How to Speak Internal Medicine

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • Slow down there, Bill

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @TaiChiKnees
    @TaiChiKnees 2 года назад +16328

    During my residency I once said, "...the patient suffered a stroke..." and my attending said, "Isn't saying he 'suffered' a little subjective?" ...so I said, "Okay, the patient enjoyed a stroke..." Luckily, my attending laughed...

    • @xyzct
      @xyzct 2 года назад +2815

      Woah, woah, woah ... _laughed?_ Aren't we Little Miss Confident. Are you sure it wasn't a chortle? Boff? Giggle? Snicker? Twitter? Cachinnation? ;-)

    • @BeatriceSoucy
      @BeatriceSoucy 2 года назад +145

      HAHAHA love this!!

    • @sophiathore3538
      @sophiathore3538 2 года назад +242

      That was the best comeback I have ever heard XD

    • @bengeurden1272
      @bengeurden1272 2 года назад +386

      I assume that with "laughing" you meant "panting vocalizations". How could one dare to use the term "laughing"... 🧐

    • @pessy4858
      @pessy4858 2 года назад +119

      I will be a resident forever if I do this.

  • @osmosisjones1001
    @osmosisjones1001 2 года назад +11260

    Internal medicine doc here. This couldn't be more accurate. Just today I read in a colleague's note: alcoholic cirrhosis most likely secondary to alcohol use 😂😂😂😂

    • @Lickyapool
      @Lickyapool 2 года назад +169

      Lmao

    • @fumeeadonis4894
      @fumeeadonis4894 2 года назад +134

      I can’t! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад +127

      Hahahaha! Most likely.

    • @Frommerman
      @Frommerman 2 года назад +701

      Woah, that's a little premature don't you think? How did they determine if the cirrhosis is alcoholic in eitiology?

    • @bryanjacobs9680
      @bryanjacobs9680 2 года назад +68

      Lol but HOW DO WE KNOW!

  • @DrGeneralkumar82
    @DrGeneralkumar82 2 года назад +1759

    And 3 hours later they ended up starting the patient on 20 mg of lasix.

    • @heatherakers5453
      @heatherakers5453 Год назад +52

      Nurse here... After they dc the foley. 😢

    • @christinajames1210
      @christinajames1210 5 месяцев назад +2

      True🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🙏🏽

    • @davidh9844
      @davidh9844 5 месяцев назад

      Unlikely. You drown in about 5-10 minutes.

    • @anonydun82fgoog35
      @anonydun82fgoog35 3 месяца назад +3

      And mechanical ventilation with PEEP because of the pulmonary edema...

    • @Paul-mx8sf
      @Paul-mx8sf 22 дня назад

      Id rather have surgery without anesthesia than have to relive Internal Medicine teaching rounds. Only thing worse is MICU teaching rounds.

  • @RJSearson12345
    @RJSearson12345 2 года назад +1929

    1:21 "You can *consider* diuresis" I love this because I'm in paramedic school and when we do our practical assessments somebody always ends up saying something like "i'm going to consider calling for additional resources" or "I'm going to consider taking c-spine precautions" and the proctor always has to be like "You can consider whatever you want but you should probably actually DO something"

    • @staceyk2274
      @staceyk2274 Год назад +36

      Sounds like my preceptor on my ED rotation!

    • @Abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1024
      @Abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1024 Год назад +42

      We need more people like that Proctor in the world

    • @dabiga2315
      @dabiga2315 Год назад +33

      I think you may have missed your calling in internal medicine

    • @richyhu2042
      @richyhu2042 Год назад +49

      I am not in medicine but I feel this. Recently I got a job and had to make a presentation on what I think we should do to build brand awareness. At the end my boss told me "this sounds good, how can you execute the ideas" and I realized that Im not just putting hypothetical solutions and theortical solutions in for a grade to look nice anymore lol.

    • @RLKmedic0315
      @RLKmedic0315 Год назад +4

      The number of times I heard that in paramedic school.

  • @adrianmole90
    @adrianmole90 2 года назад +9958

    Bill would make an excellent intensive care doctor. Straight to the point, ready to act, no time for bullshit, infinite amount of stress tolerance.

    • @rexx3546
      @rexx3546 2 года назад +372

      bill better add internal medicine to the 'considered' fight list

    • @BearcatEm
      @BearcatEm 2 года назад +330

      My husband did his residency in internal medicine but is now critical care/pulmonary. I asked him if he could relate to this and he said it's definitely accurate but he's more like Bill because he just makes a decision and says "this is what we're going to do". Then I saw this comment, so can confirm that you are spot on lol

    • @ParagMathurmd
      @ParagMathurmd 2 года назад +58

      Or even further. Anesthesiology!

    • @markgodish1347
      @markgodish1347 2 года назад +238

      As a critical care doctor, amen. Good ICU doctors are poker players-I know I have to make decisions despite incomplete knowledge. Some people can't handle that.

    • @ASDRONEDOC
      @ASDRONEDOC 2 года назад +60

      Weirdly I was thinking the exact same thing - and I’m an ICU Doctor!

  • @voidjockey82
    @voidjockey82 2 года назад +3745

    The three wonders of medicine:
    An Anestheseist at work.
    Two Internal Medicine Doctors agreeing.
    A Surgeon in the library.

    • @hobbitomm
      @hobbitomm 2 года назад +74

      A pod reading an ECG

    • @dena3107
      @dena3107 2 года назад +108

      those are signs of the apocalypse

    • @mbeally
      @mbeally 2 года назад +97

      I’ll add-an Ob/Gyn running a code 😂

    • @fil4648
      @fil4648 2 года назад +68

      I don't know where you get the surgeon stereotype from, we need to study just as much as internists, we just have to fit it into less time because we actually do something other than rounding in the hospital.

    • @voidjockey82
      @voidjockey82 2 года назад +130

      @@fil4648 I'm not the creator of this joke, just a reteller.
      Apparently the stereotype is not that surgeons don't study but that they are very self-assured, at times even cocky, to the point that they don't go through some things again because they're sure they still know it all.
      Whether that actually applies to a majority of them, I have no knowledge about.

  • @seeyouchump
    @seeyouchump 2 года назад +3497

    After one year of internal medicine in the uni, I learned more about how to be humble than how to actually treat the patient

    • @godspeedsumitbiswas
      @godspeedsumitbiswas 2 года назад +104

      We all missed the part where and that is our problem. 😂

    • @faizanquraishi4126
      @faizanquraishi4126 2 года назад +69

      Im proud that bully maguire is a doctor.

    • @hinnah5954
      @hinnah5954 2 года назад +15

      I'm going to put some dirt in your eyes

    • @Scholupine
      @Scholupine 2 года назад +23

      I'm glad that you're not an ophthalmologist

    • @seeyouchump
      @seeyouchump 2 года назад +33

      @@godspeedsumitbiswas Call an ophthalmologist already....my dirt is ready for combat

  • @PrincessLelouch
    @PrincessLelouch Год назад +347

    In veterinary medicine, we like to say you could ask 5 internists a question and get 6 answers, because by the time you get to the last one the first one will have changed their mind.

    • @marthawall3318
      @marthawall3318 9 месяцев назад +5

      😅😅😅😅😅😅

    • @kelseywalker7586
      @kelseywalker7586 7 месяцев назад +9

      As a internal medicine veterinarian... you're not wrong

    • @davidh9844
      @davidh9844 5 месяцев назад +2

      Especially true among Jewish physicians, I might add. This Internist salutes you - we can get patient histories. How you guys do it is beyond me.

  • @cwtrain
    @cwtrain 2 года назад +5955

    These videos are getting stressful and traumatic as they align more and more with my actual daily life. It's kind of like how you get older and you realize the movie Office Space is not actually a comedy.

    • @nancylindsay4255
      @nancylindsay4255 2 года назад +107

      I come here for the movie recommendations.

    • @yonpark6245
      @yonpark6245 2 года назад +165

      Yes, I could feel my BP rising with each passing second, which is why I went into a surgical specialty, but then whoops, now I encourage this hedging, obfuscating language as a rad. I apologize, oh wait, I mean, these words have the appearance compatible with an apology.

    • @a.humanbeing8171
      @a.humanbeing8171 2 года назад +51

      @@yonpark6245 these word may have the appearance, you mean 😉

    • @aslansown
      @aslansown 2 года назад +62

      Working a corporate job for decades Office Space is accurate.

    • @theman11999900
      @theman11999900 2 года назад +28

      Or idiocracy....

  • @Michelle-mn5zz
    @Michelle-mn5zz 2 года назад +1638

    As a lawyer, I feel like the internal medicine doctors are my kind of people lol

    • @boopsce
      @boopsce 2 года назад +118

      Mathematician: ditto.

    • @AstroZombie1
      @AstroZombie1 2 года назад +20

      Slightly smarter than average nursing student agrees.

    • @NiteSaiya
      @NiteSaiya 2 года назад +119

      I was going to say this is where a philosophy major might go if they went into medicine. The painstakingly precise language and robust use of qualifiers is fundamental to a certain type of philosopher.

    • @hathor9777
      @hathor9777 2 года назад +39

      I'm in Corporate Compliance, and I concur! haha

    • @darkawakening01
      @darkawakening01 2 года назад +60

      As a German lawyer I confidently can say that 'it depends...'

  • @giraffegiraffe3
    @giraffegiraffe3 2 года назад +1784

    Thanks Dr G - definitely going to use "a likely non-zero probability of it being not unreasonable to consider a possible diagnosis of..." in clinic tomorrow 🤣🤣🤣

    • @MM-pt9oz
      @MM-pt9oz 2 года назад +7

      Same!

    • @shaliniverma7020
      @shaliniverma7020 2 года назад +3

      🤣🤣

    • @sauercrowder
      @sauercrowder 2 года назад +36

      WHOA Whoa whoa, likely??

    • @2Bad4YOUuu
      @2Bad4YOUuu 2 года назад +17

      So "aggressive"

    • @XanderL
      @XanderL 2 года назад +23

      Definitely? Don't you mean you're most likely going to use?

  • @rockyvolcano4
    @rockyvolcano4 Год назад +198

    This reminds me of the time I was in a room full of law students trying to figure out how to word, “The muffin tastes good,” in an objective way. (it was a practice question for part of their class) “The sensations caused by eating this confectionery are usually perceived as pleasant by most individuals whom consume them.” Was the closest we got. The reason I was in a room full of law students is because we had booked the same study room at the same time and I was really just there to use the Wi-Fi (which was only available for people using the rooms) to download some games, so joined the conversation while I waited.

    • @ovni2295
      @ovni2295 9 месяцев назад +22

      I would have just gone "Of X number of individuals who tasted the muffin, Y number said they enjoyed it." No wriggle room there and doesn't discount that other people who did not taste the muffin wouldn't like it.

    • @rachels.8051
      @rachels.8051 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@ovni2295 ‘four out of *only* five dentists agree…’

    • @TheQuark6789
      @TheQuark6789 7 месяцев назад

      @@ovni2295 But that requires that you actually go around and survey X people to taste the muffin

    • @eekcm23
      @eekcm23 7 месяцев назад +8

      As a doctor of philosophy, despite what people may expect, people in my field find conversations like this insufferable. The muffin tasted delicious to me. Done: objective, for some sense of the word.

    • @xxBreakxxAwayxx3
      @xxBreakxxAwayxx3 6 месяцев назад +6

      This baked good stimulates certain parts of the brain and body when consumed by certain individuals that is often considered pleasant or filling, particularly when in combination with other food groups such as fruit or even coffee. Enjoyment seems highly likely but not guaranteed, such as in the case of dietary restrictions like celiac or lactose intolerance.

  • @mohrle1100
    @mohrle1100 2 года назад +2458

    As an intern in internal medicine I can say that this video is as comical as it is true. There is nothing more funny and frustrating to see five to six doctors needing about three hours to round 25 patients while making the "internal medicine arguing noises".

    • @AlexandreRodrigues-mv5cl
      @AlexandreRodrigues-mv5cl 2 года назад +291

      I'm an internal medicine specialist and I take offense. We would never take 3 hours for 25 patients! Wouldn't want to rush any decisions without proper back and forth, would we ? :)

    • @mohrle1100
      @mohrle1100 2 года назад +88

      @@AlexandreRodrigues-mv5cl
      My apologies, of course not. Where would we even end up if not for the completely necessary and absolutely not annoying to the nurses back and forths?😂

    • @Pronnt
      @Pronnt 2 года назад +97

      My current attending takes 4.5 hours to round 12 patients. Usually the outcome is some wacky dosage of something, or lansoprazole 30 mg in the morning and famotidine 40 mg in the evening, torasemide 5 mg on even numbered days, things like that. I would pay in gold for him to take even three hours

    • @chiarakoch6034
      @chiarakoch6034 2 года назад +35

      ONLY THREE HOURS?!?!? we need 7 hours for 15 patients.

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 2 года назад +11

      As a mechatronics technician: What exactly are they arguing about? What could happen in those arguments did not take place? Can somebody please explain it to me like I was a PLC with only 1 input channel?

  • @elizabethm3310
    @elizabethm3310 2 года назад +111

    Coming home from my internal medicine rotation to watch these🤣🤣🤣
    It is not unlikely that these videos are almost 100% correct

  • @amandalynn7063
    @amandalynn7063 2 года назад +754

    The multiple same-sounding voices arguing with one another ❤️
    It sounds like an achievement unlocked.

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад +5

      I was really impressed by that argument!

  • @derekantoku6431
    @derekantoku6431 2 года назад +135

    I love how confident Bill has become! He is growing as a doctor.

  • @abuazizm
    @abuazizm 2 года назад +428

    *I SWEAR THIS IS EXACTLY HOW THE INTERNAL MEDICINE ROTATION ROUNDS.*

    • @ShamrockBanksObservatory
      @ShamrockBanksObservatory Год назад +23

      "EXACTLY"?????? As an internist myself, I find your assertion of precision 'troubling'. It is, however, highly suggestive of every set of rounds in my 30 years in practice. Clinical correlation is recommended.

    • @agent0422
      @agent0422 4 месяца назад +2

      Almost exactly*

  • @merryb6646
    @merryb6646 2 года назад +113

    As a patient, thank you internal medicine docs for considering things from many angles and being thoughtful about meds. We appreciate it. And thanks Dr. Glaucomflecken for always entertaining content.

  • @andreapradella9011
    @andreapradella9011 2 года назад +2852

    You're great! It's not just the fact you're producing funny, truthful and informative videos... It's that I'm enjoying every single one of them, no exceptions! Please keep it going!

    • @eraytunali998
      @eraytunali998 2 года назад +47

      Woah woah there, thats a little agressive. I would say it is reasonable to think that his videos are funny. And I do not disagree that they are informative.

    • @BeefyZie
      @BeefyZie 2 года назад +20

      @@eraytunali998 please take into account all possibilities of what is considered informative in these settings

    • @eraytunali998
      @eraytunali998 2 года назад +16

      @@BeefyZie Correct. When the settings are considered along with the history and examination, the videos are most consistent with being informative.

    • @aj-dg1lj
      @aj-dg1lj 2 года назад +4

      @@eraytunali998 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @aj-dg1lj
      @aj-dg1lj 2 года назад +2

      @@BeefyZie 🤣🤣🤣

  • @swood07413
    @swood07413 2 года назад +49

    EM resident here. This is fantastic. I've watched pretty much all of your videos and can't thank you enough for bringing just the right amount of humor to an otherwise insanely stressful time ❤️🙏

  • @mrfxhnd9680
    @mrfxhnd9680 2 года назад +1476

    as a Hospitalist this is HILARIOUS! 😂
    Internal Medicine… nothing certain, nothing definitive, keep all options open and everything vague …why? for liability of course

    • @patti6194
      @patti6194 2 года назад +81

      Yes, as with so many other things in American life, we gave so much to thank the lawyers for.

    • @mandas677
      @mandas677 2 года назад +47

      I’ve never met a nice hospitalist. Why are you guys so mean to patients? We can’t help the orders that were put in by our admitting doctors/surgeons. But we get yelled at by you for it. It’s not just been to me, but also to my roommates while hospitalized. And no matter how serious our conditions are, you always try to discharge us and yell at us about “taking one of my beds”. Even when specialty says it’s an inpatient issue, all you want to do is discharge. Never look at the chart to even know why we’re there, just start in on us trying to make up leave. Like I was admitted and waiting to get brain surgery and the hospitalist tried to discharge me. Wtf is wrong with you guys? I had a roommate in kidney failure and the hospitalist said “you love laying in that bed don’t you? I’m not going to just let you take up space here.” Like tf???

    • @samfish5500
      @samfish5500 2 года назад +16

      @@patti6194 true.... I think lawyers really fucked it up.... but here in a different t place, IM is much more certain than the above.
      The problem is, certainty sometimes misguide..

    • @gaycatboy69
      @gaycatboy69 2 года назад +94

      @@mandas677 I'll take "shit that didn't happen" for $500. Alternatively, "made up sob stories by people who have no idea what the inside of a hospital is like".
      A hospitalist is a general care doctor that does the same work as your PCP, but at the hospital. Theyre a temporary PCP for your hospital stay, essentially, and they aren't in charge of discharging patients.
      There is an entire team of people responsible for reviewing your options of care and keeping track of your health while youre in a hospital. Nobody would walk in and try and discharge a patient waiting for brain surgery or in kidney failure unless they made a grave administrative error. Hospitalists cannot and do not just override inpatient specialist care.... like an entire fucking brain surgery. More importantly, you probably won't even see a hospitalist while waiting for surgery, because you'd be under the care of the specialists who will be doing your surgery during that time.
      Most importantly: **any doctor that yells at a patient over something as inconsequential as preferring inpatient care or occupying a bed while waiting for care would have been fired.** that's not how that works. there are rude nurses and doctors, but you cannot expect a doctor to be able to go around kicking dying patients out of the hospital without that doctor losing his job in the process. There are entire legal teams that do nothing but review how a doctor handled a case and interacted with the patient on the off chance that that patient could sue for malpractice. A doctor kicking a patient in kidney failure out would be a hilariously easy target for anyone interested in making money from medical mismanagement.
      Have you tried actually getting a hobby that isn't making up garbage online? Therapy, perhaps?

    • @mandas677
      @mandas677 2 года назад +46

      @@gaycatboy69 I know what they are, I’ve been sick since I was a kid. They are the most ignorant doctors I’ve ever been around. They constantly try to discharge you and say that the specialties can handle your case in an outpatient setting. They have terrible bedside manner and will literally raise their voice at their patients. I’d honestly rather see an orthopedic surgeon and that’s saying something. They put their nose where is doesn’t belong when you’re admitted for a specialty reason. I had Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension with severe papilledema, admitted through the ER, it was to the point that I was at risk of going blind. I needed to get a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, I was admitted but my hospital wanted to do testing on clotting and other factors before surgery so I didn’t get the surgery same day. I was in the step down ICU and the hospitalist kept asking why I was taking up his bed. My neurosurgeon wanted me there. Another time I had an impacted bowel and the hospitalist tried to discharge me, I had no bowel sounds and hadn’t had a bowel movement in over a month, no gas passing and throwing up every 2 minutes of just bile. Hospitalist said this was an outpatient issue. Gastroenterologist said no this could need emergency surgery you’re not leaving.
      Had my gallbladder out, hospitalist walks in asking why I’m there as I had been admitted after. I explain I had my gallbladder out, he interrupts me and says I know that why are you still in the hospital people get open heart surgery and leave next day. I had pancreatitis and was unable to drink water or eat any food, it was my surgeon who admitted me. I have a very complex case because of my disability, I can’t walk, have epilepsy, and have had to have 15 surgeries in my life. But hospitalists don’t give a shit. They just want you out of “their” beds. Multiple hospitals, multiple hospitalists. They’re all shit. They’re GPs that don’t have the bedside manner to be family medicine doctors/PCPs at a clinic. All they care about are numbers and getting patients discharged ASAP.
      And you’re right the one that yelled at my roommate was banned from our room, she had to fire him and it was a huge report. For me, I had my family deal with them and yell right back. Unfortunately they can’t be there 24/7 so it’s really quite scary to have then come in your room early to berate you. That girl had lupus and multiple cysts on her kidneys with very little function. She had been there for over a month already and he basically said she didn’t want to get better and that she could trick everyone else but not him. It was horrifying. Medical trauma is real whether you want to admit it or not, and is disabled people with severe chronic illnesses tend to experience it more than the average person.

  • @Joozt112
    @Joozt112 Год назад +84

    With both parents in internal medicine the (internal medicine arguing noises) part made me laugh so hard as it's trip down dinnertime memory lane lol.

  • @prognosis2019
    @prognosis2019 2 года назад +771

    This is just so accurate 🤣
    One time we consulted nephrology and we specifically stated we thought the patient needed a renal biopsy and the consultant wrote, "It would not unreasonable to consider renal biopsy" and I died 🤣
    I responded, "We did consider renal biopsy which is why we asked you." 😂

    • @faarsight
      @faarsight Год назад +29

      And he said you weren't being unreasonable in doing so, what more do you want?

    • @joestevenson5568
      @joestevenson5568 Год назад +34

      @@faarsight For him to get one

    • @roetemeteor
      @roetemeteor Год назад +65

      @@joestevenson5568 WHOA, HOLD ON THERE SPEEDY GONZALES .

    • @grandma460
      @grandma460 Год назад +3

      Too funny ;)

  • @ashutoshsharmash
    @ashutoshsharmash 2 года назад +51

    Internal Medicine resident out here... This is so accurate... Even if I think it's heart failure or Iron deficiency anemia, I can't just come out and say that. I need to say that it is my impression and not even provisional diagnosis, and that I advise these medications, order these tests and consults to determine the problem.
    But really true... Like even in, let's say, an acute decompensated heart failure, before I order Lasix for the patient, I need to take a history, check the patient's BP and other vitals, their baseline electrolytes on admission, most recent electrolytes, present mental status or any alterations in it, my examination findings, counsel the patient and their family, transmit my decision up the chain of command for approval, order a bunch of tests to determine the cause, then give this to the patient, order a Serum electrolytes panel the coming morning to establish a new baseline, and then finally after all this, chart this down. Piece of cake.
    If you love being meticulous and approach a problem in a step wise manner, then Internal Medicine is a perfect fit for you. Because, as an internist, you're taking care of the sickest patients in the hospital. So even the smallest decision you take, can have a huge impact on the course of disease.

    • @christinae30
      @christinae30 Год назад +3

      And if the patient wasn't in worse condition after all that waiting, maybe he/she didn't need the medication after all🤔
      (just joking!)

    • @ashutoshsharmash
      @ashutoshsharmash Год назад +5

      @@christinae30 😆😆.. No issues... Well this is where an Internal Medicine Residency is a coming of age training... You get faster and more efficient with practice. All of this, which takes you 30 minutes at the start of residency training, takes you less than 5 minutes by the end of it. As you go from Year 1 to Year 3 to finally becoming an attending, you ascend that chain of command, till you finally are in command.

    • @achillesglacia7700
      @achillesglacia7700 5 месяцев назад +1

      Actually the joke is obviously a little exaggerated and very funny. but if you think about it, that is really the only way to treat a patient medically, it's the only way, you can't just go in, you have to look up left right, back take one step and check for sink holes, ofcourse while being chased by a hungry bear behind you.

    • @davidh9844
      @davidh9844 5 месяцев назад

      If you think it's failure, and it is, you have to move your butt and jump! Iron deficiency anemia allows you to take your time. And it is YOUR responsibility to recognize the differences between cardiac insufficiency based on both subjective and objective findings, and failure brought on by iron deficiency. (Look at the patient's palms and listen to the bases of his lungs...) And trust your gut when the time comes, you will be right 9 times out of 10.

    • @AndreaJag1
      @AndreaJag1 5 месяцев назад +1

      I think I need to know more Internal Medicine practitioners. It appears I might like that way of thinking. Does curiosity outweigh ego in these people?

  • @SilentWayFarer1
    @SilentWayFarer1 2 года назад +135

    Cardiology fellow here. After watching this video, I now feel guilty for making a diagnosis of heart failure too quickly

    • @cinimatics
      @cinimatics 2 года назад +15

      It's ok they're gonna consult you for an opinion anyway 😆

    • @mannagarwal5390
      @mannagarwal5390 Год назад +5

      ProBNP 2D echo

  • @mrwiggiewoo
    @mrwiggiewoo Год назад +28

    As someone with multiple chronic and serious health conditions, I love and appreciate the thoroughness of my physician of internal medicine. 😄👍

    • @popenieafantome9527
      @popenieafantome9527 Год назад +2

      As someone who has sat in my mother’s doctor appointments, i also appreciate the thoroughness of it but it can be a little disheartening when i asked “how do we know it’s getting worse” and 90% of the time the symptoms is stuff that is already kind of “normal” for her. Such as some form body pain, tiredness, and lack of energy.

  • @Roccofan
    @Roccofan 2 года назад +1075

    I agree with the other doctors, at least a weeks worth of research and meetings are required to decide a reasonable course of action. Anything less would be irresponsible. If he dies, he dies, but we need to check all the boxes.

    • @muhammedmemduhoglu7854
      @muhammedmemduhoglu7854 2 года назад +37

      Hello internal medicine :)

    • @muhsalihu
      @muhsalihu 2 года назад +43

      That's why Surgeons can't stand medicine because we are trained to cut out the bull shit and treat the patient. 😁😁

    • @patti6194
      @patti6194 2 года назад +14

      @@muhsalihu as surgeons, aren't you trained to cut out the problem, period? Don't limit yourself to the bull shot! And is a bull shot like a prairie oyster??

    • @Marmalard
      @Marmalard 2 года назад +25

      Notice how he didn’t even mention sodium, which is the most important element in the human body.

    • @inmyopinion-
      @inmyopinion- 2 года назад +2

      🤣

  • @sunshinegirl1967
    @sunshinegirl1967 Год назад +7

    This reminded me of dear old Dr Miller, internal medicine rounds took hours as his 3 partners discussed, argued, digressed, pontificated, and all that while he hardly said 2 words. I was a unit secretary back then (the 80's) and filled the doctors charts and nurses charts every day. I found these words on one of Dr Miller's progress notes (just started/never finished) "80 year old woman". That was all he wrote before he fell asleep. Dear old man, Catholic, 12 kids, never a day off, very humble and overworked. He never complained or even got angry, ever.

  • @nrmbnt
    @nrmbnt 2 года назад +388

    GREAT, GREAT, GREAT!!!! As an internist I "significantly" concur that this stereotype of "us" is spot-on! Then again, that is true for all of Dr. Glaucomflecken's characterizations. For a surgeon (well, barely a surgeon since it's ophthalmology) you are a very smart and capable physician and human being. Now you will please excuse me as I have to go take a medication (to be decided upon after a prolonged internal debate) since I used the term "smart" and "surgeon" in the same sentence and that has given me both a headache and nausea.

    • @afrozeahmed6515
      @afrozeahmed6515 2 года назад +9

      How can u say he is barely a surgeon?When u have an eye problem I wonder where you will go

    • @nrmbnt
      @nrmbnt 2 года назад +19

      @Afroze Ahmed I will first meet with the ophthalmologist's scribe, and then I will say complimentary things about ophthalmologists...of course!

    • @patti6194
      @patti6194 2 года назад +25

      @@afrozeahmed6515 general surgeons and specialty corporeal surgeons present as significantly more egotistical with a higher probability of a God Complex than Ophthalmic Surgeons, in my experience.
      For instance, my sister had sudden onset lower quadrant abdominal pain, with negative tests for appendicitis. Probably an ovarian cyst, right? A very common thing. They were going to do exploratory surgery in case of ovarian tortion, (talk about hearing hoofbeats and looking for a Zebra!) and had her sign a release for removal of everything from one ovary and one fallopian tube to a complete hysterectomy (in case of cancer.) She was in her mid 20's and single, no kids. Suffice it to say, she was freaking out.
      Shift change comes, another surgeon takes over the queue, comes by to introduce himself and looks at the release. "Why in the world did he have you sign a release for a total hysterectomy?" "In case of cancer?" The guy looked at us and said, "I'm an Obstetrical Surgeon. If I find cancer, I'm going to close you right up and send you to Oncology as soon as you wake up. I'm certainly not doing a hysterectomy."
      This was in the 80's at a well known HMO that has a significantly better reputation now than it did then. When my older sister had the same symptoms at the same HMO, they made her think she had cancer. I had a private doctor with BC/BS insurance. When I had one, they shrugged nonchalantly and said, "It's probably an ovarian cyst, they're very common. We're going to send you for an ultrasound to make sure it's not too big. It will probably burst and resolve on its own, just take Tylenol." So, instead of having a huge stressful health scare and surgery, I had a common, boring, everyday ailment that, while painful, sure wasn't even close to the Big C. When we were comparing notes one day, we found that all three of us had a benign functional heart murmur as well as the ovarian cysts.
      When I had cataract surgery on both eyes simultaneously, the surgeon told me her percentage of unfavorable outcomes, which was something like .002 or .0002%, and added, "... and I've never blinded anyone." Ok, good to know, but not sure I wanted to hear it out loud, lol.

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад +14

      @@afrozeahmed6515 pretty sure he's joking.

    • @marysalmon2367
      @marysalmon2367 2 года назад +8

      @@afrozeahmed6515 its a joke

  • @mar10ssj1
    @mar10ssj1 2 года назад +46

    Defensive Medicine at it's finest 👌. Any hospital administrator would be proud of their work 👏.

  • @maryragan6335
    @maryragan6335 2 года назад +911

    I'm a nurse and whenever there's an internal medicine or ID consult I read those for the history because they dig up stuff from the patients entire life 😂

    • @pauldegregorio6432
      @pauldegregorio6432 2 года назад +102

      To be complete, Palliative Care, ID and Hospice care consults must contain BOTH APGAR scores.

    • @CataclysmicStar
      @CataclysmicStar 2 года назад +88

      "Patient had a splinter in the left hand palm when they were four that required stitches... GUYS I THINK THIS IS THE KEY!"

    • @Theoneandonlyenelie
      @Theoneandonlyenelie 2 года назад +66

      @@CataclysmicStar did you see in the chart that his step mom had a negative reaction to this medication when she was 5 years old?

    • @wentaoli7611
      @wentaoli7611 2 года назад +44

      It’s scary af, they literally dig out your past relationships, I once saw a note containing pt cheating on the second husband and he ditched her because of that. Like, from that point, nobody on the unit wants to every be admitted in the hospital anymore.

    • @nancylindsay4255
      @nancylindsay4255 2 года назад +5

      @@CataclysmicStar Hmmm . . . Could that be the problem? They're all guys.

  • @dianavaleriaandres4631
    @dianavaleriaandres4631 Год назад +17

    I am a medical interpreter residing in Argentina, and even though I am not a doctor, I really enjoy your videos and with this one you really made my day!

  • @farah5189
    @farah5189 2 года назад +366

    After watching Bill's session with Psychiatrist, I respect Bill more. I feel like Bill is the "normal" one except here he receives so many burdens and feel overwhelmed sometimes. We love you, Bill

    • @yuki97kira
      @yuki97kira 2 года назад +4

      I feel like only jonathan appreciates bill here

    • @dena3107
      @dena3107 2 года назад +1

      Im slightly confused about Bill's speciality because I see him with all the other characters, what exactly is his role ?

  • @petersoa840
    @petersoa840 2 года назад +16

    Retired Internist. Internists don’t usually smile much, but reading this, I did. Entertaining and sounds authentic. I don’t condone unbridled, unseemly enthusiasm but I have to say this is just perfect!

  • @Florkl
    @Florkl 2 года назад +84

    I was expecting them to be arguing over you can’t call a chest xray significant to be followed up by, “They’re significant because the patient has five broken ribs.”

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад +6

      I thought he was going to do something like, "The femur is jutting out of the skin" but he took it in a different, more subtle direction.
      Great video!

    • @joestevenson5568
      @joestevenson5568 Год назад +1

      Yep I was expecting massive pneumothorax or a whiteout

    • @richardsparks9904
      @richardsparks9904 Год назад

      Ortho!

  • @patricewilson8924
    @patricewilson8924 Год назад +18

    I work as a medical assistant for an Internal Medicine doctor and this is exactly how he works. He also refers for everything because he wants an expert opinion to consult with. My boss needs to see this so I can explain why you can't overbook his schedule, not unless they want me to have 5 hours overtime a week because of how far behind he got during the day. Amazing doctor though!

  • @adityajadhao7137
    @adityajadhao7137 2 года назад +276

    I am an Internal Medicine doctor and I can say that this video shows our daily conversations😂😂

    • @Whitecroc
      @Whitecroc 2 года назад +22

      With a potentially reasonable level of accuracy?

    • @redpilledbachelor7776
      @redpilledbachelor7776 2 года назад +6

      I would not have the patience for that LOL.

    • @bryanjacobs9680
      @bryanjacobs9680 2 года назад +10

      I used the word significant during rounds one time and my attending stopped me and went on a 30 minute talk about why or why not it should be considered significant, followed by him asking me to prepare a presentation on the condition for the following day.

    • @Whitecroc
      @Whitecroc 2 года назад +5

      @@paulbarclay4114 So one could, as it were, possibly infer that within this video there might exist a non-zero degree of specificity as to the alleged accuracy of the supposed behavior of what, under certain circumstances, *might* be called non-external, empirically indicated positive chemical interventionists?

  • @kristaturner6470
    @kristaturner6470 2 года назад +9

    As a surgeon, this gives me chest pain. With an extensive, nebulous differential diagnosis list, which is, of course, derived from my history, great aunt’s anesthesia history, my FeNa, and my cabrini score. All of which will be thoroughly investigated and discussed, prior to being consulted for myself, after the self-inflicted knife is finally noticed in my chest. Ugh. I need a nap. 🤪

  • @velvetrose12
    @velvetrose12 2 года назад +58

    Far too early to find memes and other people's hilarious stories in the comment section haha

  • @featherfluent1109
    @featherfluent1109 4 месяца назад +1

    as someone who used to work in internal medicine, this is one of the greatest shorts Ive ever seen

  • @wsljoan
    @wsljoan 2 года назад +97

    As a biostatistician/epidemiologist, we also get jumpy about the word "significant" XD

    • @lawrencetchen
      @lawrencetchen 2 года назад +11

      That was my first thought, "what's the p-value on that?!?"

    • @bootmii98
      @bootmii98 2 года назад

      @@lawrencetchen First tell me what your alpha-value is

  • @zachbrenner9959
    @zachbrenner9959 2 года назад +13

    These sketches are actually helping me learn the difference between the different specialties. Not super important for me as an EMT since I only work with the emergency department. Before I would have figured everything except dermatology and maybe urology was internal medicine

  •  2 года назад +25

    That "I concur." whipped up the memory of "Catch me if you can" in my head. I had to rewatch the whole short because I missed the rest of it due to laughing.

  • @mipizarrop
    @mipizarrop 2 года назад +4

    Internal medicine doctor here. Showed up this to my residency partners and we all was like "LMAO FUCKING ACCURATE!!!" so kudos for nailing the point hahaha. Anyways I'm all like bill: straight to the point but still the differential diagnostic pun hahaha lol always on the verge of ddx. Thanks for this Dr glaucomflecken, you make residency a lot more cheerful.

  • @veverizza2016
    @veverizza2016 2 года назад +12

    I am an internist and I had an attending like that in Residency, I felt horrible No matter what I used to say, it was really impossible to please him. I am so glad I am done and I do not have to impress anyone anymore now.

  • @Zometh
    @Zometh 2 года назад +8

    I never knew that I could relate to a doctor video, yet here I am. Never being willing to confirm or deny anything is my most prominent personality trait.

  • @vanshooky3875
    @vanshooky3875 2 года назад +201

    no way internal medicine consults are the same as me trying to write my thesis,,,internal medicine truly is the academia of medicine

    • @naweka4319
      @naweka4319 2 года назад +18

      when you have to fill the 2000 word limit you become an internal medicine doctor in deep from your heart

    • @ItWillRainXO
      @ItWillRainXO 2 года назад +2

      Shookyyyyy!!!!!!!!

    • @ItWillRainXO
      @ItWillRainXO 2 года назад +1

      Never thought I would find an army in these comments :)))

    • @vanshooky3875
      @vanshooky3875 2 года назад +1

      @@ItWillRainXO jkdfngkjdfngjf hi fellow army!!!

    • @eddiegreif2715
      @eddiegreif2715 2 года назад +2

      Literally came to say this, this is exactly like the academics department component of my design degree !! It's astounding how many words you can knit together to say something like "in conclusion" or "this means" or "because" 😂

  • @zb1423
    @zb1423 Год назад +4

    Meanwhile in the ED, a nurse comes into the area where the docs are angrily dictating their charts and says "I gave the heart failure patient in room 17 20 of Lasix, can you chart that and clear the override?" and the response is "Sure can"

  • @melissaparks6698
    @melissaparks6698 2 года назад +65

    I was a nurse at a university outpatient clinic and this takes me back to my fly on the wall days of afternoon internal medicine clinic! Absolutely spot on!
    Side note* morning clinic rotated between Rheumatology, ID, GI Hep C clinical trials (long ago when Interferon was coming on the scene), a nephrology HTN clinic and probably more....all Dr. G's videos are scarily accurate! Love them!!!

  • @Ichibuns
    @Ichibuns Год назад +7

    This is hilarious but at the same time I understand why internal medicine can be so hesitant on quick decisions. The patient's life can be ended so easily without all the information that may take time to get. Running across a situation where there isn't enough time to get all the information must be terrifying.

  • @coolfool183
    @coolfool183 2 года назад +17

    He forgot about the exhaustive literature review

  • @kinebrembry6224
    @kinebrembry6224 2 года назад +3

    I’d love to see internal medicine on a date using all his noncommittal terms

  • @purkinje972
    @purkinje972 2 года назад +11

    Considering different options,different doses,what kidney funcns look like,my most likely comment is consistent with 'Love your videos ' Significantly

  • @absolutetuber
    @absolutetuber 2 года назад +5

    bro....this is like a live reading of an internal med note. i always get a chuckle out of it. no certainty, full of ambiguity, and never committing lol

  • @lakibrain
    @lakibrain 2 года назад +149

    After almost ending up in internal medicine myself, I can conquer that this is strongly suggestive of comedy gold 😂 Keep it up doctor G!

    • @WandererTheLost
      @WandererTheLost 2 года назад +2

      Conquer is a little strong. Don't you mean that it would not be unreasonable that you might agree with the video?

    • @robertbodden8810
      @robertbodden8810 2 года назад +5

      Do you mean "concur"? Lmao

    • @WandererTheLost
      @WandererTheLost 2 года назад

      @@robertbodden8810 I mean yes but also that isn't what he said :P

    • @robertbodden8810
      @robertbodden8810 2 года назад +3

      @@WandererTheLost yeah I know. You're both wrong. Concur is the right word lmao

  • @msmeyersmd8
    @msmeyersmd8 Год назад +5

    This is genius medical truth. Presented in an incredibly funny manner.
    Thanks for doing it. The"Golden Weekend" was priceless.

  • @evastickler3298
    @evastickler3298 2 года назад +205

    Maybe I should consider trying internal medicine out if I get into med school. They sound as politely unsure as I do, and Bill has the EXACT look of disappointment that my lab investigator had when I suggested that I not be the *only* one to quantify the sperm found in the experiment because…y’know…to err is human. Instead of just trusting my own judgement call on the number.

    • @kiilas
      @kiilas 2 года назад +1

      Omg💙

    • @Persephone-t5b
      @Persephone-t5b 2 года назад +8

      Was it 8? It seems like the number was 8 for some reason.

    • @malaciousmark3903
      @malaciousmark3903 2 года назад +2

      Why would you not just use a machine to count them. They are relatively inexpensive

    • @merlinious01
      @merlinious01 2 года назад +4

      @@malaciousmark3903 sperm or machines are inexpensive?

    • @deepashriramesh51
      @deepashriramesh51 2 года назад +3

      Omigod SAME. I was just relating to how there's so many possibilities every single time and being thorough is something I've stuck to. I'm in med school now and have been considering IM for long now

  • @120gktgbox
    @120gktgbox 2 года назад +1

    This should be one of the greatest vids, It has to be.

  • @msiddhartho
    @msiddhartho 2 года назад +124

    Honestly I feel bad for non medicos for being unable to appreciate how accurate your videos actually are!

    • @melaniesee8916
      @melaniesee8916 2 года назад +36

      If one has been a patient, particularly an “interesting patient”, one understands this, too.

    • @SimpleReally
      @SimpleReally 2 года назад

      0

    • @swals05able
      @swals05able Год назад +2

      It’s actually a smidge terrifying but I want to also say these are awesome and make me laugh so don’t stop making them please.

    • @chethangv7974
      @chethangv7974 Год назад

      These days everyone watches grey's anatomy and good doctor so I think they can also understand!!

  • @TimeWizard727
    @TimeWizard727 2 года назад +49

    After 20+ years being a chronic illness patient ive learned to also speak internal medicine to sometimes have to correct other doctors to get the best care and boy the backlash I get at sometimes knowing my own body better has been wild, often times like the end bit. These are cathartic as my experience has often been bills and feeling like the new med student wandering my way through the broken medical system 😂😭

  • @firelordOzai3
    @firelordOzai3 2 года назад +5

    I'm a Neurosurgery registrar, I've listened in on an endocrinology consultant round for a pituitary patient in our ward and this is exactly how it played out. I think I would probably die

  • @cloudi7665
    @cloudi7665 2 года назад +5

    I’m a medsurg nurse and this is too accurate 😂 constantly trying to figure out how to phrase things to internal med!

  • @lionheartsda9999
    @lionheartsda9999 2 года назад +309

    As a neurologist and internist, this is legitimately frustrating if it actually happened in real life for each patient.🤣
    But I agree, when working as a team each member has their own opinion and if opinions clash, it is best to have the team leader or the specialist of the system involved decide the best course of action. This does not happen much overtly, but I think in the heads of each consultant, this is the exact scenario that they are imagining. 😂
    Love your videos by the way. Stereotypically accurate and very funny and entertaining. 😂 I can really relate with the neurologist persona and the jokes are really funny.
    Please never stop your videos and stay healthy.

    • @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi
      @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi 2 года назад +8

      Absolutely, “stay healthy.” If you develop a/some chronic conditions (especially neurological), no doctor will even spend the few minutes it takes to watch your video to investigate your health problems.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 2 года назад +4

      @@KiKiQuiQuiKiKi i think om living with a chronic csf leak for 13 yrs. It took 12 yrs to get an ehlers danlos diagnosis and no one wpuld consider my hypermobility and a baseball to the head reasons to do a spinal scan. This is my 4th neuro and hard to keep going.:(

    • @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi
      @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi 2 года назад +1

      @@dana102083 My kids and I have EDS, too (+ a host of other comorbidities). So many times doctors have said to us some version of “Why do you want to have that [disease, syndrome, etc.]? It’s terrible and extremely RARE.”
      🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓🦓

  • @botedj9084
    @botedj9084 2 года назад +6

    Honestly amazing how he can make content which is relative to everyone but is focused on such a niche topic

  • @NishantGogna
    @NishantGogna 2 года назад +11

    Just finished my internal medicine inpatient rotation last month. This is 100% the truth.

  • @blennergomes
    @blennergomes 2 года назад +5

    Dude you make it seem like working in the medical field is pure comic insanity. I love it. Keep up the great work doc!

  • @ariaflame-au
    @ariaflame-au Год назад +8

    'let's keep arguing about the symptoms and possible treatments until the patient dies and is no longer our responsibility.'

  • @koree225
    @koree225 2 года назад +5

    Lol i am at my third day of residency in internal medicine department and bruh that is soo accurate!!!! That's all they do all day

  • @taykaram6020
    @taykaram6020 2 года назад +7

    How incredible it is that you are truthful about an actual morning round and also funny at the same time .....plz dont stop making these videos....breath of fresh air in the mobotonous routine 👍👍👍

  • @galehusom7266
    @galehusom7266 2 года назад +26

    This is so great! 😅 The scrutinization of every single word is exactly what I went through when I was writing my capstone for my master's degree. It was pretty intense.

  • @lauravalle3766
    @lauravalle3766 2 года назад +3

    The face you make convey SO much! You must have been practicing these for like 7 years or something! 😂❤️

  • @galatea742
    @galatea742 2 года назад +72

    This is like writing my lab reports where everything has to be ‘possibly’ and ‘likely’. This is even after I carry out painful ANOVA, Peirson’s R, Chi Square tests and such to get the actual significance number. My calculations say significant but I am not allowed to definitively say significant.

    • @ghoghzilla
      @ghoghzilla 2 года назад +4

      I am studying the basics of anova chi square tests today!

    • @galatea742
      @galatea742 2 года назад +1

      @@ghoghzilla good luck! I use SPSS and have more or less got the hang of it now but it can be tricky! I suggest finding workbooks on each procedure if you can!

    • @ghoghzilla
      @ghoghzilla 2 года назад +1

      @@galatea742 Hey! you seem like a student of research 🤗
      I am actually a med student and I have to take an exam for getting into the specialty of my choice. So there's a subject called social and preventive medicine in which we have a topic of biostatistics
      And they ask us very simple questions, we are given a scenario and we have to choose which test of significance will be valid
      Good luck with your studies!

    • @galatea742
      @galatea742 2 года назад +2

      @@ghoghzilla I just had a stats test last week and it was pretty slow with having to do all the different tests but luckily I got pretty simple questions too. The sample data was a laugh though, nothing to do with my course, nothing to do with anyones course? Stats is my least favourite part of the whole thing but it’s got to be done if I ever want to write anything about anything I suppose. Good luck with your test!

    • @ghoghzilla
      @ghoghzilla 2 года назад

      @@galatea742 thank you 😊

  • @vikingshark2634
    @vikingshark2634 2 года назад +4

    I'm not a medical professional, but as an intelligence analyst I felt this.

  • @levinikee501
    @levinikee501 2 года назад +6

    You can see the exact moment Bill had an out-of-body experience

  • @rebeccakoch9203
    @rebeccakoch9203 2 года назад +11

    😂😂I love your videos so much. They make me value my non-interpersonal job as a dog groomer that much more.

    • @loiscassels8966
      @loiscassels8966 Год назад

      Hey! dogs are persons, too! ❤️🇨🇦🐾

  • @kristendarden7639
    @kristendarden7639 2 года назад +5

    THIS is how I knew after one day of medicine rounds as a medical student that internal medicine was not for me.

  • @blackbutterfly233ify
    @blackbutterfly233ify Год назад +2

    The internal doctor would have made a great liability lawyer. He has a way with words

  • @4002372
    @4002372 2 года назад +5

    That slow blink at the end as the others argue.
    Perfection.

  • @luisozuna6456
    @luisozuna6456 Год назад +3

    I got chills remembering IM rounds in med school after watching this. So freaking accurate. Once had an attending that would grill anyone for saying “endorsed.” Like “the patient is endorsing chest pain” and he would go off on how the word was not appropriate. I mean, I believe it’s not either but this would last at least 20 minutes sometimes.

  • @michaelamilova1600
    @michaelamilova1600 2 года назад +11

    Internal medicine in Czech republic is like family medicine in US. I am glad we do not play words here.

  • @DrAletia
    @DrAletia 2 года назад +1

    Lol! I trained in a rural area and then when I came back to the city after 5 years and took a resident job I felt just like Bill! JUST GIVE THE PATIENT THE DAMN FRUSEMIDE!!!!! AAAAAAARGH!!! I WANT TO GO HOME SOMETIME TONIGHT!!!!! 🤣

  • @toastpoint
    @toastpoint 2 года назад +47

    Wow, how bad does cardiology have to be to be worse than this

    • @M1ke10191
      @M1ke10191 2 года назад +5

      What do you see on this EKG?

    • @chodzsiepowoczymy1892
      @chodzsiepowoczymy1892 2 года назад +11

      On cardiology ward we don’t need any x-ray to diagnose heart failure and start diuretics immediately 😅

    • @rlrvir
      @rlrvir 2 года назад +2

      Wait, a cardiologist needs an echocardiogram before giving any diuretic

    • @chodzsiepowoczymy1892
      @chodzsiepowoczymy1892 2 года назад +3

      @@rlrvir not really 😅 The problem is here where I work if you want an echo you have to do it yourself so we often start treatment before an echo. Still ECHO is one of the first studies we do. During shifts we often perform a short study just to know basing things which may impact our treatment like EF, severe valve pathology, regional wall motion abnormalities and so on

    • @patti6194
      @patti6194 2 года назад

      @@chodzsiepowoczymy1892 what does "regional wall motion abnormalities" mean or what condition does it refer to? Non med person needs more info to decipher this, lol. Thanks!

  • @is_this_name_taken
    @is_this_name_taken Год назад +1

    Brings back detailed memories of my internal medicine intern year, when the chief would superciliously stop me every 2 to 3 words to correct the way I said things. I learned quickly to say things the way he instructed, and when I got to my specialty training I think it was considered both overkill and overly formal, although the training in clinical reasoning served my patients very well, as too many of them brought their life-threatening IM conditions to my specialty care domain.

  • @turdferguson3400
    @turdferguson3400 2 года назад +9

    Meanwhile in cardiology service: 120 lasix, three times a day! They are going to go on the "peeing diet"

  • @anthonyhewetson5086
    @anthonyhewetson5086 2 года назад +8

    I teach anatomy at medical school (to first year medical students and to graduate students) but have very little understanding of what 'my kids' are headed for as professionals. A few of my former students who are now doctors recommended that I watch a few Dr. Glaucomflecken videos to get a humorous but valid take on things. I hope they were steering me the right direction:)

  • @serandipati7333
    @serandipati7333 2 года назад +8

    this is spot on for IM Docs! 😂 I’m a medical inpatient coder. Sometimes the ddx list is endless!

  • @ZijnShayatanica
    @ZijnShayatanica 2 года назад +2

    As someone w/ several chronic illnesses, I'm grateful for the overwhelming level of analysis & uncertainty Internists treat me with, lmao. I'd much rather be shunted to several specialists & be told "We can't say for sure if this treatment will help, but it's worth investigating" than be dismissed by a General Practitioner & feel like an inconvenience. 🙃

  • @Thaffin
    @Thaffin 2 года назад +4

    Man this hits close to home. We had a noro-virus outbreak at my ward. I found myself unironically ask almost as a philosofical quandry "Well, what really is diarrhea and what isn't?" Peak IM.

  • @awsstudios
    @awsstudios 2 года назад +1

    I feel like this is getting so aggressively close to what my daily life is like I am watching an alternate version of my life;

    • @awsstudios
      @awsstudios 2 года назад

      I came for the jokes and stuck for the relations to my daily life

  • @Shinnizle
    @Shinnizle 2 года назад +24

    I know nothing about medicine yet your videos are absolutely hilarious to me. Keep it up!

  • @karrihoopes284
    @karrihoopes284 Год назад +1

    Years ago I had a physician get upset because, as the infectious disease nurse at our rural hospital, I made him follow the TB policy because he listed TB as one of the differential diagnoses. This reminds me of that nightmare.

  • @KansaSCaymanS
    @KansaSCaymanS 2 года назад +8

    It’s becoming more and more clear why Bill is headed for Ophthalmology. 😎

  • @Amorphous_Sand
    @Amorphous_Sand 2 года назад +3

    I'm not even a doctor but I know that my fear of strict explanations would make me exactly this type of doctor.

  • @spandanmishra9813
    @spandanmishra9813 2 года назад +17

    This doc himself is a Multispecialty Hospital, playing each and every speciality so accurately like seriously Great videos keep it up Doc 👍🏻

  • @sarahh1007
    @sarahh1007 2 года назад +1

    You can tell that Bill is reaching breaking point

  • @dr.floridamanphd
    @dr.floridamanphd 2 года назад +4

    I have a feeling internal medicine was the debate nerd who wanted to define every term every time a new word was used in an argument and then debate the definition of that word.

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Год назад +1

    Most Internists don’t like simple diagnosis and treatments. The video made me smile

  • @dammit3048
    @dammit3048 2 года назад +5

    If i was insane. I would say your videos are inspiring me to become a doctor. But I am in fact not insane so they merely motivate to support and better appreciate all doctors. I wish all the best to our medical workers!!!

  • @stevenlouton6381
    @stevenlouton6381 2 года назад +2

    Dude, I love your videos! Some of the only times I ever get a smile or a laugh from seeing a medical professional.
    Thank you, so much.

  • @Soriyou3
    @Soriyou3 2 года назад +5

    As a med student considering IM, I was laughing and panicking simultaneously as I was watching this video.