Gotta give credit to the other actors as well. Those doctors looked exhausted (from trying to keep her alive) and found the perfect balance between showing sadness and steadfast resolve. Of course they are gutted they couldn't save her, but that's the nature of the job. You can't save everyone. Sometimes your best is not enough, and you have to accept that.
@@larsoftheredhotlovers6220 for sure, i never discredited the others. I just know how hard it is for actors to get the mother-just-lost- her-baby scream and meltdown, i just was complimenting her part lol
If there really is a secret cancer cure out there, and the government and big pharma are keeping it secret so they can keep making money on ineffective "treatments", then they are guilty of murdering millions of Haley's every year.
All this technological and scientific progress and we still can't save people when it really matters. It's nothing but a tragedy on the largest scale imaginable.
A doctor's job, aside from saving lives, is preparing loved ones for the imminent death of a family member or friend. Manning let her emotions drive her decisions, which made the death of that little girl so much harder. The parents asked, straight up, if their child was dying. Instead of preparing them for what was likely, she propped them up with misplaced hope, only to pull the rug out from under them just hours later.
I don’t feel a fucking thing and there’s nothing you can do to stop because that’s how my autism works especially since it’s a tv show get used to it 👍
The woman who plays the mother has to be a mother in real life. Her cries, her screams after losing the girl-only a mother could channel that kind of pain like that.
My uncle, who works in emergency medicine, once told me a story that I'll never forget. He treated a sweet little girl, about 9 or 10, with leukemia. He was her favorite doctor. She was afraid of needles and she would never let anyone else, not even the nurses, draw her blood except for him. They grew attached and he came to love her as his daughter but unfortunately, she didn't make it. He would always tear up whenever he'd tell me about her. He told me that's when he realized that when you work in healthcare, you need to be empathetic yet you also need to detach your emotions from your patients. Although he never completely moved on from her passing, she inspired him to be strong and continue his work. Amazing girl.
I cried when Dr Manning was too. How can you not. I know doctors and nurses are supposed to be emotionally detached from their patients, but sometimes you can’t help it when you’ve been treating them for so long. My heart broke for the parents and especially the mother. Wow that was great acting
I know what that feels like. My baby boy died on September 28 of aggressive and quick soft palate cancer. At the end, he couldn't swallow, with saliva leaking from his mouth, he couldn't breathe anymore, it became that obstructive. Watching him deteriorate was worse than watching him pass 💔 He was 12. His 12th birthday will be next month.
I'm so sorry for your lost. He is no longer suffering and he is no longer sick, and he's watching you and he is with you always. He is in paradise now. Praying for you and your family 🙏
Ik as medical professionals you have to be professional and emotionally detached but when you treat a patient for so long you naturally build a bond with them, its so hard and sad when those patients don’t pull through. Just know that you did everything you could and I applaud and have massive respect for people who work in the medical field. All types ❤
One of the most heartbreaking areas in a hospital is the pediatric hem-onc unit. Because of an immune deficiency I was always placed there and there are some things I heard/saw happen still haunt me. The sound of parents grief when they’ve lost their child is something I’d never want to hear again. I had a little boy “buddy”(6 vs my 16) who’d always come out to the child life room when I was there (the floor did all kinds of arts and crafts and a playroom stocked with games and toys) He had lung cancer that metastasized to his liver, heart, and brain one morning he couldn’t breathe and started seizing… I remember them calling a code to his room and about 30 minutes later hearing his mom scream and completely break down, all the nurses were crying at that loss and I was bawling like a baby. 6 year olds shouldn’t die for any reason not just because of cancer.
I was a patient of pancreas cancer last year if cancer tumor won't be detected in early stage you have nothing to do I was in asystole after the surgery because the surgery got complicated and I had internal bleeding what caused the flatline.
@@sirena80hi sorry if it's rude for you to ask.... But could you tell me your age? I'm currently terrified of cancer an searching for all available information thank you
The biggest honour of my life was being a cancer nurse. Guiding people through their journey and comforting the ones who were terminally ill. I got many a compliment for how I spoke to them. I miss the job
I didn't get the opportunity to go back and thank the nurses and staff, that helped my mom. The empathy shown when we confirmed she was terminal.. their demeanor and professionalism, were unmatched. It took years for me to move forward from losing her, but I am thankful for people like you. Exceptional, necessary, and appreciated!
@@kempisd thank you 🙂 I really appreciate your comment 🙂 its a tough job, but it's shaped me into being good in a crisis in my daily life 🙂 I felt honoured to be the one people would ask for. I haven't done the job for 14 years now, since I gave up to care for my husband(he's disabled and terminally ill) but if I hadn't had the honour of caring for people like your mum, then I wouldn't be able to mentally cope with things now. So even years later, after the passing of people, they still touch and influence my life. There's a nurse or carer out there somewhere who's saying the same because of you, your family and your experience.
This is what people in the healthcare industry face. Just watching this scene, even knowing it's just a TV show, breaks my heart. I try to be healthy as possible to somehow reduce these incidences from happening. I and will always have the highest respects to these heroes.
hearing the mother's anguished cries at losing her sick daughter just hurts me so deeply. you have to remind yourself it's just a tv show, it's not real, but it feels so real. she deserves so much praise for her performance in this scene.
there's only 2 things that scare me in this world, #1 Drive thru windows (you can thank final destination for that one) and the #2 is the scream of a parent who just lost a child, it hits you in your core, and the woman who played the mother nailed it on the head. sent chills down my spine and it was very sad to watch.
i recently lost a patient in my dementia unit after working with her for months. i was the only staff she remembered and she considered me family (which is incredible considering the memory issues). it was completely unexpected and seeing the emotions really sent me back to my own feelings that day. i’ll never forget the last words she said to me, holding her in my arms as she took her last breath, and silently crying while attending to the 14 others on my unit. crying now writing this. the acting is amazing and can confirm very real in these situations. you get so attached to long term care even though you’re not supposed to.
The last like 90 seconds of this video Manning deserves an Oscar for. You can hear her voice break when she says charge to 200, and then explaining to the parents…. I cried along with her
It is a heartbreaking moment seeing a patient you been treating for such some times health deteriorating and watching them loose their battle is such a heart wrenching thing to see as a doctor/nurse etc I do not blame Dr.Manning for crying in the end I cried too when I saw her walking out crying as the patients parents crying because they lost their baby.
This is one of the main reasons why I wouldn't become a doctor or nurse. I get attached to people easily, and I know you are not supposed to be emotionally attached to a patient. Especially if they passed away...this had me in tears.
I remember seeing the other clip from this episode, the girl and other guy got the infection from a scope because the way it was designed gave it a ridge where infectious bacteria or virus can remain even after proper cleaning per the scopes instructions
might sound sick but i kinda like these kinda of EPs it shows how brilliant the acting is from all sides Dr Manning the mum and dad and the kid whos sick and it shows us the pain that parents go though when losing their kid.
I like that it shows how patients passing away can affect their doctors/nurses too. Deaths of patients can actually be so sad and traumatizing to them.
It's such a heartbreaking experience for a child to have to go through so much. Sometimes, a soul comes to earth for a short time but leaves an impression on so many people.
People have no idea how grateful they should be just to have their health. There are COUNTLESS sick children that would do anything to trade places with one of the countless healthy people who "have it so bad".
You know what this made me think of? The Karen who coughed on a woman at Pier 1 during the pandemic for filming her behaving badly. Turns out the coughed on woman was a foster mom of like 10 kids with brain cancer. Karen was eventually arrested and ostracized from her community. Rightly so bc this clip is EXACTLY what she could have done to a woman battling brain cancer.
Omg the end made me cry so much cuz Hayley was just 11 years old and she died in front of her parents and her favorite doctor 😭 and I thought she was going to live but I guess not 😭😭
My granddad fought with dementia for 15 years. It went on so long it got to the point that it was easy to believe it would never kill him, he'd just stay speechless (and mostly unconscious) until he died naturally. For the last few years of his life, he had private carers come in three times to a day to help my grandma with him. Last summer, he got a second bout of covid, and while he survived that, it was enough to push him over the edge and the doctors said it was finally time. The carers came to his funeral, not only to say goodbye, but to support my grandma. I will never forget how loving, caring and genuinely devastated they were, only to have to go back to work with their other clients that evening while the rest of us grieved and consoled each other at the wake. Medical professionals do not get nearly enough credit doing this side of their job....
This is a heartbreaking, heartwarming episode. This little lady was so brave, and her mental resilience is awe inspiring. They all need grammy's for this episode
As someone who has a chronic illness that causes extreme pain can kill me at any moment and various types of other symptoms most of us are prepared to die, even little kids with cancer their parents don’t have to tell them about death you can feel it, they can feel it. They can also see it in everyone around them and their comes a time when they are only going through the pain and torture for their family because they know that their family is not ready for them to go.
He might've been looking at the doctors but that sounded to me like he was crying to himself and his wife, it sounds so desperate like he's trying to plea and convince someone to recognise when it's over. It's soul-crushing.
@@JordanBrown-lt5bjUgh... So what?? We can't talk about the show then? Many of the episodes, especially in medical and law shows, are based on REAL LIFE events as well, so some of them are genuinely heartbreaking.
Young cancer patient with no immune system who has a super bug that’s resistant to antibiotics. No masks, keeps her on the ER floor (when there might be an outbreak), dosnt quarantine her or have a protocol for the people who do come in the room.. 🤦🏻♀️ Welp that’s a lot help! Also this is why palliative care and palliative doctors are so important! They have such a hard job but they make losing a loved one just a little bit easier. Granted not but much but that little bit does a lot. You actually feel like you get to prepare yourself and take the time to say your goodbyes to them instead of it feeling so sudden.
I would love to be a nurse or a doctor like that to help people. I wish I could’ve been able to go to school to do so. I really do disagree with the statement that nurses and doctors should be emotionally detached from their patients because hope, love, and care is what really makes a doctor/nurse. I mean the whole point of who they are is to do EVERYTHING in their power to help you and give you hope until there really truly is none left. I would never wanted a doctor or nurse that didn’t care as much as she so obviously does. That’s beautiful. Doctors and nurses deserve to grieve too. Especially when they’ve known the patient for a decent amount of time. Everything they go through is NOT AT ALL normal. It’s not an every day thing. Their emotions, their experiences are too much for any human to go through.
Ive always loved watching this show. Chicago med all the Chicago's shows. But this one show with this little girl having cancer really hit me hard in the heart. Im so sorry for anyone who has family that dies of cancer mostly a child. Blessings to all of you 🙏🏻
The last minute or so was absolutely gut-wrenching. I could never be a doctor or nurse because it would mentally and emotionally kill me to have to go through something like this over and over again.
I know how this feels. 2018 a 2 year old I was very close with died from cancer. He had gotten sick but he was too weak from the chemo to fight it off. He died in his pregnant mother’s arms. I still remember falling to the floor when I found out. And baking cookies for the funeral. This year one of my best friends died from cancer. She had it since she was 11 and caught it off for over 4 years. She never gave up, she just went home. I miss them.
This is very upsetting for me because I am in girlscouts Add 1 of my fellow girl scout sisters Passed away from cancer and she's only 11She passed 2 months ago
Some years ago I read an article that said that doctors in Russia wouldn't tell patients they were dying because it would make their passing easier. The stress of knowing your dying can add many more complications that causes suffering. This action by these doctors would seem to follow the oath of Hypocrites. First do no harm.
And I mean...pretty sure that the patients are gonna figure it out anyway, either when they are actively dying, or when they realize they're not really being given treatment anymore, and are instead being given meds to keep them comfortable. The human body has ways of knowing it's in jeopardy, even if no one specifically tells the patient.
A doctor told my late mother very bluntly that she would die from cancer. Doctor showed no bedside manner, but l do not blame him. Sometimes, it is better to be blunt. However, my late mother described him as kind!!!
@@gordanazakula5669 Many patients prefer honesty when it comes to their condition. I imagine it's probably better than knowing SOMETHING is wrong, but not knowing what you're up against (pre-diagnosis can be the hardest part sometimes). Often it's the families who want to lie outright, lie by omission, or otherwise pretend that everything is fine; which doesn't help anyone, since you will have to stare reality in the face eventually. Better to be truthful, and handle things as a team, rather than stay in denial to the point where you accidentally neglect supporting your loved ones.
@@Panda72021 Please see videos about intubation for general anaesthetic. For dental surgery, they place a tube up your nostril; yikes!!! Glad l ran away!!!
My younger sister died of cancer while at home.. I had been afraid to look into her eyes and see her pupils blown like that.. but when it happened I looked down deeply into eternity and gently closed her eyes and said "fly little bird fly.. she was no longer in pain or fear.
Damn give that woman an Oscar. You could hear the pain in her cries...
Women are great at crying. 😂
@@jezalb2710you are definitely not wrong
yes and when she was talking,too
TV shows get Emmys.
@@jezalb2710
I'm sure you'd be great at crying if I got my hands on you.
the moms sob’s were insanely real. instead of an extra crying, she really gave us a such heartbreaking performance :(
Gotta give credit to the other actors as well. Those doctors looked exhausted (from trying to keep her alive) and found the perfect balance between showing sadness and steadfast resolve. Of course they are gutted they couldn't save her, but that's the nature of the job. You can't save everyone. Sometimes your best is not enough, and you have to accept that.
@@larsoftheredhotlovers6220 for sure, i never discredited the others. I just know how hard it is for actors to get the mother-just-lost- her-baby scream and meltdown, i just was complimenting her part lol
I dont blame manning for crying shes been treating haley for quiet some time . Its truly heartbeaking that these kind of things happen in real life :(
If there really is a secret cancer cure out there, and the government and big pharma are keeping it secret so they can keep making money on ineffective "treatments", then they are guilty of murdering millions of Haley's every year.
All this technological and scientific progress and we still can't save people when it really matters. It's nothing but a tragedy on the largest scale imaginable.
This is exactly why I call doctors and nureses science soilders.
A doctor's job, aside from saving lives, is preparing loved ones for the imminent death of a family member or friend. Manning let her emotions drive her decisions, which made the death of that little girl so much harder. The parents asked, straight up, if their child was dying. Instead of preparing them for what was likely, she propped them up with misplaced hope, only to pull the rug out from under them just hours later.
I don’t feel a fucking thing and there’s nothing you can do to stop because that’s how my autism works especially since it’s a tv show get used to it 👍
The woman who plays the mother has to be a mother in real life. Her cries, her screams after losing the girl-only a mother could channel that kind of pain like that.
My uncle, who works in emergency medicine, once told me a story that I'll never forget. He treated a sweet little girl, about 9 or 10, with leukemia. He was her favorite doctor. She was afraid of needles and she would never let anyone else, not even the nurses, draw her blood except for him. They grew attached and he came to love her as his daughter but unfortunately, she didn't make it. He would always tear up whenever he'd tell me about her. He told me that's when he realized that when you work in healthcare, you need to be empathetic yet you also need to detach your emotions from your patients. Although he never completely moved on from her passing, she inspired him to be strong and continue his work. Amazing girl.
Aw that’s amazing
Amen.
As a nurse working ltc and palliative care, it is soo hard to keep distance in your heart when you loose a patient.
😢😢😢😢😢
What was the girl's name???
I cried when Dr Manning was too. How can you not. I know doctors and nurses are supposed to be emotionally detached from their patients, but sometimes you can’t help it when you’ve been treating them for so long. My heart broke for the parents and especially the mother. Wow that was great acting
Me too😢
I know what that feels like. My baby boy died on September 28 of aggressive and quick soft palate cancer. At the end, he couldn't swallow, with saliva leaking from his mouth, he couldn't breathe anymore, it became that obstructive. Watching him deteriorate was worse than watching him pass 💔 He was 12. His 12th birthday will be next month.
Rip your son. We all have those moments man I hope your doing ok
Rest in paradise to your baby boy. Hang in there okay? He's in a better place not suffering anymore I promise ❤
I'm so sorry for your lost. He is no longer suffering and he is no longer sick, and he's watching you and he is with you always. He is in paradise now. Praying for you and your family 🙏
Happy heavenly birthday to your sweet baby boy 💐 Bless your heart as well. Sending you love and light
I’m so sorry ❤️🫂
Ik as medical professionals you have to be professional and emotionally detached but when you treat a patient for so long you naturally build a bond with them, its so hard and sad when those patients don’t pull through. Just know that you did everything you could and I applaud and have massive respect for people who work in the medical field. All types ❤
We still grieve and cry for patients, professional or not. 99% of healthcare workers do care and fight for their patients.
One of the most heartbreaking areas in a hospital is the pediatric hem-onc unit. Because of an immune deficiency I was always placed there and there are some things I heard/saw happen still haunt me. The sound of parents grief when they’ve lost their child is something I’d never want to hear again. I had a little boy “buddy”(6 vs my 16) who’d always come out to the child life room when I was there (the floor did all kinds of arts and crafts and a playroom stocked with games and toys) He had lung cancer that metastasized to his liver, heart, and brain one morning he couldn’t breathe and started seizing… I remember them calling a code to his room and about 30 minutes later hearing his mom scream and completely break down, all the nurses were crying at that loss and I was bawling like a baby. 6 year olds shouldn’t die for any reason not just because of cancer.
I was a patient of pancreas cancer last year if cancer tumor won't be detected in early stage you have nothing to do I was in asystole after the surgery because the surgery got complicated and I had internal bleeding what caused the flatline.
It happens as sad as it is. And sometimes there is nothing you can do.
@@sirena80hi sorry if it's rude for you to ask.... But could you tell me your age? I'm currently terrified of cancer an searching for all available information thank you
The biggest honour of my life was being a cancer nurse. Guiding people through their journey and comforting the ones who were terminally ill. I got many a compliment for how I spoke to them. I miss the job
I didn't get the opportunity to go back and thank the nurses and staff, that helped my mom. The empathy shown when we confirmed she was terminal.. their demeanor and professionalism, were unmatched. It took years for me to move forward from losing her, but I am thankful for people like you. Exceptional, necessary, and appreciated!
@@kempisd thank you 🙂 I really appreciate your comment 🙂 its a tough job, but it's shaped me into being good in a crisis in my daily life 🙂 I felt honoured to be the one people would ask for. I haven't done the job for 14 years now, since I gave up to care for my husband(he's disabled and terminally ill) but if I hadn't had the honour of caring for people like your mum, then I wouldn't be able to mentally cope with things now. So even years later, after the passing of people, they still touch and influence my life. There's a nurse or carer out there somewhere who's saying the same because of you, your family and your experience.
You're the truest kind of hero
This is what people in the healthcare industry face. Just watching this scene, even knowing it's just a TV show, breaks my heart. I try to be healthy as possible to somehow reduce these incidences from happening. I and will always have the highest respects to these heroes.
Even though this is a tv show, you can't help but think that stuff like this happens in real life.
my brother died of brain cancer when he was 11
@@makinley.sI’m so sorry for your loss.
@@makinley.sThat's heartbreaking! I am so sorry.
@@makinley.sRIP to your brother
hearing the mother's anguished cries at losing her sick daughter just hurts me so deeply. you have to remind yourself it's just a tv show, it's not real, but it feels so real. she deserves so much praise for her performance in this scene.
there's only 2 things that scare me in this world, #1 Drive thru windows (you can thank final destination for that one) and the #2 is the scream of a parent who just lost a child, it hits you in your core, and the woman who played the mother nailed it on the head. sent chills down my spine and it was very sad to watch.
Immediately I had tears running down my face
Womp womp
i recently lost a patient in my dementia unit after working with her for months. i was the only staff she remembered and she considered me family (which is incredible considering the memory issues). it was completely unexpected and seeing the emotions really sent me back to my own feelings that day. i’ll never forget the last words she said to me, holding her in my arms as she took her last breath, and silently crying while attending to the 14 others on my unit. crying now writing this. the acting is amazing and can confirm very real in these situations. you get so attached to long term care even though you’re not supposed to.
Natalie’s acting was so raw in this scene. Add on the mother’s heartwrenching cries, this is probably one of the saddest scenes in TV history
"For God's sake, leave her be!" Dad did the right thing. The incredibly hard thing, but the right thing
This brought tears to my eyes this is really heartbreaking
😭 OMG...me, too! So incredibly heartbreaking! 💔🙏
I ACTUALLY CRIED TEARS LIKE TEAR DROPS CAME OUT OF MY EYES 😭🤧
9:01 I had the same reaction as Dr. Manning at the mother's scream- deserves an Oscar, good God-
Cancer is just evil. 😢
Brain cancer is one of the deadliest diseases, indeed.
I know it’s hard
And all so @@rafaelalbertocayuela8661 and it can calls because it could cause blockages in peoples airways ans it’s sucks.
How unfortunate
Pure evil...
The last like 90 seconds of this video Manning deserves an Oscar for. You can hear her voice break when she says charge to 200, and then explaining to the parents…. I cried along with her
I was literally having goosebumps at the last scene may God not show such a day in anyone's life.
God is just having fun.
May she rest in peace I feel sorry for the parents no young kid should not have to go through this
This is a tv show.
It’s not real.
@@louiscyphre2267it is real because this happens in real life
It is a heartbreaking moment seeing a patient you been treating for such some times health deteriorating and watching them loose their battle is such a heart wrenching thing to see as a doctor/nurse etc I do not blame Dr.Manning for crying in the end I cried too when I saw her walking out crying as the patients parents crying because they lost their baby.
Lose
Well not the dad the mom was teh one screaming
😢😢 2:12 I don't wish to in those parents shoes it's so hard.. really you can't tell what's an emergency anymore 😢😢
This is one of the main reasons why I wouldn't become a doctor or nurse. I get attached to people easily, and I know you are not supposed to be emotionally attached to a patient. Especially if they passed away...this had me in tears.
I remember seeing the other clip from this episode, the girl and other guy got the infection from a scope because the way it was designed gave it a ridge where infectious bacteria or virus can remain even after proper cleaning per the scopes instructions
That's based on a true story
@@jldmswwait. Seriously??? What story??
I feel bad for her struggling with cancer. I feel bad for her parent as well.😢😢😢😢 RIP poor girl
Dr.Manning Really Cares About Her So Much It's Very Sad😔She's Have Cancer😔I Know Her Parents Are Very Sad😔
It was heartbreaking to see Dr. Manning cry it made me so sad
might sound sick but i kinda like these kinda of EPs it shows how brilliant the acting is from all sides Dr Manning the mum and dad and the kid whos sick and it shows us the pain that parents go though when losing their kid.
I like that it shows how patients passing away can affect their doctors/nurses too. Deaths of patients can actually be so sad and traumatizing to them.
Absolutely heartbreaking. Phenomenal acting by all.
It's such a heartbreaking experience for a child to have to go through so much. Sometimes, a soul comes to earth for a short time but leaves an impression on so many people.
People have no idea how grateful they should be just to have their health. There are COUNTLESS sick children that would do anything to trade places with one of the countless healthy people who "have it so bad".
You know what this made me think of? The Karen who coughed on a woman at Pier 1 during the pandemic for filming her behaving badly. Turns out the coughed on woman was a foster mom of like 10 kids with brain cancer. Karen was eventually arrested and ostracized from her community. Rightly so bc this clip is EXACTLY what she could have done to a woman battling brain cancer.
OH MY GOD NOT COUGHING every single person coughs every single day you cant just not cough around people
@@midnight_x_edits can you read?
@@midnight_x_edits oh god you’re a healthcare worker? The “most mean spirited people you know will become a nurse” trope wins again
@@midnight_x_edits The evil witch did it on purpose. Leaned in and coughed right in her face. She committed assault.
@@midnight_x_editsbut they did it intentionally
Torey Devitto is amazing
Omg the end made me cry so much cuz Hayley was just 11 years old and she died in front of her parents and her favorite doctor 😭 and I thought she was going to live but I guess not 😭😭
Hayley is so battling her cancer treatment so well
Well this was just absolutely heartbreaking but so beautifully acted.
My granddad fought with dementia for 15 years. It went on so long it got to the point that it was easy to believe it would never kill him, he'd just stay speechless (and mostly unconscious) until he died naturally. For the last few years of his life, he had private carers come in three times to a day to help my grandma with him. Last summer, he got a second bout of covid, and while he survived that, it was enough to push him over the edge and the doctors said it was finally time. The carers came to his funeral, not only to say goodbye, but to support my grandma.
I will never forget how loving, caring and genuinely devastated they were, only to have to go back to work with their other clients that evening while the rest of us grieved and consoled each other at the wake. Medical professionals do not get nearly enough credit doing this side of their job....
Just the scream from the mother at the end gave me goose bumps, you can just feel her pain😭😭😭
This is a heartbreaking, heartwarming episode. This little lady was so brave, and her mental resilience is awe inspiring. They all need grammy's for this episode
Yeah, they do. I even feel bad for Dr. Manning, who usually lets her emotions get the best of her. She had an excuse for being emotional this episude.
Since Ive become a parent, there is no more pain that I’ve ever experienced worse than watching my children suffer
Thank you, Chicago Med, for showing us, the world, the reality of childhood cancer. 🎗️
As someone who has a chronic illness that causes extreme pain can kill me at any moment and various types of other symptoms most of us are prepared to die, even little kids with cancer their parents don’t have to tell them about death you can feel it, they can feel it. They can also see it in everyone around them and their comes a time when they are only going through the pain and torture for their family because they know that their family is not ready for them to go.
Name of it?
I have one too. I know what it’s like. It sucks
I started crying at the end this is really heartbreaking to see💔🥺
I don't understand why the dads yelling "for God's sake let her be" I know he's grieving but the doctor is just doing his job.
He might've been looking at the doctors but that sounded to me like he was crying to himself and his wife, it sounds so desperate like he's trying to plea and convince someone to recognise when it's over. It's soul-crushing.
The ones with kids hit me hard. I can appreciate that they didn't pull the 'parents are mad at the hospital' card.
Great! Im inside a crowed train crying my eyes out and everyone is staring at me😢
I cried so so much while watching this 😭 😭
Omg, this made me cry. Just thinking about how manning felt.
It is only a show, get a grip
@@JordanBrown-lt5bjUgh... So what?? We can't talk about the show then? Many of the episodes, especially in medical and law shows, are based on REAL LIFE events as well, so some of them are genuinely heartbreaking.
This hits so hard, especially since Natalie is also a mother
It's most painful scenario for pediatric oncologist; in which situation we have to give up truly.
When she said well I guess we’ll spend one more time together she really meant it😢
Young cancer patient with no immune system who has a super bug that’s resistant to antibiotics.
No masks, keeps her on the ER floor (when there might be an outbreak), dosnt quarantine her or have a protocol for the people who do come in the room.. 🤦🏻♀️
Welp that’s a lot help!
Also this is why palliative care and palliative doctors are so important! They have such a hard job but they make losing a loved one just a little bit easier. Granted not but much but that little bit does a lot. You actually feel like you get to prepare yourself and take the time to say your goodbyes to them instead of it feeling so sudden.
She a strong girl im proud of her for fighting being brave and have a heart of gold of goodness
She is 11 and have cancer then all of these extra diseases oh god 💀😭 she is really fighter
Dr Charles is like the father of the whole hospital 😭
That was too sad 😢
I feel so bad for Dr. manning she loved that patient haley she tried so so hard to save her and she didn’t make it
My husband was leukemia patient 6 yrs ago
Hi I'm sorry, if I could ask how old was he? I'm sorry if I'm being rude, I'm terrified of cancer and looking for information
This is just heartbreaking 💔
I would love to be a nurse or a doctor like that to help people. I wish I could’ve been able to go to school to do so. I really do disagree with the statement that nurses and doctors should be emotionally detached from their patients because hope, love, and care is what really makes a doctor/nurse. I mean the whole point of who they are is to do EVERYTHING in their power to help you and give you hope until there really truly is none left. I would never wanted a doctor or nurse that didn’t care as much as she so obviously does. That’s beautiful. Doctors and nurses deserve to grieve too. Especially when they’ve known the patient for a decent amount of time. Everything they go through is NOT AT ALL normal. It’s not an every day thing. Their emotions, their experiences are too much for any human to go through.
We all want to hold onto hope.
Yes 0:02 😢❤
This episode was so sad, So heartbreaking 😞 ❤
I wish I could stop cancer for good.❤❤❤
Those mother's cries at the end were gut-wrenching
Being a patient is hard...but being any type of docter is harder
Dang you mean she actually cares…has a heart? Usually she’s so by the book!
Ugh...no, lol. The thing with Dr Manning is she's usually against the book, lol.
Dr Manning does care, yes some of her methods are problematic, but Manning really cares for her patients especially children, as she is a pediatrician
Ngl that made me tear up as a mother 😢
filming this with the crew was fun thank youu
Sweet girl i will be praying for her family 😊❤❤
i feel really sad for natilie her and hailey have a good friendship
I do not want to be a doctor and I do not envy those who have to deal with this.
this has to be the longest i've seen Dr. Abrams in a episode. More episodes with Dr. Abrams please ;w;
Nope I just lost a patient like this and it’s heartbreaking…
I feel sad for her. May she rest in peace.
it made me cry at the end
Ive always loved watching this show. Chicago med all the Chicago's shows. But this one show with this little girl having cancer really hit me hard in the heart. Im so sorry for anyone who has family that dies of cancer mostly a child. Blessings to all of you 🙏🏻
Dr Charles is almost literally always on the job. Respect to the character, and all Dr’s like him.
The last minute or so was absolutely gut-wrenching. I could never be a doctor or nurse because it would mentally and emotionally kill me to have to go through something like this over and over again.
R.I.P for little girl❤❤😭😭😭
The acting is actually very good, you don't need to play music over it.
It might have had more of an impact without it.
I never knew anyone who works at the hospital is this smart
I've never cried so dam hard 😢😢
I know how this feels. 2018 a 2 year old I was very close with died from cancer. He had gotten sick but he was too weak from the chemo to fight it off. He died in his pregnant mother’s arms. I still remember falling to the floor when I found out. And baking cookies for the funeral. This year one of my best friends died from cancer. She had it since she was 11 and caught it off for over 4 years. She never gave up, she just went home. I miss them.
This is very upsetting for me because I am in girlscouts Add 1 of my fellow girl scout sisters Passed away from cancer and she's only 11She passed 2 months ago
That’s soul crushing!
6:38 Oh look, she's becoming self-aware.
First time crying for 20 minutes when at the end she dies
Some years ago I read an article that said that doctors in Russia wouldn't tell patients they were dying because it would make their passing easier. The stress of knowing your dying can add many more complications that causes suffering. This action by these doctors would seem to follow the oath of Hypocrites. First do no harm.
And I mean...pretty sure that the patients are gonna figure it out anyway, either when they are actively dying, or when they realize they're not really being given treatment anymore, and are instead being given meds to keep them comfortable.
The human body has ways of knowing it's in jeopardy, even if no one specifically tells the patient.
A doctor told my late mother very bluntly that she would die from cancer. Doctor showed no bedside manner, but l do not blame him. Sometimes, it is better to be blunt. However, my late mother described him as kind!!!
@@gordanazakula5669 Many patients prefer honesty when it comes to their condition. I imagine it's probably better than knowing SOMETHING is wrong, but not knowing what you're up against (pre-diagnosis can be the hardest part sometimes).
Often it's the families who want to lie outright, lie by omission, or otherwise pretend that everything is fine; which doesn't help anyone, since you will have to stare reality in the face eventually.
Better to be truthful, and handle things as a team, rather than stay in denial to the point where you accidentally neglect supporting your loved ones.
@@Panda72021 Please see videos about intubation for general anaesthetic. For dental surgery, they place a tube up your nostril; yikes!!! Glad l ran away!!!
My younger sister died of cancer while at home.. I had been afraid to look into her eyes and see her pupils blown like that.. but when it happened I looked down deeply into eternity and gently closed her eyes and said "fly little bird fly.. she was no longer in pain or fear.
Ok you got me to cry today 😭
This made me cry 😭😭😭
Boosting resilience with igrotum. Its helping me face cancer challenges with strength.
Im not crying im just making waterfalls with my eyes 😭
This made me cry so much
I couldn't hold my tears
Dr Manning didn’t do anything wrong. She just helped her patient the best she could.
I Feel sorry for Dr Manning😢