The correct SBAR way of doing it (with extrapolation for a bit of flavour) : "78yom, known diabetic and hypertensive, came in with urosepsis, currently spiking a fever. Of 455F. The patient is on fire. I tried to give him some Tylenol but he refused to stand still long enough to swallow. Could I get some subcutaneous morphine instead? He seems to be in pain. Can't quantify his pain on the scale, but I'd say it's at least a solid 8." That being said, the mental imagery of this call, and whatever the hell is going on on the nurse's side, is enough to make me laugh out loud.
Haha! Well... on behalf of all of us nurses, I apologize for these sorts of calls. I remember the first time I called a MD with a high BP and didn't know the pulse. I'll never make that mistake again! Thanks for having such a good sense of humor about it. :)
When I was a new grad RN I called the doctor during the day to alert him that the patient expired. I was screamed at that an ordinary resident could have pronounced. I hadn't seen any residents. They weren't there until fall.
There've probably been Radio Reports into ERs like this. "Medic 1 to Saint Elsewhere." "Saint Elsewhere" "Coming into you with a 54 year old male patient, chief complaint of a fever, vitals are BP, HR, RR, SPO2, BGL." "When was onset?" "Approximately 15 minutes ago, secondary to the patient being on fire." "Wait what?" Or something.
Happens the other direction too. I actually had a doctor try and give a verbal order for "a little bit of Benadryl" It's always 2 AM. The way to know how a nurse's night is going? "is it really 2 AM?" Bad night involves cussing and fustration, good night involes smiles and looking up at the clock like their surprise.
This is amazing. I am an American nurse, I must admit sometimes I fall short. Thank you for making that fun! I laughed my buttocks(Z DAD )off. That was a great reminder of how many patients you guys have, and I work in NICU. We are blessed to have a NEO 24/7.Beep, ding, beep, parents(love)but my baby has hiccups, dealing with a brady, ect. sometimes we are not prepared. I will remember this video!!!! lol lol lol
I just saw this and it brings back flashbacks to being a resident at the VA. Nurse: Doctor, the patient has a fever Me:What is his temperature? Nurse:I didn't take it. Me:So go take it and come back and tell me what it is. Nurse: (a few minutes later). It's normal. Me: So why did you call? Nurse: He's all sweaty and shaking Me: Oh crap. (Runs to check on patient who turns out to be a diabetic who was NPO for a procedure that was cancelled that AM and rescheduled for the next day so has not eaten for over 24 hours but was still getting insulin and had a sugar of 20)
@@joestevenson5568 in the US, blood sugar is measured in mg/dL instead of mmol/L. Using this measurement a normal range for a diabetic is 80-150 mg/dL. A blood sugar measurement of 20 mg/dL is equal to 1.1 mmol/L, or dangerously hypoglycemic. (Sorry you had to wait so long for a response. I just happened to stumble upon this video today)
Not being mean here, but, back when I was a pleb in high school, (Hey, it was the 70's and my dad was the head Pathologist.) our hospital just recruited some nurses from the Philippines. I went to the floor, and drew for a blood culture. On the way out, the new Philippine nurse called out, "Dats a STAT!". "Yes, I know, that's why I came up so fast." (Yep, our lab was in the basement, surprise!!!), I replied. About an hour later, I answered the phone at the main desk. "Where is my STAT. You people are so slow!", it was the Philippine nurse from before. " "I drew it already, you saw me do it." I countered. "Yes, yes, but my results are where?", she asked. "Uhmmmm, it's a blood culture, remember?" I asked. I am now very confused, back in the day, ALL, blood cultures, took 48 to 72 hours. "I know what it is, were are my results! I have to call the doctor!" she snapped. I put her on hold and went back into the main lab, and told the M.T., David, in micro what was going on. David sighed, got up, walked over to the "Hot House" as we called it. Opened the door, picked up the bottle I drew, looked it over, set it back on the shelf, closed the door. David then picked up the phone, opened the line to the waiting nurse and said, "60 minutes, no growth." "Finally!, you people are to slow." the nurse snarled. 15 minutes later, the doctor called. He and David had a great laugh.
This has happened to me so many times…and for some reason the majority was with float nurses. We had home call during my VA-based residency and it used to irk me so much whenever I got these calls and the RN only gave a bed number as an identifier…and I basically had to dig for information one question at a time, since it was often for a patient I wasn’t caring for regularly. Having a crap computer that wouldn’t allow me to set up functional remote access only made things 10x worse, especially when it would take me 45 minutes to just log in to put orders in-it was faster for me to make a round trip to the hospital to take care of business. I’ve definitely learned to have much more patience in these situations since most of us are trying our best to do right by the patients we care for.
Omg!! 😂😂 so I’m not a dr but I was a rapid response RN for 7 yrs. I feel you SO much on this!!!! We’d get the craziest calls!!! There are just too many examples to give...I’d be writing a novel
I had a patient ablaze once. He was shocked with a defibrillator when a dry piece of gauze missed on his chest sparked and caught fire. One can’t make this up.
Don't feel bad, I can't even get a decent bedside report from most other nurses. Usually they start with " patient had a bowel movement today" instead of the reason why they came in lol
This frustrates me in a sense because I am a new nurse and I am all about giving full report because I take serious what they teach in school about SBAR. Then, I get these doctors in 99.9 % on times that as I am blabbing away theyr are like rushing me to tell them just the problem at hand, they already know the patients and/or are annoyed with the details. Now I just say "Unit X, Bed Y, Name Z, and main concern. I let them ask me what additional info they need. Always make sure you have VS taken , current labs results, PMHx, and current orders and care plan details on screen ready to go. That's it. And this goes both ways! Doctors sometimes after the report give you and imconplete order w/o frequency, quantity, or other relevant detail...it's not all about the nurses. Let's make it clear.
Doctor don't leeb.... Bee are habing a botluck in de comperence room. Bee hab chicken adobo, panzit, lumpia and leche flan. Come, get a blate! Bee lub you!
I love how the music for these segments is the baseline created by the world's most famous and most successful Doctor of all time... Formally trained on Crenshaw Boulevard... Andre "Dr. Dre" Young.
"Dr. Z. patient Robert Jones in room 203 REQUESTS THAT I CALL YOU" (unless vented lol)....then do quick SBAR. That way , I rarely get a sassy-as* 'tude from on-call doc. Then I quickly chart that "PT. requests MD be called, SBAR given, order received." After 6 months, when they get to know you, they know you don't call at 0300 for not-picky sh*t. CYA PEOPLE!
Flash back to ward call. One of the (many) reasons I'm leaving the hospital to focus on GP instead of hospital medicine. Used to get this exact phone call "bed 13....." and I'm covering over 200 patients over 12 hours. Not to mention when you ask for background" actually this is not my patient, I'm just covering the nurse who is on lunch break, just come and review" . Ughhh seriously the hospital sucked the life out of me and I'm counting down until the end of my contract.... #doctorburnoutisreal
I love this so much. As a new nurse I feel this on a personal level too because I try to give really good information to my docs but working at night sometimes I mess up and forget to get some information, and I can just feel the palpable disappointment and defeat on the other end. Doctor...I'm so sorry for who I am as a person and I will try to be better in the future. I promise I'm smarter when it isn't 3 am lolololol. I also love the he/she thing because I have several amazing Filipino coworkers and I always feel like an ass clarifying the gender but I'm like...if I'm going to take 15 minutes of report on this person I have to make damn well sure we're talking about the same person hahaha
This lasts a career in my case 30 years. We are humans not robots, we forget, we get tired, we think of everything in the shower or driving home. It’s life.
In South Africa, this is actually an example of a good nurse. We just get a ward screamed at us and told to come, then they cut the call. . . SBAR is none existant
It does, but every now and then you'll get that one patient that doesn't have the order for Tylenol. Then you have to call the doc at 0200 for an order for it...
Unless the MRP is the patients family physician, I assume the doctor knows zero about the patient and just start with “mr Smith 76 year old male admitted with urosepsis, relevant history of (state relevant hx). I am concerned about (actual reason you’re calling), recent vitals/assessment point to (insert possible issue?), I need (insert what you want...new pain orders/come see patient/what do you think). The funny thing is I’ve actually had doctors get short with me and cut me off because I’m giving too much information! it seems you never can win🤷♀️😆.
I am appalled as a RN by this, I don’t want the public to believe this is the norm. Nurses are well aware of how to handle their patients before needing to reach out to the attending.
This is too good: I can remember the late night calls where they piecemeal the information to you (like a tease where you hope you can solve the problem and go back to sleep)..... But then at the end you have to get out of bed anyway...Would have been better to just get out of bed immediately and go take care of the problem... But on those instances, you could have simply taken care of the problem and rolled back over to sleep.... You can never win on a call night.... LOL.
I remember as a medical student, the poor intern that upset the RN's in a unionized public hospital where the doctors had to go and put the IV's back in after they came out...They made his life a living nightmare on his call nights between 2 and 4 in the AM with multiple IV's magically coming out... We students had to beg to not wind up on his team...Otherwise, our lives would be miserable with him as well...From what I can remember, he seemed to have a hard time learning his lesson, and kept reliving the nightmare on subsequent call nights... Moral of the story I learned from those nights (amongst other things): Never upset the nurse, unless you are ready for all the misery she and her nurse colleagues will unload upon you...Being nice to staff can go a long way.
This reminds me of the occasional calls we get in ICU from other units wanting us to “come pace her” or “I think we need Levo, could you come hang some...” uhhhh.
Valid point. It would also help if doctors have more than one - one liner in their list - yes nurses can provide and must provide great support. However, it is also doctors responsibility to know their patient information and not rely so heavily on the nurses for background info.
I am dieing laughing 😄 At least after this I will try very hard to be an exemplary nurse and give an excellent SBAR every single time . Thank you! Watched this video not once
@@Sarah-rf2wq I am super happy than someone super 🤓 is going through the comments, actually reading them and giving a constructive feedback. Excellent job! Thank you. I'll work on the spelling and constructing the sentences for easier understanding
Happens the other way around too...even on doctors’ documentations and we have to tell the doctor they charted on wrong patient...And this is not funny at all: you are exaggerating the tagalog accent and the whole story...and making fun/mocking a Filipino nurse. Smh
Ok so you wanna tease Dr Z? Ok I got u dog. What about the on call doctors who are sleep when I call and they did it listen to anything I say and tell me , “ send him to the hospital.” 😶 I just want to give the norvasc early because the bp is elevated. But no ...” send him to the hospital”
I make memes of the ridiculous things doctors tell me. And yes I've said since dumb stuff myself. I can't be expected to know why I paged you when you call back 30 minutes later. And I've used apap to put our ten other fires in the meantime
I’ll never forget the one time I called the new on call at 0200 because a resident had coarse crackles in the lungs and had an O2 sat around 85% R/A and a fast respiration rate. On the other end I got “FOR THIS YOU CALL ME AT 2AM?” I said “um, well yes doctor. The pt can’t breathe” he continued to groan and I was like “can I just get an order for a ventolin nebulizer tx and a chest x-ray please” he said yes and hung up. Lmfao. I was like woooooooooow.
Well sadly, when the physician calls us back we are in somone else's room , away from the computer. Maybe with our hands in poop or trying to put in an IV. But it is funny. Also, why do physicans think we know bed x or How is Miss y..did she poop (usually asked right at the start of our shift)...but if we ask about Mr Y in room 3 we get the I know nothing about the patient. Sometimes we nurses have to look up the patient just like the doc.
Well I don't know how you work in your hospital but an oncall doctor can be covering multiple wards whereas nurses have like 8-10 patients each. Its far more reasonable to expect someone to remember 8 patients they've spent their whole shift with than than 60, most of which they're never seen...
I think you made a make believe story. Before any foreign-educated nurse qualify for being a US RN, they should pass CGFNS , NCLEX TOEFL etc. In terms of the body temperature that you mentioned, it is unbelievable that they would make a mistake like that. Next time, make a believable story and don’t use people for laughs.
Why do you have to put TAGALOG as your example? Your wife is an Asian right? Do not single out Filipinos if we can single out your race. Tsk.Tsk. I am very disappointed with how you put "nursing errors" in a demeaning way. Educate people with respect and translate your experiences with research. We can also cite an example of doctors who act more moronic than your personal experiences.
You should have just focused on the information needed to communicate in a health care system regarding patient status and provided examples of nursing errors commonly done or should try avoiding. You’re mocking the accent from a visible minority. Racist.
What a horrible man. Why does she need to have an accent? Nurses support young doctors who don’t have a clue when they leave university. If this is true it’s an exception. So you put up with her the same way you were supported by nurses when you first trained.
Why do you hate nurses so much...or maybe just the Asian ones..? I will concede that today's nurses are a lot different than when I became a nurse ....1982. I don't think their education is as comprehensive.. especially in terms of experience with patients during training. I'm a PNP now. I guess u dislike NP's also.
Deborah Mulkey nursing school is much easier than when you went. I’m pretty positive about that. This is just a funny anecdote about a poor SBARR. He is a very big champion of nurses and defends them on a frequent basis. I understand that this video doesn’t demonstrate that at all though. I don’t see how it suggests that he hates nurses either though. If you enjoy some cheeky, albeit sometime vulgar dialogue on some current medical issues, give some of his other videos a chance. If that isn’t acceptable to you, I don’t believe you would like them. Thank you for all of your service in the medical field and keep on healing friend.
I'm not certain when this video was made but this is just terrible and disrespectful. Cultural awareness applied to everyone, including (and especially) our colleagues. To mock a nurse (accent, words, word choice...."he or she, whatever the moon is") is disrespectful and distasteful. After 30 years in this profession, I thought we were better than this. I would hope that this physician will consider removing this video so that no one else is offended.
"Yes Dr, he is ablaze."
Hahahaha :)
"This would imply that the patient is actually on fire..." LMAO
The correct SBAR way of doing it (with extrapolation for a bit of flavour) :
"78yom, known diabetic and hypertensive, came in with urosepsis, currently spiking a fever. Of 455F. The patient is on fire. I tried to give him some Tylenol but he refused to stand still long enough to swallow. Could I get some subcutaneous morphine instead? He seems to be in pain. Can't quantify his pain on the scale, but I'd say it's at least a solid 8."
That being said, the mental imagery of this call, and whatever the hell is going on on the nurse's side, is enough to make me laugh out loud.
That is exactly how I would say it. Lol
Oh snap
Wouldn’t the patient is on fire be the second priority??? After his name and age
Love this
Great job 👏
"The patient is ablaze" makes me crack up every time!
Haha! Well... on behalf of all of us nurses, I apologize for these sorts of calls. I remember the first time I called a MD with a high BP and didn't know the pulse. I'll never make that mistake again! Thanks for having such a good sense of humor about it. :)
Nursity yeah I’ve done that before lol
Probably all do it at least once....
Sames
anytime I'm feeling down, I pull up this video....never fails to cheer me up LMAO
"Yes, doctor....The patient is ablaze...." BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!
"De patient is ablaze" LOL
He is ablaze. Can you bring some Tylenol.
[dyin']
When I was a new grad RN I called the doctor during the day to alert him that the patient expired. I was screamed at that an ordinary resident could have pronounced. I hadn't seen any residents. They weren't there until fall.
There've probably been Radio Reports into ERs like this.
"Medic 1 to Saint Elsewhere."
"Saint Elsewhere"
"Coming into you with a 54 year old male patient, chief complaint of a fever, vitals are BP, HR, RR, SPO2, BGL."
"When was onset?"
"Approximately 15 minutes ago, secondary to the patient being on fire."
"Wait what?"
Or something.
Happens the other direction too. I actually had a doctor try and give a verbal order for "a little bit of Benadryl" It's always 2 AM. The way to know how a nurse's night is going? "is it really 2 AM?" Bad night involves cussing and fustration, good night involes smiles and looking up at the clock like their surprise.
This is amazing. I am an American nurse, I must admit sometimes I fall short. Thank you for making that fun! I laughed my buttocks(Z DAD )off. That was a great reminder of how many patients you guys have, and I work in NICU. We are blessed to have a NEO 24/7.Beep, ding, beep, parents(love)but my baby has hiccups, dealing with a brady, ect. sometimes we are not prepared. I will remember this video!!!! lol lol lol
I just saw this and it brings back flashbacks to being a resident at the VA.
Nurse: Doctor, the patient has a fever
Me:What is his temperature?
Nurse:I didn't take it.
Me:So go take it and come back and tell me what it is.
Nurse: (a few minutes later). It's normal.
Me: So why did you call?
Nurse: He's all sweaty and shaking
Me: Oh crap. (Runs to check on patient who turns out to be a diabetic who was NPO for a procedure that was cancelled that AM and rescheduled for the next day so has not eaten for over 24 hours but was still getting insulin and had a sugar of 20)
Why was the pt hyperglycaemic after fasting?
@@joestevenson5568 in the US, blood sugar is measured in mg/dL instead of mmol/L. Using this measurement a normal range for a diabetic is 80-150 mg/dL. A blood sugar measurement of 20 mg/dL is equal to 1.1 mmol/L, or dangerously hypoglycemic.
(Sorry you had to wait so long for a response. I just happened to stumble upon this video today)
Not being mean here, but, back when I was a pleb in high school, (Hey, it was the 70's and my dad was the head Pathologist.) our hospital just recruited some nurses from the Philippines. I went to the floor, and drew for a blood culture. On the way out, the new Philippine nurse called out, "Dats a STAT!". "Yes, I know, that's why I came up so fast." (Yep, our lab was in the basement, surprise!!!), I replied.
About an hour later, I answered the phone at the main desk. "Where is my STAT. You people are so slow!", it was the Philippine nurse from before. " "I drew it already, you saw me do it." I countered. "Yes, yes, but my results are where?", she asked. "Uhmmmm, it's a blood culture, remember?" I asked. I am now very confused, back in the day, ALL, blood cultures, took 48 to 72 hours. "I know what it is, were are my results! I have to call the doctor!" she snapped.
I put her on hold and went back into the main lab, and told the M.T., David, in micro what was going on. David sighed, got up, walked over to the "Hot House" as we called it. Opened the door, picked up the bottle I drew, looked it over, set it back on the shelf, closed the door. David then picked up the phone, opened the line to the waiting nurse and said, "60 minutes, no growth." "Finally!, you people are to slow." the nurse snarled.
15 minutes later, the doctor called. He and David had a great laugh.
i come here every once in a while to laugh at this scenario and comment!
I can’t get enough of your video! 😂😂😂😂
This has happened to me so many times…and for some reason the majority was with float nurses. We had home call during my VA-based residency and it used to irk me so much whenever I got these calls and the RN only gave a bed number as an identifier…and I basically had to dig for information one question at a time, since it was often for a patient I wasn’t caring for regularly. Having a crap computer that wouldn’t allow me to set up functional remote access only made things 10x worse, especially when it would take me 45 minutes to just log in to put orders in-it was faster for me to make a round trip to the hospital to take care of business. I’ve definitely learned to have much more patience in these situations since most of us are trying our best to do right by the patients we care for.
That made me laugh so hard I cried. Thank you always Dr. Z
Omg!! 😂😂 so I’m not a dr but I was a rapid response RN for 7 yrs. I feel you SO much on this!!!! We’d get the craziest calls!!! There are just too many examples to give...I’d be writing a novel
I had a patient ablaze once. He was shocked with a defibrillator when a dry piece of gauze missed on his chest sparked and caught fire. One can’t make this up.
Don't feel bad, I can't even get a decent bedside report from most other nurses. Usually they start with " patient had a bowel movement today" instead of the reason why they came in lol
Obsessed with BM.....
@@jenniferbitner6112 Must be geriatrics
@@joestevenson5568 or spinal cord injury. We’re kind of obsessed with bowel & bladder function
This frustrates me in a sense because I am a new nurse and I am all about giving full report because I take serious what they teach in school about SBAR. Then, I get these doctors in 99.9 % on times that as I am blabbing away theyr are like rushing me to tell them just the problem at hand, they already know the patients and/or are annoyed with the details. Now I just say "Unit X, Bed Y, Name Z, and main concern. I let them ask me what additional info they need. Always make sure you have VS taken , current labs results, PMHx, and current orders and care plan details on screen ready to go. That's it.
And this goes both ways! Doctors sometimes after the report give you and imconplete order w/o frequency, quantity, or other relevant detail...it's not all about the nurses. Let's make it clear.
Doctor don't leeb.... Bee are habing a botluck in de comperence room. Bee hab chicken adobo, panzit, lumpia and leche flan. Come, get a blate! Bee lub you!
Erika Ronska OMG! I’m rolling on the ground lmao! 😂😂😂
So true and YUMMY
I had a Filipina nurse MIL. *holds out plate and says please*
I love working with Filipino nurses!
This made my night.
I love how the music for these segments is the baseline created by the world's most famous and most successful Doctor of all time... Formally trained on Crenshaw Boulevard... Andre "Dr. Dre" Young.
"Dr. Z. patient Robert Jones in room 203 REQUESTS THAT I CALL YOU" (unless vented lol)....then do quick SBAR. That way , I rarely get a sassy-as* 'tude from on-call doc. Then I quickly chart that "PT. requests MD be called, SBAR given, order received." After 6 months, when they get to know you, they know you don't call at 0300 for not-picky sh*t. CYA PEOPLE!
We used SBAR, but the Dr would say yeah yeah I know the pt, , no I dont want anything done , click... seriously thats what they would do
Flash back to ward call. One of the (many) reasons I'm leaving the hospital to focus on GP instead of hospital medicine. Used to get this exact phone call "bed 13....." and I'm covering over 200 patients over 12 hours. Not to mention when you ask for background" actually this is not my patient, I'm just covering the nurse who is on lunch break, just come and review" . Ughhh seriously the hospital sucked the life out of me and I'm counting down until the end of my contract.... #doctorburnoutisreal
lol. I love it! I'm filipina :) You got the accent right....
I think that's more of an Indian accent :(
I love this so much. As a new nurse I feel this on a personal level too because I try to give really good information to my docs but working at night sometimes I mess up and forget to get some information, and I can just feel the palpable disappointment and defeat on the other end. Doctor...I'm so sorry for who I am as a person and I will try to be better in the future. I promise I'm smarter when it isn't 3 am lolololol. I also love the he/she thing because I have several amazing Filipino coworkers and I always feel like an ass clarifying the gender but I'm like...if I'm going to take 15 minutes of report on this person I have to make damn well sure we're talking about the same person hahaha
This lasts a career in my case 30 years. We are humans not robots, we forget, we get tired, we think of everything in the shower or driving home. It’s life.
In South Africa, this is actually an example of a good nurse. We just get a ward screamed at us and told to come, then they cut the call. . . SBAR is none existant
I can't get enough of this call LMAO
Tylenol puts out fires?
It does, but every now and then you'll get that one patient that doesn't have the order for Tylenol. Then you have to call the doc at 0200 for an order for it...
emeltser it's a wonder drug. 😂
Haha OMG I am a Filipino NP and this is so true lol
👏🏻👏🏻thank you for the video 😂 😂
OMG too funny. But that does happen regularly. When I call a Doctor with abnormals I have everything ready to give him good report.
Unless the MRP is the patients family physician, I assume the doctor knows zero about the patient and just start with “mr Smith 76 year old male admitted with urosepsis, relevant history of (state relevant hx). I am concerned about (actual reason you’re calling), recent vitals/assessment point to (insert possible issue?), I need (insert what you want...new pain orders/come see patient/what do you think). The funny thing is I’ve actually had doctors get short with me and cut me off because I’m giving too much information! it seems you never can win🤷♀️😆.
I am appalled as a RN by this, I don’t want the public to believe this is the norm. Nurses are well aware of how to handle their patients before needing to reach out to the attending.
oh my Goodness!! this was hilarious! what?! "yes doctor he is ablaze" lolol yo! smh
Omg this had me rolling!
This is too good: I can remember the late night calls where they piecemeal the information to you (like a tease where you hope you can solve the problem and go back to sleep)..... But then at the end you have to get out of bed anyway...Would have been better to just get out of bed immediately and go take care of the problem... But on those instances, you could have simply taken care of the problem and rolled back over to sleep.... You can never win on a call night.... LOL.
I remember as a medical student, the poor intern that upset the RN's in a unionized public hospital where the doctors had to go and put the IV's back in after they came out...They made his life a living nightmare on his call nights between 2 and 4 in the AM with multiple IV's magically coming out... We students had to beg to not wind up on his team...Otherwise, our lives would be miserable with him as well...From what I can remember, he seemed to have a hard time learning his lesson, and kept reliving the nightmare on subsequent call nights...
Moral of the story I learned from those nights (amongst other things): Never upset the nurse, unless you are ready for all the misery she and her nurse colleagues will unload upon you...Being nice to staff can go a long way.
oh my god accent is right on the money :)
You are hilarious. Wish you were in my hospital quality team when the cases are reviewed. .
This reminds me of the occasional calls we get in ICU from other units wanting us to “come pace her” or “I think we need Levo, could you come hang some...” uhhhh.
Are you sure this was not a prank call?
Thank you for posting this by itself! It makes me laugh every time. 😂😂😂 🔥 🔥 🔥
That was freaking hilarious lmao
Valid point.
It would also help if doctors have more than one - one liner in their list - yes nurses can provide and must provide great support. However, it is also doctors responsibility to know their patient information and not rely so heavily on the nurses for background info.
I am dieing laughing 😄 At least after this I will try very hard to be an exemplary nurse and give an excellent SBAR every single time . Thank you! Watched this video not once
"dying"...master spelling first 😉...and why are you laughing if you haven't even watched the video once?
@@Sarah-rf2wq I am super happy than someone super 🤓 is going through the comments, actually reading them and giving a constructive feedback. Excellent job! Thank you. I'll work on the spelling and constructing the sentences for easier understanding
@@Sarah-rf2wq thank god you're here, sarah.
I don't think she is a Filipina. We don't talk that way.
🤣
Funny!!! Have to laugh as a icu nurse at this hilarious recall but totally not ok to make calls like that a routine mistake!😂😂
Happens the other way around too...even on doctors’ documentations and we have to tell the doctor they charted on wrong patient...And this is not funny at all: you are exaggerating the tagalog accent and the whole story...and making fun/mocking a Filipino nurse. Smh
The struggle is real
Ok so you wanna tease Dr Z? Ok I got u dog. What about the on call doctors who are sleep when I call and they did it listen to anything I say and tell me , “ send him to the hospital.” 😶 I just want to give the norvasc early because the bp is elevated. But no ...” send him to the hospital”
This is F@#$ing amazing
I make memes of the ridiculous things doctors tell me. And yes I've said since dumb stuff myself. I can't be expected to know why I paged you when you call back 30 minutes later. And I've used apap to put our ten other fires in the meantime
I’ll never forget the one time I called the new on call at 0200 because a resident had coarse crackles in the lungs and had an O2 sat around 85% R/A and a fast respiration rate. On the other end I got “FOR THIS YOU CALL ME AT 2AM?” I said “um, well yes doctor. The pt can’t breathe” he continued to groan and I was like “can I just get an order for a ventolin nebulizer tx and a chest x-ray please” he said yes and hung up. Lmfao. I was like woooooooooow.
I'm crying! HEE HEE HEE.
Hi Doc. Am transitioning, was just curious on ISBARR, am going for shadowing tommorrow and you really cracked my ribs!. 😂
Yup, always clarify if the patient is a he or she if the one giving report is Filipino. Sex/gender often gets mixed up for them.
hahaha - perfect Pilipino accent!
That was hilarious but spot on.
Well sadly, when the physician calls us back we are in somone else's room , away from the computer. Maybe with our hands in poop or trying to put in an IV. But it is funny. Also, why do physicans think we know bed x or How is Miss y..did she poop (usually asked right at the start of our shift)...but if we ask about Mr Y in room 3 we get the I know nothing about the patient. Sometimes we nurses have to look up the patient just like the doc.
Well I don't know how you work in your hospital but an oncall doctor can be covering multiple wards whereas nurses have like 8-10 patients each. Its far more reasonable to expect someone to remember 8 patients they've spent their whole shift with than than 60, most of which they're never seen...
HAAHHHAH that filipino accent tho
🤣😂🤣 i know her!
Jo Koy would have been awesome doing this.
And nurses complain the doctors on call are rude😂
nice story
Shud ob put bicks on da poots. Den socks por da peeber.
Ferdi Sanchez omg! I have worked for 18 yrs as a nurse and made lots of Pilipino friends lol this is exactly what they sound like!
Love ur filipino
Good News! It is still that way at the VA!
🤣 … hilarious!!
you sound like JoKoy
I think you made a make believe story. Before any foreign-educated nurse qualify for being a US RN, they should pass CGFNS , NCLEX TOEFL etc. In terms of the body temperature that you mentioned, it is unbelievable that they would make a mistake like that. Next time, make a believable story and don’t use people for laughs.
hello there
Hahahahaha! Omg
Lol Phillipina nurses🤣🤣🤣
Why do you have to put TAGALOG as your example? Your wife is an Asian right? Do not single out Filipinos if we can single out your race. Tsk.Tsk. I am very disappointed with how you put "nursing errors" in a demeaning way. Educate people with respect and translate your experiences with research. We can also cite an example of doctors who act more moronic than your personal experiences.
Matthew Bailey it’s a joke. I’m a Filipino nurse and I thought it was hilarious. Sheeesh
Im a Filipino RN and was laughing the whole time. Calm down
Supposed to be funny...
@@MarkSetGO I’m gonna go on a limb here and assume that Mr. Bailey is, in fact, not actually Filipino…
🤣🤣🤣
Thompson John Harris Anna Lee Ruth
You should have just focused on the information needed to communicate in a health care system regarding patient status and provided examples of nursing errors commonly done or should try avoiding. You’re mocking the accent from a visible minority. Racist.
What a horrible man. Why does she need to have an accent?
Nurses support young doctors who don’t have a clue when they leave university.
If this is true it’s an exception. So you put up with her the same way you were supported by nurses when you first trained.
Lolol!
😂😂😂😂
I hate getting report from some dude who calls he a she. Or por six pibe for gcs.
LMAO -
Your Hilarious!!
Why do you hate nurses so much...or maybe just the Asian ones..? I will concede that today's nurses are a lot different than when I became a nurse ....1982.
I don't think their education is as comprehensive.. especially in terms of experience with patients during training. I'm a PNP now. I guess u dislike NP's also.
Deborah Mulkey nursing school is much easier than when you went. I’m pretty positive about that. This is just a funny anecdote about a poor SBARR. He is a very big champion of nurses and defends them on a frequent basis. I understand that this video doesn’t demonstrate that at all though. I don’t see how it suggests that he hates nurses either though. If you enjoy some cheeky, albeit sometime vulgar dialogue on some current medical issues, give some of his other videos a chance. If that isn’t acceptable to you, I don’t believe you would like them. Thank you for all of your service in the medical field and keep on healing friend.
HAHAHA!
I'm not certain when this video was made but this is just terrible and disrespectful. Cultural awareness applied to everyone, including (and especially) our colleagues. To mock a nurse (accent, words, word choice...."he or she, whatever the moon is") is disrespectful and distasteful. After 30 years in this profession, I thought we were better than this. I would hope that this physician will consider removing this video so that no one else is offended.
Funny! 455F!
Lololol
lol
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂