sample of stained abnormal red blood cells; they are imperfectly circular and jagged at the edges suggesting some kind of disease of the blood or improper red blood cell production. if these are in fact red blood cells that person is not healthy.
1:00:41 - you are mostly correct, these are mostly live cultures that spilled and now appear to be growing on the floor supplied by all that agar left abandoned.
1:00:52 - these look like stains for preparing samples for view. stains make it easier to see the form of cells they attach to as well as the insides of the cell, such as granuoles and nuclei.
1:01:10 - those are not samples, they are tests, dyes and other testing related chemicals that have specific refrigeration requirements
1:01:41 - that is a really really big centrifuge, as mentioned earlier it spins samples and their contents separate by density.
1:01:57 - i am very unsure but this appears to be a spectrometer, this is used to test liquid samples for certain things like density and concentration
1:02:55 - this is not medicine, its a liquid sweetener. maybe they put it in liquid suspension medications, maybe they put it in their tea, hard to say
i hope this satisfied literally anyone ever's curiosity on what anything in this video is or might be. if i misidentified something please please please comment cuz i wanna know too. gr8 video btw
holy crap dude
thanks!
@@2swag.productions loved the video medical stuff is my jam i sadly had to give up my dream of working healthcare. keep it up but please please please be safe 💕
Thanks there were some things that didn't know
I literally subscribed a few weeks ago and you’ve dropped a full blown video ( after I couldn’t get enough of your shorts! )
Your voice is perfectly fine, it’s quite soothing actually! (if it isn’t AI)
Super proud of you for doing this, by the way, keep the good work up ❤
Haha thank you 🙏 And no my voice isn’t AI 😭
Anaesthesiologist here, 19:00 no it's not where they take the shoes off deceased people ; in ORs and often even in morgues, you're supposed to wear special rubber shoes like these crogs, which can be desinfected afterwards. When you're done, you're placing your shoes on one of these racks and they give them on this rack to disinfection
28:00 this "rice" isn't to extract anaesthetic gases, its to clear the air from carbondioxyde so you can "re-breathe" some part of the air (doing this, there is less loss of humidity, warmth and anaesthetic gas which all together, is mor economic and better for the patient)
Let me know if you have more questions to any devices in the video
Thanks for the insights. I learned something.
It's fascinating to see what time does to places that have been left behind, and I really appreciate how careful and quiet you were while exploring the building. I personally find that it's important for people to not only hear the stories, but also see the impacts from disasters and other unfortunate events that have occurred, even if they were from over a decade ago. So also a thank you to you and your friend for showing this to us. Hope you guys stayed safe and continue to do so with future explorations :]
If you ever visit an abandoned hospital that’s stocked up like this, you should be very careful. In anaesthetics paralytic drugs are used, and they could stop your breathing and kill you if you are exposed to them.
I like how they touch on the subject with respect 👍
Thank you so much for telling the history of this hospital and being respectful!❤
Saw a few of you wanting to know what certain things would be, tried my best, please if I am wrong or someone wants to add feel free:
13:00- Some glass vials with medicines, could be anything that is drawn up with a needle
16:51 i dont think it us a kitchen it looks like sterilising ovens bc the trolleys are full of metal trays //morgue maybe not sure. There are chisels, osteotomes, other orthopedic tools
20:0 definitely where they would wash and scrub up
20:39 Anesthesia stats machine, it just monitors patients stats it's where the anestesist would normally sit at the head of pt
21:20 Microscopes to use during surgery. They get draped so they are sterile while operating
21:57 you can see an arched machine this is an old Xray machine.
22:31 lookd like a guillotine to cut wires or rods for like spinal surgeries
23:05 Very common for music to be playing during surgery
23:26 definitely blood! Thats a machine wher the sucker usually a yankeur or dmth like that gets plugged into and then they throw away the bags and refill the plastic pot with another bag so it can get full again
23:57 Again a microscope, very common in Spine procedures in the cervical area
24:19 anesthesia stats machine to monitor pt
25:58 theatre light covers. They put them over the little tube below the lights and they are sterile so surgeons and scrubbed up ppl can change the light direction without getting unsterile
26:47 Xray gowns to protect when taking xrays in theatre
28:09 as some other commented these are to maintain the correct levels of oxygen from going to the patient, it recycles air extracting Co2, during surgery they start turning blue and it is indicating when it is totally blue that it needs to be changed
28:35 at the bottom all sterile trays full of medical instruments ready to use, the blue tag should be unbroken for them to be sterile and they have an expiration date
35:01 eye checking machines
35:34 eye testing lupes
37:39 similar to a gyneo chair to put your legs up
39:20 machine to the left is ultrasound machine
41:06 the “guns” are for the light covers that I was saying about earlier to move them
41:48 some more little rocks for the gas exchange while patient is asleep
42:10 i think just blood vials for samples
42:29 red bib for sharps
42:56 the sheet is so thin and it seems weird bc it was likely for day surgery cases which don’t require full GA. Also probs room to put anaesthesia/blocks
45:25 probs a machine for a stress test
45:50 stair in the corner is for rehabilitation, same as the pool seen later on
47:38 more sharps bins with the yellow cans
48:41 endoscopy is when they put a little cam to see inside of you
50:26 XRAY machine again. The arch spins to have the part where you shoot the xray into the patient to then imprint on the little receiver behind it. YOu can see the top being covered in a plastic bag which is to keep it sterile
51:19 MRI machine
56:15 Morgue definitely this time
1:00:08 print of some sort of tissue tinted seen on microscope
1:00:42 petri dishes to grow cultures
1:01:48 I believe to centrifuge small vials, but not sure
holy crap thank you !!!🙌
First "morgue" is pathology I believe. Supplies and tables for dissecting organs, body parts, etc.. plus the small incinerator/sterilization machine and all of the fancy tools without a full wet table like an autopsy room would have.
Being able to trace the content of the petri dishes back to the original purpose and investigate their long term development would surely be invaluable.
@@phoenix4560 To be honest most likely the results were uploaded to a digital data base and reports were sort of up to date I imagine. Hopefully not still done by paper but if it was an investigation lab it's quite sad as it takes loads of time to build certain researches to the same point. However, if it was more to do with samples of patients, as sad as it is petri dishes are mostly use for swabs of bacteria so probably not as catastrophic as it could have been, but could be completely wrong jaja
53:13 while being an xray machine it is a sonogram to xray boobs and check for cancer
I would love to see someone use this as a reference to preserve this point in history in a game or something, even just modeling it so people could explore it on their computer.
I would love to explore abandoned places but I'm to scared
Weak ass
Fr bro what if someone pulls out the Aztec death whistle while you’re exploring
@@DisastrousKevinthat’s what they did in a short
Js know its cannon if you did die
just dont go alone and do ur research on the place before to know what kind of security stuff they have.
I love being able to learn the history of places like this with slightly detailed videos of the places and I enjoy it more when people who record this kinda stuff are respectful of the places they visit! love your content
Hoping a medical expert sees this video and is able to do a breakdown of what everything is that you saw, and what their condition means (ex: why do some of those things have little rocks in them and not others, does this mean there was an examination about to happen or happening at the time? etc)
It's an anesthesia gas machine. It delivers a controlled mix of oxygen, anesthetic gases, and sometimes air to keep a patient unconscious and pain-free during surgery. It also removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from exhaled air.
The small pebbles in the machine is typically soda lime, that absorb CO2 from the exhaled air. This allows clean air to be reused safely in the breathing circuit.
Soda lime granules in an anesthesia gas machine start as (off-)white. As they absorb carbon dioxide, the color changes due to an indicator dye, usually turning purple or blue when they become saturated and can no longer absorb CO2. This color change tells when the soda lime needs to be replaced.
So if the building was abondened, it could indicate that the machine hasn't been used since the building was abandoned, as the soda lime would normally change color (to purple or blue) if it had absorbed CO2 during use. Also, if the soda lime is still in good condition, it suggests that the environment has been relatively stable.
Hey! I added some timestamps with what I recognised :)
@@rikleferinkthank you!
its a hospital with hospital stuff in it.
hospital stuff, very elaborate explanation
Your shorts are really interesting to watch, and it’s cool that you dropped a full length video shortly after I discovered you! Thanks for risking a lot of things to view this piece of history, and for being respectful.
Dude, amazing work on this video. The production quality is top notch. I've been sharing this with all of my friends and you know I had to instantly subscribe. This is the most impressive video I've seen on RUclips this year. It's amazing that you were able to publish the world's first proper public documentation of this.
I got your video in my recommended and i'm so happy I clicked on it, it's absolutely fascinating! I love your passion and excitement and how much attention you pay to every detail. Like others said, you actually take time to properly explore and show all the cool stuff you find, which I love. It's a pleasure to watch. Also, completely random, but your hushed soft spoken voice in this video is some great unintentional ASMR Very relaxing :)
Wow this is so well made! You have a bright future keep up the good work! Also thank you for always being respectful when exploring 👍
Thank you so much!
DUDE.. I love how you guys not only tell the backstory and history about the places you explore, but actually have fun and enjoyment from this. I’ve seen people only do this for clout, but I know this is different. I love how at 31:31 you say “this is so pretty” and with full genuine feelings. This MIGHT be my fav yt channel ever. Whenever I’m down I always find a way to binge your vids. Pls keep making this type of content.
all of the video i was so concerned for this guy. no gloves is crazy
Dude. This is…the best urban exploration video ever. I’ve been to some amazing spots that could only possibly be one upped by this.
Thank you 🙌
I was hoping for a 10 minute video but this just saves my evening
Not adding too much music really helps understand the eerieness of a place and the whispering voices, it is good
These devices can be purchased legally and some are pretty cheap. If you want me to approve any excursion like this[to the point, I'd join you] just leave and don't return to any radiologically contaminated area until you get at least 1. I've looked at a radioactive sample right before my eyes and you can't see these dangers with the naked eye. The, 'heat' is probably not the same in all the areas. You don't know how much radiation you're exposing yourself to through these acts. You don't want cancer, you seem like Kewl people. I can appreciate this and I would gladly explore places like this, but you have to be safe and protect yourself at all times.
Agree!! And better masks! Who knows what kind of viruses and bad bacterium you were exposed to!
Cracked me up when he called those pink things whistles 😂😂 great job though!
What are they
The nice thing about the security is it kinda preserves the place, not much chance for vandals to muck about
You’re so respectful! It’s great that you don’t vandalize or displace things. :) Great video!
He got called disrespectful by japanese people and media + recived insane ammount of death threats from japanese people
(new to the channel) man for 13 years that place still looks like it's in a solid state. (aside from the occasional gutting and tearing, and mold which could be cleaned professionally)
it's sad to see all that tech inside just left there though, especially the computers. I mean imagine turning one on and getting greeted to either the Windows XP startup or Windows 7/Vista. I don't know why they never bothered taking that stuff out and I hope all that gets salvaged before demolition. (unless it's dangerous to do so because of the exposure it got to, I don't know)
I could be wrong but I believe the reason the hospital never reopened and they never salvaged the tech was solely because of the radiation. The estimated half-life for nuclear radiation, last I checked, was 12,000 some-odd years. Even with fallout cleanup crews the area won’t be safe to inhabit anywhere in the near future. It’s a real shame that all the books, technology, medical research and the building itself will be lost to history, but it’d be even more of a shame if we threw away human lives in the pursuit of preserving human inventions. The risks outweigh the rewards 100/1, so it’s an unfortunate necessity to scrub it from the face of the earth.
I could be wrong though, I’ve been known to jump the gun on things I’m halfway educated on. If anyone has any addendums or corrections they’d like to make, be my guest.
@@LoafofSourdough Yeah I guessed that may have been the reason they left everything in there even awhile later but wasn't clearly sure about it. I mean I'm glad they focused on only the patients when they were evacuating.
@LoafofSourdough but they are already building the new Hospital close by... so they will be moving people back into the area sooner rather than later...
@@LoafofSourdough but they build new hospital in same place, like maybe 20 meters away. So there can't be any radiation unsafe for people to live there. He shows us new hospital, so you should saw it. Also radiation isn't same for all nuclear bombs, so saying 12,000 years is bullshit. Especially when radiation lvl drops to safe lvl much sooner and this time is for radiation to be 0. But common is 30 years. Which compared to your 12000 is nothing. I am curious why u said 12,000 years when clearly people live there after 13 years and they probably were there much sooner. Even if you don't have much knowledge, you at least should use some logic.
Coodies, gremlins , radiation, from a nuke plant.
Ya know that sh t will hurt you ?
For many yrs after.
The machine at 19:02 is more likely used to burn bio hazard stuff rather than a body. Since there no Urns around it’s seems also unlikely that it’s used for that.
It's an autoclave
Wow 1 hour! I'm blessed🙏
“Im pretty sure that’s just soy sauce” made me chuckle 🤭
As someone whos an avid proper people watcher, y'all give me that kinda vibe. Glad I found y'all through a video on X.
Honestly it looks like a teaching hospital. The camera in the surgical light is for review. There are multiple eyepieces on the DaVinci robot, one for the the surgeon and one for a resident to watch. The second surgeon's viewer wouldn't be that close.
You weren't in the morgue. That was orthotic surgery, hence the hammers and chisels. The thing you thought was an incinerator was an autoclave. Coupled with the amount of instruments it looks like that was where they cleaned their tools.
Every surgery room is negative pressure, which is why the entrances are so elaborate.
The whole place is a mess, I'm guessing, because it was hit by a ginormus earthquake.
The stuff with the O is OPTICAL. Looked like they did routine eye exams.
Urology is primarily about the kidneys, bladder, and ureters. It's also male health focused.
I find it odd that such a state of the art facility used lightboards to view xrays. Digital xrays existed in 2011, and they use a fraction of the radiation of traditional film based xrays.
The surgery thing with the space ship deal wasn't for surgery. It was for exams, likely female pelvic exams.
The binary pool is for hydrotherapy. It's a form of physical therapy.
Endoscopy is GI. The fishing rod things are tubes with cameras attached that they put down the esophagus for stomach exams. The moniters are for the camera, measurements, and readouts.
The big round thing with the tube is an MRI scanner. The VA I go to also has 2 of them. It's fairly common.
I was trained in pathology assisting, and I can tell you that is one BEAUTIFUL autopsy suite. It has plenty of space and a large sink. It's prominently placed on the first floor, again pointing to this being a teaching hospital. I'm surprised you didn’t go into the basement. The actual morgue is body storage, and I would have liked to see how many coolers they had.
The thing you saw for vials is a centerfuge. It seperates blood components.
Too bad you didn't have time to see more. You weren't given the oppertunity. You snuck in.
Anyway, cool but reckless and careless.
This actually gave so much insight to what I was seeing, I truly had no clue about like 95% of the stuff in there so thank you so much 🙌
i really enjoyed the reverence, wholehearted curiosity, and overall respect you approached this exploration with :) really awesome to hear your reactions, it’s very clear that you’re super passionate about what you do and that adds a lot of depth to the video! can’t wait to see more content from you :)
Every single abandoned place fills me with sorry and curiosity...
at 18:00. that room is for cleaning medical equipment. the machine in the center, its an autoclave. they're used to sterilize all the chisels and clamps you saw. hospitals generally don't have incinerators. at least not in the west, Japan might be different. but ether way, no incinerator will have a window into the chamber.
the yellow machines with tubes on them. one of the ones that were full of a red liquid. those are suction units. they red liquid is indeed blood, and water, and bile. and whatever other nasty stuff leaks out of a person when you cut into them. they're used to remove that liquid so the surgeons can see what they're doing.
As a medical pro I can confirm that the fluid you stood in about 19:00 is some sort of decomp, it very much looks like decayed flesh. Bodies eventually liquify.
oh my god
I’m not even an expert but I bc e he said “bio hazard boxes” and “I think this is the morgue” I was like that’s definitely dead people juice
This is so laughable. You can confirm, eh?
U cant confirm anything with out being there and testing it yes it prob is a bodily fluid. wat is a medical pro?? U deadset sound like a stooge
@cammos you don't know what. a "medical pro" is?
U saying stop it while still making noise was funny ngl
You gotta wear a respirator mask and goggles to protect yourself from the mold friend
Yeah, I was more thinking about the amount of radioactive dust.
Alpha radiation does more damage if it goes inside the body as it is stopped by something as thin as paper like the skin, so the radiation can't escape the body.
Whereas gamma is more dangerous from the outside as only thick lead can stop it, so it'll go right through you and do the damage that way.
Good idea. Using your friend as a decoy so filming inside the hospital can commence. Brilliant!
44:37 - "Ortho is bone right? so this is like bone room" tell me why this is actually really funny
I'm really glad that when you went exploring the hospital you were very respectful
Sorry I heard got u banned from Japan but footage was fire 🔥 I didn't know people would dare themselves and u entering Fukushima hospital. U are freaking dare devil 😈 👍
What seriously?
@@kittymeow90 bro got banned by illegally entered Fukushima hospital and it's on shorts (u'll find... The reason why he got banned)
@@grimraccoon3327 thank you! I just went hunting for it and found it :)
The attention to detail is appreciated. Almost no other exploration page breaks it down and goes over the items there and what they could’ve meant. All of this stuff has a backstory and you manage to capture it as much as possible.
Him telling the whatever those are to stop making noise is so hilarious and cute at the same time 😭
I'm sure you guys have seen the comments asking for long videos and I don't know about others but this is exactly what I was imagining so thank you :)
I wish they wouldn’t destroy these things but use them to tell the stories of these terrible events but also to show the impact.
I find it very curious how rodents and fungus are all that lasts after these types of events. It’s so sad to think how many souls were trapped in those walls as the hospital would have been the final resting place for so many injured and ill victims. It’s something like 30-40 people were even forgotten when they evacuated and I can only imagine sitting there alone experiencing the most heartbreaking death with no one way to escape or say goodbye.
Thank you for documenting these places that are left forgotten by so many.
It was so crazy to watch this. Thank you for recording and uploading
30:33 I love how he says the place is “infested” with workers like THEY’RE the ones that aren’t supposed to be there 😂
Omg! I’m a nurse and I’m explaining to you, as you’re walking and talking, what instruments and medical equipment you’re seeing! If you only knew!!! 🤣🤣🤣
18:15 osteotomes! Used in orthopedic surgery (hip, knee, ect)
28:18 blue packs on the right are drapes, used to cover medical equipment and body parts to make the surgical area as small and sterile as possible
28:46 sterilization containers! Used to hold instrument sets like the one you opened (looks like a set for a minor bone surgery)
29:50 this is where all the used medical instruments are sent to be washed and disinfected, they then get sent to 'clean side' which is where you were @ 17:40, inspected, and sterilized for reuse.
48:44 Endoscopes! Used for colonoscopy 💩 and gastroscopy (the thinner scopes) 1 scope costs around 35k
I work in the device reprocessing department and i'm a total nerd for my entire job. I work with all those things daily and it's crazy to see it all abandonded like this. So expensive too.
20:25 herobrine in the back there
😨🤯🤯
25:48 It's Anapein, an anesthesic
32:51 It's not a fridge, its more likely a heater to keep the drinks warm. It's common in Japanese convenience stores
52:44 Its an MRI machine. Its not that they're guarding it because of the money, the machine is likely wasted bu now. It's more about the dangerous materials the compromise the machine.
Every time he touched something with his bare hands, I screamed out loud.
I was waiting for a guard to be standing behind a door he opened. lol
Billions of dollars in medical equipment.
I dont even know how you just did that, that place gives me the creeps
Thank you for showing these places before they are lost to time and destroyed. Please be super super careful and please wear gloves more often for your safety. Ain't no buffing out those health hazards 10-20 years down the line.
Also yeah it is really surprising the things rats and mice will eat through. I have a couple pet ones (domesticated), wouldn't be surprised if they're hoarding those ritz vanilla bites in their nest lol.
But yeah please take more precaution. I really love your shorts and tiktoks, would totally love seeing more long-form videos of the explorations!
This Guy Could Make a Whole Netflix Documentary
off topic, i love your voice and whispers.. they're relaxing
I found your channel yesterday and I love it
I kinda got a chuckle when you thought you had come across the morgue. The big machine was not for cremation of bodies but a autoclave for sterilizing the surgical tools. Which is why you saw so many of the same type of tools. And the boxes that were marked "biohazard" was the surgical gowns, masks and gloves surgeons wore during surgeries. They have to be disposed of in a special way because of blood and other contaminants that get on them during surgeries. Hope that helps a little...I really enjoyed your video. 😉😂
A one hour video!Amazing!
you're brave dawg. If i was there I'd be under a table all day