The Saga of a GI Bleed: IR vs GI (with
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- GI bleeding isn’t always straightforward. It takes a lot tests, specialists and phone calls. I've spent a lot of time making calls like this both as a medicine resident and a GI doc.
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Thanks to Dr Cellini for joining me in this video. Check out his channel here! @DrCellini
This is so accurate it hurts!
hey it’s dr cellini
Gave me flashbacks
I almost fell on the floor when I saw you in the video. Nice job 👏🏼👏🏼👍
When I saw that you were the featured collaborator on this video i instantly clicked knowing it would be quality content
Ha! Well done fellas. So so accurate. I’m an ER PA. We are the middleman frequently caught in that scenario… thanks for the laugh and for all you do for our patients 🙏🏻
I love the collab with other RUclips docs, I think it adds a level of realism to the skit. The fainting at the end got me 🤣🤣🤣
I saw it more as a "Head hits keyboard" moment!
So true! So damn true!! GI here, my goodness I can totally relate, it happened so many times… 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I can relate to the nurse falling over! 🤣😂😁
You’ve heard of a face palm? 🤦♂️
Yeah. She did that. With her desk. 😁
As an internal medicine resident I can confirm this is 100% accurate. Damn all those phone calls we have to make for a single patient.
imagine a world where we can put them all in a room together
You guys charge a lot
What's extra frustrating is that this conversation takes about 100 times longer than shown here all the while the patient is decompensating in the ER asking the ER doc "Am I going to die?" and the family saying "ugh these doctors don't do anything!"
So dysfuctional
Correct
Chaotic
Amen
Or in the ICU
The finish with surgery at the end was perfect. And so realistic it hurt.
As a IM doc, this was the bane of my existence during residency.
Peds and I felt the same way. Wasn't it just the best being the go-between with multiple specialties!? 😑
@@sarahb7626 YAAAAAS. Even worse when you work in a small hospital with limited attendings from limited specialties
This is my nightmare as a medicine resident….sometimes I feel like the child mediating between divorced parents
Sometimes
People who have not worked in a hospital will never know the struggle.
Hi!! My name is Bre, I’m 26 years old and have spent my entire life in and out of hospitals due to a chronic and progressive genetic disorder. Last year I was admitted 10 out of 12 months. I just wanted to thank you for making these videos! They are so accurate and it’s so amazing how you portray each profession as well as the perspective/crazy things that inpatients say and do!!🤣 As a “frequent flyer” in the hospital whose has learned how the entire hospital works as a system; it cracks me up when I get a roommate that has no experience being admitted and they act/say the most hilarious things to doctors and nurses!😝😂Keep up with making videos!
Hi there! So glad to hear you can enjoy my videos. So sorry to hear you’ve required so much time in the hospital but I’m honored that my videos can be a bright spot for you
I am glad you can see the lighter side
As a nurse I encourage the doctors to speak to each other, I don’t like being the go between lol
Spot on!!!!
Right, you could possibly not hear the Dr. clearly then pass on wrong info. I hated talking to Dr.s who were driving, shopping, etc. Sometimes it’s a noisy conversation!
Amen to that!
I have an attending that hates texting or calls like this. He prefers to walk over and speak face to face. Says it saves time and confusion.
Right!!!
As an ER physician I can attest this is 100% Accurate.
I'm sure Mr Jones will be eventually DNAR status 😀
He deserves some time away from the hospital it’s sad he’s in there literally every day
@@aamirrazak3467 yep
NEVER! Jones will never die! He's immortal 😜
@@kelly1827 DNAR is not the same as DNR
@@resourceress7 googled it...you are correct. Also AND...allow natural death. Never heard that one before.
Interestingly, it's actually more straightforward if there are fewer treatment alternatives. In the rural hospital I just finished working in, there is no gastroenterology or IR, so the surgical team deals with GI bleeds. We both scoped and resected, therefore one team sorted everything out with no poor middleman being bounced back and forth between specialties. Back in the city, the scenario is much more like you portrayed.
Trueee.
In my college , even tho we are a tertiary centre, we have Gen Surgery or Gastro specialists look into GI bleeds. We don't have an IR dept.
Where do you work, I want to move immediately. Any nice houses for sale?
This is very accurate, but if I were the nurse for this patient and had to take them to ct scan x 3, help with a scope and take them to IR, I would be fuming!!! Love your content. Always makes me laugh 😆
Don't forget that bowel prep!
I was thinking the VERY same thing!!! And all while unstable and receiving blood, fluid, and maybe pressors, etc. And MOST times, never coming to talk to YOU about it any of it, you have to SEE the orders come through on the chart that you are NOT always in front of, bc you're too busy trying to save them. Lol Ahhhhh, the good ol'days. 😂😂 Don't forget if you had to work in an older, sometimes more rural hospital, that there's only one set of elevators that will hold the bed with the head almost flat and all the pumps and the amount of humans it takes to move the bed and equipment from place to place, and OF COURSE that elevator is the farthest one away from you! Lol So add on an extra 20-30 min just to get them down there and back, not including the time the tests take, all of them, ESPECIALLY the tagged RBC scan, are time consuming, not like an x-ray or regular CT scan. And the scope will be done at the bedside if they are that unstable, so I'm helping with that as well. Don't forget that in the bigger hospitals, I would also have a second patient to care for as well. HOPEFULLY they knew about this guy BEFORE assignments were made and so my other patient won't be a trainwreck. . And they wonder why we're staying late to finish charting. It was great while doing it for 16 years, but....
I'm very happy in Hospice now! ☺️🥰
They would be in a high dependency bay or step down ICU though - so 1 to 1 nursing ish - which would be happening anyway bc that many units of blood and you have to sit with someone when giving blood
As a surgeon I can tell you this is 100% accurate.
Another surgeon here! High five!
Oh yeah sometimes you just have to call the cavalry in at the end
Also really underscores how medicine is rarely an exact science and why they can’t just “fix” what you want and send you on your way. Humans are complicated!
Sometimes medical decisions are complicated too.
Too much, I couldn't stop laughing.
That happened to me as a patient and the cheery on the cake was that, they lost me for 6 hours from the ER to OR. Drug out of existence. Two operations later and after serious bleeding. Docs didn't lose me again.
and for those who aren't in the medical profession, we are not taking care of only one patient at a time. doctors at my hospital have 20+ patients
As an IR tech (who scrubs cases as well as sets them up/ circulates) this is so painfully true. And somehow one of the nurses or techs has found out about this possible bleed & we’ve been waiting allllll day to know whether we’re doing it or not. GI decides to scope them at 3:30, I leave at 4 and get called back 20 min later because GI couldn’t stop the bleed 😭😭😭
This is the greatest physician collaboration I've ever seen! As a fan of both channels and someone who wants to be a GI physician all I can say is, more of this please!
This is so accurate. I'm a Family Medicine resident and whenever I get a GI bleed case, the same exact situation happens with me. It takes at least 30-60 mins to solve this "call X, call Y" issue. And it's not just IR and GI by the way, surgery is thrown in the mix too. Maybe ICU as well.
I hated being the messenger owl like that. Sometimes I could give one the other’s number & let them talk to each other; other times I suffered.
It's always the resident the one who runs around trying to see if they are going to decide anytime soon
Wow. Recently out of peds residency and you're making ME tachycardic with this incredibly accurate video! That poor IM resident. I really feel for her 💜
As an inpatient nurse care manager I can truly say this is spot on !!!
Good to see Dr. Tortellini try his hand at humor
Awesome 👏🏼
Gotta say. This is the most efficient Gi and IR Dept I’ve ever seen. 20 min and the Cscope is done?? Lol 😂
I was an RT and the things the nurse would say having to be the go-between AND care for an unstable patient... would make you blush 😊.
Jones has got to have 9 lives 🤣 the ending though lmao felt that
100 day jones
hey it’s patient jones again
That guy is a mess
The hospitals favorite patient poor guy can’t catch a break
OMG it's Dr. Cellini! Excellent Dr. Schmidt. I hope you both do more together. You Doctors are excellent and the best!!!!!! on you tube. Oh btw how about Adriana too?
The back and forth with GI and IR is soooo true! 🤣🤣🤣
That's a pretty darn good hospital there. Everything is getting done so quickly! At where I work, that would have taken at least a whole day.
I work in Transfusion Services, and sometimes we’re in the dark going, “But why can’t they fix the bleed?!” Such a humorous representation of what goes on on the clinical side!
I have worked in all 3 areas. This is so accurate.
Uuumm…have you been listening in on my work calls? I felt HARD for that nurse.
As soon as I heard IR I was gonna say better be Dr. Cellini!
How on earth did I miss this?!?! The accuracy is incredible 🤣😂🤣
Dayum this was so precise! Loved it
Living with UC has gotten me to be very familiar with my GI and even colorectal surgeons very well. I seriously love how amazing they are with their bed side manners by making these poop issues less poopy.
Why is this sooo accurate, I’m laughing sooo hard. I legit have been that person in the middle….
This is better than any House MD, Grey’s Anatomy, etc and with real Doctors 🔥🔥
I think Mr and Mrs. Jones have gold membership of the hospital
Omg I love Dr. Cellini and his wife!!! They are awesome
3 days later, while everyone is playing "Phone Tag", the Patient's Hemoglobin is down to SIX😓🤦♀️:(
As a nurse this says a lot about what’s going on behind the scenes. Love it!
These videos really help me understand the medical system, and i would be a patient. Thanks for doing them! Even though I’m in Canada, I have a feeling it’s very similar, just the patient doesn’t usually have to worry about the bill :)
I laughed at the part where the IR said the GI embo only took 30 minutes 😂
I appreciated seeing Dr Cellini consulting with you. What a great skit.
I am usually the one on the table they are talking about, and yes, this is all facts!
This is fantastic, and so accurate! (Even though I'm in Newborn Medicine, I still remember my [Rotating] Internship days on Medicine and Surgery.) Love the collaboration, too!! I love both of your RUclips channels, Drs. Schmidt and Cellini!
For the love of all things RN, please Drs, talk to each other. So many things get lost and miscommunication can delay patient care , extend their stay and become a huge emotional stressor (for both the patients and the RNs😭) It sucks being yelled at by Doctors when they have you playing operator instead of nurse.
This video allows me to see and appreciate the complexity of behind the scenes work that doctors do to come to a conclusive diagnosis and course of treatment for their patients! Thank you so very much for making this video!
So many people (myself included until now) have gone to the hospital with a complaint (any complaint) and thought that care would be as simple as explaining the situation and the doctor doing a physical exam and possibly a scan of some kind and then be able to right a prescription and send the person on there way...
This video has taught me to think differently! Thank you!
This was crazy accurate! We need more of this!
Thanks! Will keep that in mind
Love you doc.Just got my booster shot!!
Being the resident stuck relaying messages is the worst. Also, I hope the consultants were as easy to approach as shown in the video. Other than that, the content is to the point. Good work doctors !
03:30 -perfectly encapsulates the frustration of nursing staff caught in this constant back and forth
I'm loving all of these collabs!
This gives me pain. As a hospitalist this sort of thing happens a lot and I finally ask if the specialists if they can just talk to each other because it feels like I am a monkey relaying information.
So that was happening while I was in the ER and being admitted, twice. First the lower GI bleed, that much bleeding is frightening. Near the end of chemo I had an upper GI bleed. My doctors, NP, ICU nurses, nurses on the cancer floor, etc were kind and reassuring. I am in remission.
I'm happy to hear you're in remission.☺
That last 2 seconds made me bust out laughing. That really seems like how things go sometimes though. Everybody, their brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles and maybe grandparents are involved, and the person in the middle is pulling their hair out by the roots!
Doc Schmidt makes a very good looking blonde lady😂❤️ Great video again, Doc and great Collab with Dr Cellini.
Me at the ER, pulling my hair out, possibly cursing and trying to keep the patient stable: Am I a joke to you?
I was a GI nurse and this is just how it is.
Love this collaboration!
I can understand the medicine resident in so many levels 😂
The funny part for me is how I tell triage about the blood loss, the color and frequency leading me to assume its upper or lower, that I've been NPO 12+ hrs and they look at me like I'm crazy. I know what to expect after 10+ years! 😂
Sad!! My dad was bleeding from ascending lower tract (neuc scan) BP low & heart rate high, both controlled with IV drip but throat was too fragile to prep for colonoscopy. This is a real and serious problem. He received blood and plasma, Bleeding stop on own and started again 2 days later, even worse. GI couldn't see it without prep and determined nothing else could be done. We brought my dad home on hospice. Even though my dad was old that is no reason not try. He fought for his life. They gave him no choice. He bled out. They need to come up w/better tools like a controled water spray attached to camera or maybe laser. Heartbreaking!
I have very common GI bleeds due to ehlers danlos & marfans. GI doctors get shocked when I say blood comes out of my gastric orifices at least once a week 😅 oh well not dead yet. So much love to the GI docs that have been able to stabilise me without surgery! Surgery would be disastrous due to my fragile tissue, and would likely give more bleeding
Loved how she just banged her head on the desk! I know the feeling!😂.
Truth!!! keep up the great work!
Definitely what happens - It is almost easier sometimes if you get 4 people calling in parallel to get opinions of the same patient about possible intervention. MDT in its finest!
Officially my favorite skit of yours. I’m a Hospitalist. Lolll
This reminds me of conversations with my kids “Go ask your Dad”…dad, “go ask your mom”…kid, “I did”…dad, “what did she say?”…kid, “she said to ask you”…and the conversation circle continues…lol😂
I love these collaborations!! Next you should do a skit with Dr Mike!
Help me get his attention! 😁
He is so popular he might not read his messages🙁 but I hope to see one with him- see his acting skills
The end is always my favorite part! Haha it’s always a vicious cycle.
This is the most accurate thing I've ever seen.
The collaborations are so fun! Thank you Doctors.
Lol as a surgeon i can approve of what the surgeon said in this video.. because that’s exactly what I would say rofl - ER doc should just say upfront he’s discussed with GI and IR and both IR and endoscopic treatments have failed - then there’s no way the surgeon would ever turn the referral down. We all love a nice left hemicolectomy after all!
Been there! By the time my patient was finally in surgery his hgb was 3
Loved this ! Needed a good laugh this morning! 🤣🤣🤣
Please do other skits like this !
Thank you for this! I work at a level 1 trauma center in blood bank and always wondered what was happening with the GI bleeds! I get the calls about 1 thing from the doctor and another from IR and I get so confused 🤣
This is so painfully accurate
That was great! Love the collab. Omg so realistic
As a FNP, one of my favorite phrases is "Well, yes that is likely the issue but let's leave that to the specialist..let me order a consult" --it warms my heart...
LOVED this…!! 😳😳🤣🩴👣
OMG 🤣🤣🤣🤣 best way to start my Monday!
Love the vids brother God bless you and your work brother Love from Canada 🇨🇦🙏
I'm invested now. Is Mr Jones going to be ok? I need answers! 👀
These are actually so informative thank you
Mr. Jones needs to meet Bill from Dr Glaucomflecken
They already have a video up.
This is gold! I love it!
My two favorite doctors😍😍😍
The surgeon will save the day... all day every day!!!
I have an interest in medicine, but by no means I'll pursue a career in the medical field but i found this so funny! This is really comedy, Dr Schmidt!
So spot ON!
I as a Crohn's patient since '03 sadly understood all of this BUT laughed my ass off at the ending...haha
Spot on!
As an RN, this is sooooooo accurate.
That was great! And to top it off.... patient and/or family is asking for answers.
I've heard about this happening. My sister in law also talks about this. I don't remember this happening in military hospitals.
Omg. This is sooo painfully funny because it’s exactly what happens. Thank you.
Currently on a GI rotation as a M3. It's an endless loop among GI, IR, and surgery lol