Its soo lovely that even though Tino didn't recognise her mum she still wanted her near, she was asking where the lady in the blue top was so she must have known deep down inside that she was a safe person to be around.
11:12 she answered “hospital use only,” which is what it says all over her gown. Smart kid, picking up clues from her environment even while so disoriented!
For some reason, Tino’s sweet face and gentle demeanor deeply touched my heart more than most. Such relief washed over me at the end to see her recovered. I was honestly overjoyed.
Bailey is THE toughest kid I’ve ever seen. It’s said that breaking the femur is the most painful break you can get and I’ve seen grown men SCREAMING just having their broken thigh touched. Kid is an absolute trooper.
Genuinely one of the most terrifying and moving things I've ever seen. I cannot begin to imagine what it must be like as a parent to see your child look at you and not know who you are.
This one really got me. When the mom asked "do you know me" and she didn't I could just imagine what the mom felt. So glad we live in a time where we can cure this
my dad had encephalitis and your loved one not recognizing you is an absolutely horrible feeling of dread. can't imagine how horrible it must feel when it's your child.
It's just as terrifying to be locked inside an encephalitic brain. I had that in 2003, I still occasionally have some difficulty in expressing myself, though I work on it every day.
🌷🌷🌷 hey friend.. meningitis for me.. same diff brain swelling wise.. I understand and am proud of every day you keep living. Way to go! The world needs you🩷🤸♂️
It's similar to how my seizures initially started out, being so spatially disoriented, not being able to open my bedroom door, then being asked all sorts of questions, some I could not answer, but the worst was knowing the answer and just not being able to say the words I wanted to.
I feel so bad for Tino, she must have been incredibly scared. I can't imagine falling asleep and waking up suddenly not knowing where I was and not remembering who a single person around me is, including my mom, and in a lot of pain
I'm so relieved to know that Tino has recovered from encephalitis. As a mother, I would have been a blubbering idiot if it were one of my sons in that hospital bed.
The important thing in this kind of situation is to not panic. Stay calm and collected. You panicking makes the child panic. I am a mom and I understand the feeling she had.
From experience I can tell you that you go into a super mother mentality mode. Yes, you’re scared. But the priority is on your child. Staying calm keeps the child calm. There will be times away from your child to let it out. Then if you’re lucky enough to have your children live you look back and wonder how in the heck did I get through that.
One THINK one would go into "blubbering idiot" mode, but the shock actually makes you calmer and more collected. I know,from personlal experience's. One have this strange mode one might not ever need , but its there , if needed , and its a huge help. AFTER the fact, when its all over , one might have the time to become the blubbering idiot. And thats ok too. Hi from Norway 🇧🇻
Tino’s case pulled at the heartstrings, her doctor was amazing! Bailey was a real trooper and a sweetheart and Karen needs a lot of help for her anxiety and fixations, hope therapy helps because she is basically in a prison inside herself.
As a retired and disabled Sept 11 paramedic, I must say I am impressed with the level of care and standard of care from the United Kingdom national health service. I am impressed also with the volunteer physicians for life flight.
To this Amazing Dr..What a woman she is! A mother of many and a Dr to all who come her way..a Dr who most definitely cares for her patients! I wish I had her as mine, she won’t stop till she figures it out, or has answers. She is one of the best!
40:08 what a scene 🥹 you know someone helped that guy out when he was a kid, just zipping up someone’s jacket when they’re having trouble is such a sweet thing to do
The mother asked "do you know me?" so many times because she was really hoping she would eventually get a different answer :'( you never want to accept that your loved one doesn't know who you are but usually those things happen with older people and you were expecting it. It's must be so surreal to have your 9 year old daughter look at you as if you're a stranger... :'(
@@normagrimstad8869 Yeah I know. My dad remembered my brother's name but not mine the last time I saw him before he passed :( he also thought I was my older sister.
This one had me quite emotional, I’m so glad Tino and Bailey got thru their emergencies, and the mum with the anxiety will never regret therapy, it’s absolutely the right treatment for her physical symptoms, as worry is a terrible use of a great imagination.
I always get upset that my students don't like me. Then I'm reminded that they trust me. Liz's comment about her colleagues bringing their children to her hit home.
Peanut butter... My new favorite swear. I think people tend to forget that a mental illness CAN be physical. I'm glad Liz kept at it with Tino and she recovered.
In my early 20's I kept having severe chest pain off and on, I also had problems breathing if I used my arms to fold towels or sheets, and then as it went on for over 8 years getting pneumonia etc. I was told it was all in my head and I was just over anxious.Eight years later I moved to another town and went to my new doctor and he ordered to get a chest x-ray. This new doctor was "actively listening" to me explain my symptoms. I went for a chest x-ray was was told I could not leave the radiology department. Long story short, I had a HUGE aneurysm in my left side of my chest from my heart to my lung. It's called an AVM. You're born with it and it grows bigger and bigger throughout your life until one day it ruptures. Two days later I was in a hospital facing major chest/heart surgery. It ruptured while they were cutting me open and I lost 3/4ths of my left lung. I had several complications during recovery but I survived to continue raising my two young daughters. The heart surgeon stated that if I would have been walking around and I coughed, I would have died right on the spot!!! It was so large that it looked like my large intestine was in my heart and lung!
When I was 14/15 I had viral encephalitis, I was very much like Tino, I didn’t have control of my body. It took a long time to become completely well again.
2/3 of all USA bankruptcy is due to medical bills. 6 years ago I had to file because of my high risk pregnancies…PLEASE HELP OUR HEALTHCARE SYSTEM! I ❤️ all of you amazing people!
My husband also has anxiety and this severe and it does cause the same problems. They diagnosed him with fight or flight syndrome. It caused his whole left side to go numb. Lexapro helps.
And for immediate relief - Benzodiazepines do a great job - just be careful, and take them ONLY as needed!! They are VERY addictive, and difficult to come off of!!!
@@mistymed77 - That is horrible, these meds have changed my life. Different Benzos have different half-lives, like Midazolam is 2-5 hours, where as Clonazepam is 24 hours or more. If taken in the evening, or at bedtime, still no?
Often watch this type of show because seeing the people coming in hurt are treated very well and with care by the staff. Not often happens in American hospitals and have lived in 4 different states, my experiences.
Karen saying, she goes to the doctor every couple of days, is very worrying in itself. Her adamant denial of health anxiety is stopping her from living her life. How sad.
I have had and barely survived encephalitis and I recognise the detachment, seeing and hearing but the world is very far away from you and you just can't grasp it. I hope Tino is doing well
I feel so bad for the 9 year olds no.ther and of course her but to have yout child not know you must be Heart breaking. My heart goes out to both of them.
My mom as a 10 year old got encephalitis..was in a coma for a year. Came out was never the same. Struggled with mental conditions all her life. It's a miracle first this little girl.. was addressed quickly. Second she didn't sustain any life long issues. Third she received all her memory back.
Heartbreaking watching Tino and her mum, and how scary seeing the wee girl look so out of it. Im glad that the woman with the intermittent loss of sensation has decided to get therapy, its what I call the physical manifestation of a psychological origin. I had a lot that needed to be unboxed and it took my GP being what I perceived as being unkind before I realised what I needed to do. I hope she gets the relief that she most definitely needs. Yeah this episode was a bit of an emotional one.
Oh wow, even when Tino didn't consciously remember that her mom was her mom, she seems to have still felt their connection and clearly wanted her around.
Bailey, boys and men can cry any time they want. Pain is pain. I fractured my thigh bone or femur in 2015. I hope yours heals well with no further issues.
Never seen anyone, adult or child, be so stoic about a broken femur. By all accounts, it’s utterly excruciating! Bailey is an incredibly brave & mature boy.
Liz the consultant is a real cool lady to be that calm especially with a child with memory loss and not know what is wrong with that child having a child the same age! I don’t know if I would be that cool if my daughter didn’t know who I was but she did have scarlet fever when she was a wee little lassie
Wow...Tino, her mum and Dr Liz... It is so cruel when your loved one doesn't recognize you. Happened with Mom...actually losing her in the months before she physically passed. Not something you can be prepared for, or easily accept. Nor do you truly recover from it, really. Just do your best. I am glad Tino recovered from the encephalitis, and her mum got her back. Love Dr Liz.
This is like the beginning of dementia in older people. (sort of). When my mom had it and she kept wondering who my sister was even though she was now living with her. She would remember and then not. Thank goodness encephalitis is not that bad and can be treated.
A coworker had severe encephalitis, which resulted in brain damage & loss of her job. It was in the US, so her bill was probably ten million dollars. From the brain infection Her head was as big as a soccer ball, & in our insurance dominated for-profit medical system, the hospital wanted her to go home in the middle of it all. Her Dr said she may have contracted the disease from their turtle. Which is shocking to me since pet turtles are common. I doubt these ppl in England will get a massive, bankrupting bill.
It may manifest as severe anxiety, but I'd says it's the affects of her intense grief. It's waves can do so much to our body chemistry. She truly loves him
Agreed. I have heard that grief can cause severe heart problems resulting in death, so that one really can die of a broken heart. It's supposed to be a genuine medical diagnosis. I think of mental health and physical health as just two sides of the same coin, as each affects the other. For example, Bipolar Disorder has emotional and mental components, but it's caused by chemicals in the brain that are out of balance. Anyone suffering grief and anxiety to such a degree is experiencing health problems, real health problems. She needs a very, very compassionate therapist to help her get a handle on her life. Combined with exercise and healthy eating, therapy can help her reset and move forward again in life.
Seems like pretty classic functional neurological disorder-- thankfully not too severe. Some people can develop horrible pain or even paralyzed limbs just from psychological trauma. Dealing with the mental health issue usually helps with the physical symptoms.
34:08 its panic attacks. A very medical problem for sure, but not one that can easily be treated or cured, and it very much IS a mental problem. Who says mental problems are not medical problems?
I know how the lady feels about missing her dad my dad is still here at 79 but I know it’s just a matter of time that I loose him and I can’t even deal with the thought of it my dad has been there for me since day one when everyone else left, he stayed, and I am forever. Grateful for that. He was visiting me a couple of weeks ago and fell on my step and broke his wrist. I didn’t see it happen as I was inside, but when I came out, I was freaking out I know it could’ve been worse but it’s hard to get that sight out of my head as time goes on it’s getting easier but I don’t know how I’m to be ok after loosing him :(
Tino and Bailey were incredible patients. Bailey was so brave bless him, such a little trooper and a credit to his mum. Tino’ Dr was phenomenal, right on the money with her diagnosis. Quick action like that is what saves lives and stops further deterioration, incredible woman. I’m so pleased Tino recovered, she’s such a clever, sweet girl. My heart went out to her mum.
I have a form of encephalitis and I will never forget the day I got it. Experiencing your brain changing like that and not knowing what is going on or why it is happening to you is absolutely terrifying! I don’t have any memory loss from it, it affects me differently as it does everyone, but it is still terrifying nonetheless. You literally go from being perfectly healthy, to behaving in ways you wouldn’t normally, like this girl was, in the snap of your fingers.
I feel for the lady who misses her dad, I lost two daughters and almost all the rest of my family, mom, dad stepfather, brother, and other relatives, I just want to say that u can't make yourself sick over the deaths of the people u have loved, I know that some day I will be with them again, but u have to live your life, u can't make yourself sick.
Bailey was probably in shock the whole time. And hopefully they had him fully drugged up as well. Plus with a break sometimes you can’t feel it so bad unless it’s moved
I've always said that if a relative of mine is that sick in hospital I know that I would have to keep it together until they get better. They need to lean on someone stronger or bigger than what they're dealing with. After the adrenaline rush and I have a moment to relax I usually crash and need medical attention. It's like I know I need to be strong and I do it but someone to be ready to catch me when the crisis is over. 😢
I am lucky and grateful to be alive. I kept telling doctors that I wasn't well for 4 years until I started almost passing out and having difficulty breathing. It wasn't mental health it was 7 blocked arteries around my heart. Now I'm recovering from triple bypass surgery. You know your body, trust your instincts.
Its soo lovely that even though Tino didn't recognise her mum she still wanted her near, she was asking where the lady in the blue top was so she must have known deep down inside that she was a safe person to be around.
Right??!!!
😢
Having had encephalitis, she may have known she was her mum, but her brain wouldn't allow the proper answer to come to her lips.
Brains are complex.
It’s smell. Pheromones. It’s absolutely fascinating and sooo so wonderful , yes
The first doctor, treating Tino, is absolutely brilliant. Not only worrying for the girl, but the mom too, telling her to eat and drink.
The doctor has four kids. She knows how mum feels.
Shes amazing yes ❤ i love how both efficient and empathic she is
You have to treat the WHOLE patient, if mom matters, then she needs care too
She gave me Emma Thompson vibes.
Nup, this is a real doctor @@lineprestkvrn9014
11:12 she answered “hospital use only,” which is what it says all over her gown. Smart kid, picking up clues from her environment even while so disoriented!
For some reason, Tino’s sweet face and gentle demeanor deeply touched my heart more than most. Such relief washed over me at the end to see her recovered. I was honestly overjoyed.
Bailey is THE toughest kid I’ve ever seen. It’s said that breaking the femur is the most painful break you can get and I’ve seen grown men SCREAMING just having their broken thigh touched. Kid is an absolute trooper.
Sad to see him believing that it's not manly to cry tho... 😕
The amount of pain he must have been in and all that came out was 'Ooooo fudge cake'
I was about to say!!! This is a war injury 😭
Genuinely one of the most terrifying and moving things I've ever seen. I cannot begin to imagine what it must be like as a parent to see your child look at you and not know who you are.
This one really got me. When the mom asked "do you know me" and she didn't I could just imagine what the mom felt. So glad we live in a time where we can cure this
It would be terrible for your own child not to recognize you. I'm so glad she got better.
Tinos doctor was incredible. I’m so happy she is doing better
my dad had encephalitis and your loved one not recognizing you is an absolutely horrible feeling of dread. can't imagine how horrible it must feel when it's your child.
It's just as terrifying to be locked inside an encephalitic brain. I had that in 2003, I still occasionally have some difficulty in expressing myself, though I work on it every day.
💕
🌷🌷🌷 hey friend.. meningitis for me.. same diff brain swelling wise.. I understand and am proud of every day you keep living.
Way to go! The world needs you🩷🤸♂️
It's similar to how my seizures initially started out, being so spatially disoriented, not being able to open my bedroom door, then being asked all sorts of questions, some I could not answer, but the worst was knowing the answer and just not being able to say the words I wanted to.
I feel so bad for Tino, she must have been incredibly scared. I can't imagine falling asleep and waking up suddenly not knowing where I was and not remembering who a single person around me is, including my mom, and in a lot of pain
The compassion/dedication/professionalism from these front line workers is amazing.
I'm so relieved to know that Tino has recovered from encephalitis. As a mother, I would have been a blubbering idiot if it were one of my sons in that hospital bed.
The important thing in this kind of situation is to not panic. Stay calm and collected. You panicking makes the child panic. I am a mom and I understand the feeling she had.
From experience I can tell you that you go into a super mother mentality mode. Yes, you’re scared. But the priority is on your child. Staying calm keeps the child calm. There will be times away from your child to let it out. Then if you’re lucky enough to have your children live you look back and wonder how in the heck did I get through that.
One THINK one would go into "blubbering idiot" mode, but the shock actually makes you calmer and more collected.
I know,from personlal experience's.
One have this strange mode one might not ever need , but its there , if needed , and its a huge help.
AFTER the fact, when its all over , one might have the time to become the blubbering idiot. And thats ok too.
Hi from Norway 🇧🇻
@@tiffinyanderson4403😊
Tino’s case pulled at the heartstrings, her doctor was amazing! Bailey was a real trooper and a sweetheart and Karen needs a lot of help for her anxiety and fixations, hope therapy helps because she is basically in a prison inside herself.
As a retired and disabled Sept 11 paramedic, I must say I am impressed with the level of care and standard of care from the United Kingdom national health service. I am impressed also with the volunteer physicians for life flight.
Same in Germany.
Thank you for your service 🗽💐
Wow! That ER doctor is amazing. I'm so glad Tino recovered. What a beautiful little girl.
To this Amazing Dr..What a woman she is! A mother of many and a Dr to all who come her way..a Dr who most definitely cares for her patients! I wish I had her as mine, she won’t stop till she figures it out, or has answers. She is one of the best!
One day a week, the rest of the time mothering.
I wish also, she was MY Doctor!!!
40:08 what a scene 🥹 you know someone helped that guy out when he was a kid, just zipping up someone’s jacket when they’re having trouble is such a sweet thing to do
The mother asked "do you know me?" so many times because she was really hoping she would eventually get a different answer :'( you never want to accept that your loved one doesn't know who you are but usually those things happen with older people and you were expecting it. It's must be so surreal to have your 9 year old daughter look at you as if you're a stranger... :'(
Believe me, it’s very painful when older people don’t know you either. My mom didn’t recognize me. It’s very painful.
@@normagrimstad8869 Yeah I know. My dad remembered my brother's name but not mine the last time I saw him before he passed :( he also thought I was my older sister.
Me too my grandma has dementia and is starting to forget really fast
This one had me quite emotional, I’m so glad Tino and Bailey got thru their emergencies, and the mum with the anxiety will never regret therapy, it’s absolutely the right treatment for her physical symptoms, as worry is a terrible use of a great imagination.
What an incredibly dedicated Consultant Liz is. So glad she was able to finally diagnose Tino! Many thanks for a great video!
My heart breaks for Tino and her mom! Especially Tino, with silent tears running down her face, and no idea what’s going on 🥺❤️
Watching this show from Chicago. I absolutely love it. I'm now hooked on it. Lol. Thank you 😊
What a beautiful little girl! Heart wrenching worry for her mother and all the ER staff. All so caring.
Their medical is service oriented, while ours is profit oriented, makes a huge difference!
I always get upset that my students don't like me. Then I'm reminded that they trust me. Liz's comment about her colleagues bringing their children to her hit home.
Peanut butter... My new favorite swear.
I think people tend to forget that a mental illness CAN be physical.
I'm glad Liz kept at it with Tino and she recovered.
Psychosomatic.
In my early 20's I kept having severe chest pain off and on, I also had problems breathing if I used my arms to fold towels or sheets, and then as it went on for over 8 years getting pneumonia etc. I was told it was all in my head and I was just over anxious.Eight years later I moved to another town and went to my new doctor and he ordered to get a chest x-ray. This new doctor was "actively listening" to me explain my symptoms. I went for a chest x-ray was was told I could not leave the radiology department. Long story short, I had a HUGE aneurysm in my left side of my chest from my heart to my lung. It's called an AVM. You're born with it and it grows bigger and bigger throughout your life until one day it ruptures. Two days later I was in a hospital facing major chest/heart surgery. It ruptured while they were cutting me open and I lost 3/4ths of my left lung. I had several complications during recovery but I survived to continue raising my two young daughters. The heart surgeon stated that if I would have been walking around and I coughed, I would have died right on the spot!!! It was so large that it looked like my large intestine was in my heart and lung!
So thankful for the new doc🤗🤗🤗
I’m so glad you found a doctor who listened to you, worked quickly, and took care of you. That had to be incredibly scary.
I am so happy that you recovered,you’re very courageousGod bless ♥️🇨🇦
Holy smokes!!! So happy you’re here and well❤
The young boy Bailey was so sweet. Love him
8:05 The doctor that they don't even mention that is comforting Tino when she's crying and doesn't know what's going on, MVP
When I was 14/15 I had viral encephalitis, I was very much like Tino, I didn’t have control of my body. It took a long time to become completely well again.
That little girl is adorable
2/3 of all USA bankruptcy is due to medical bills. 6 years ago I had to file because of my high risk pregnancies…PLEASE HELP OUR HEALTHCARE SYSTEM! I ❤️ all of you amazing people!
Bless Liz and all like her.
My husband also has anxiety and this severe and it does cause the same problems. They diagnosed him with fight or flight syndrome. It caused his whole left side to go numb. Lexapro helps.
And for immediate relief - Benzodiazepines do a great job - just be careful, and take them ONLY as needed!! They are VERY addictive, and difficult to come off of!!!
@@GunnWrights they gave these too him to but he was unable to take them due to working in a plant. Hope they help you.
@@mistymed77 - That is horrible, these meds have changed my life. Different Benzos have different half-lives, like Midazolam is 2-5 hours, where as Clonazepam is 24 hours or more. If taken in the evening, or at bedtime, still no?
@@GunnWrights nope. Exxon says none of you work in their plants. Too much risk
Microdosing mushrooms is the best. You don't get high or anything. Its amazing. Look it up on Google.
The dr who took care of the little girl was an absolute rockstar!!
Such a beautiful and sweet little girl! Heart wrenching for mommy.
Love Bailey! What a smart, sweet kid. Kudos Mom!
Tino's case was so scary, I can't even imagine. I'm so glad she's okay now. ❤
Often watch this type of show because seeing the people coming in hurt are treated very well and with care by the staff. Not often happens in American hospitals and have lived in 4 different states, my experiences.
Tino is so precious. I am so glad she is well.
Bailey is a strong young man
Really happy that little girl is recovered. Her memory is pretty scary for her mother to watch my heart is breaking for her.
Bailey... YES Boys AND Men Can And Should Cry!!! Actually It's Proven To Add Years To Their Lives!!! Brave Young Man 💙☀. Western Upstate New York here
Karen saying, she goes to the doctor every couple of days, is very worrying in itself. Her adamant denial of health anxiety is stopping her from living her life. How sad.
I hate MRI's as well. I have to be given a 5mg Valume about an hour before. I am claustrophobic and loud noises scare the living daylights out of me.
Tino, what a sweet and wonderful little girl!
Depression and anxiety can cause physical issues big time. Get to a counselor.
I have had and barely survived encephalitis and I recognise the detachment, seeing and hearing but the world is very far away from you and you just can't grasp it. I hope Tino is doing well
I feel so bad for the 9 year olds no.ther and of course her but to have yout child not know you must be Heart breaking. My heart goes out to both of them.
I'm so glad tino got well, that had to be so scary for her mum!! 💞
So glad TIno was oka, it was hard to see her having no idea even who she was. The boy with the broken leg was a real cut up.
My mom as a 10 year old got encephalitis..was in a coma for a year. Came out was never the same. Struggled with mental conditions all her life. It's a miracle first this little girl.. was addressed quickly. Second she didn't sustain any life long issues. Third she received all her memory back.
The cuts to the people arguing in the waiting room with their loved ones is just the best 😂
Heartbreaking watching Tino and her mum, and how scary seeing the wee girl look so out of it. Im glad that the woman with the intermittent loss of sensation has decided to get therapy, its what I call the physical manifestation of a psychological origin. I had a lot that needed to be unboxed and it took my GP being what I perceived as being unkind before I realised what I needed to do. I hope she gets the relief that she most definitely needs. Yeah this episode was a bit of an emotional one.
LOVE this show. I get really emo when i watch. That is the downside
Oh wow, even when Tino didn't consciously remember that her mom was her mom, she seems to have still felt their connection and clearly wanted her around.
It is so sad to see those of us that cannot accept a mental health diagnosis.
Baily, if it hurts bad enough, anyone is allowed to cry.
Bailey, boys and men can cry any time they want. Pain is pain. I fractured my thigh bone or femur in 2015. I hope yours heals well with no further issues.
Never seen anyone, adult or child, be so stoic about a broken femur. By all accounts, it’s utterly excruciating! Bailey is an incredibly brave & mature boy.
Liz the consultant is a real cool lady to be that calm especially with a child with memory loss and not know what is wrong with that child having a child the same age! I don’t know if I would be that cool if my daughter didn’t know who I was but she did have scarlet fever when she was a wee little lassie
Wow...Tino, her mum and Dr Liz... It is so cruel when your loved one doesn't recognize you. Happened with Mom...actually losing her in the months before she physically passed. Not something you can be prepared for, or easily accept. Nor do you truly recover from it, really. Just do your best. I am glad Tino recovered from the encephalitis, and her mum got her back. Love Dr Liz.
This is like the beginning of dementia in older people. (sort of). When my mom had it and she kept wondering who my sister was even though she was now living with her. She would remember and then not. Thank goodness encephalitis is not that bad and can be treated.
The 11 year old boy who was hit by the car is so polite.
38:52 What a wonderful mother, what’s that like?
What a lovely girl Tino is. It's wonderful that Liz and the team were able to help her.❤
So scary for that little girl.
Tino is so cute, consultant defo saved her life
Great Dr n nurses caring for people in the hospital and never giving up till they find out what’s wrong with the patient.
Bailey is the most self possessed and stoic person I have ever known of. Amazing.
i'd feel so relieved to have either myself or a loved on land in casualty on Liz's shift. what an amazing doctor and healer!
A coworker had severe encephalitis, which resulted in brain damage & loss of her job. It was in the US, so her bill was probably ten million dollars. From the brain infection Her head was as big as a soccer ball, & in our insurance dominated for-profit medical system, the hospital wanted her to go home in the middle of it all. Her Dr said she may have contracted the disease from their turtle. Which is shocking to me since pet turtles are common. I doubt these ppl in England will get a massive, bankrupting bill.
Of course not. Like in any Western European country.
And Canada. (so far).
No, they have free healthcare.
@@susanengel-ix8blthey pay for it with their taxes, it’s hardly free
It may manifest as severe anxiety, but I'd says it's the affects of her intense grief. It's waves can do so much to our body chemistry. She truly loves him
Agreed. I have heard that grief can cause severe heart problems resulting in death, so that one really can die of a broken heart. It's supposed to be a genuine medical diagnosis. I think of mental health and physical health as just two sides of the same coin, as each affects the other. For example, Bipolar Disorder has emotional and mental components, but it's caused by chemicals in the brain that are out of balance. Anyone suffering grief and anxiety to such a degree is experiencing health problems, real health problems. She needs a very, very compassionate therapist to help her get a handle on her life. Combined with exercise and healthy eating, therapy can help her reset and move forward again in life.
Seems like pretty classic functional neurological disorder-- thankfully not too severe. Some people can develop horrible pain or even paralyzed limbs just from psychological trauma. Dealing with the mental health issue usually helps with the physical symptoms.
@modusvivendi2 i become paralyzed due to a rare non-pyschological disease. Hypo kalimic periodic paralysis.
34:08 its panic attacks. A very medical problem for sure, but not one that can easily be treated or cured, and it very much IS a mental problem. Who says mental problems are not medical problems?
Bailey is a
Lovely young man.....credit to mum
The 11 year old boy looks so much older but I feel sorry for him😢
Who wants to run to there family right now and hug them and kiss them and love them to bits and hold on to them tight forever.
I know how the lady feels about missing her dad my dad is still here at 79 but I know it’s just a matter of time that I loose him and I can’t even deal with the thought of it my dad has been there for me since day one when everyone else left, he stayed, and I am forever. Grateful for that. He was visiting me a couple of weeks ago and fell on my step and broke his wrist. I didn’t see it happen as I was inside, but when I came out, I was freaking out I know it could’ve been worse but it’s hard to get that sight out of my head as time goes on it’s getting easier but I don’t know how I’m to be ok after loosing him :(
Bailey is such a super lovely and brave boy!
Lord I pray that Tino gets her memory back it's so sad
I would love to see “Where are they now” episodes.
Tino and Bailey were incredible patients. Bailey was so brave bless him, such a little trooper and a credit to his mum. Tino’ Dr was phenomenal, right on the money with her diagnosis. Quick action like that is what saves lives and stops further deterioration, incredible woman. I’m so pleased Tino recovered, she’s such a clever, sweet girl. My heart went out to her mum.
I feel for Karen her anxiety is putting limitations on her and her family, I think some mental health help to deal with those will go a long way
Bailey is such a sweet boy. Very bright.
The amazing Dr is giving Princess Diana vibes ❤
I have a form of encephalitis and I will never forget the day I got it. Experiencing your brain changing like that and not knowing what is going on or why it is happening to you is absolutely terrifying! I don’t have any memory loss from it, it affects me differently as it does everyone, but it is still terrifying nonetheless. You literally go from being perfectly healthy, to behaving in ways you wouldn’t normally, like this girl was, in the snap of your fingers.
I feel for the lady who misses her dad, I lost two daughters and almost all the rest of my family, mom, dad stepfather, brother, and other relatives, I just want to say that u can't make yourself sick over the deaths of the people u have loved, I know that some day I will be with them again, but u have to live your life, u can't make yourself sick.
Thanks so much
I've watched many of these sort of videos but l have never needed a bed sheet to wipe my tears before!
Bailey was probably in shock the whole time. And hopefully they had him fully drugged up as well. Plus with a break sometimes you can’t feel it so bad unless it’s moved
Great team here. I’m in Boston mass with remarkable medicine and y’all have the best bedside manor etc.,
I've always said that if a relative of mine is that sick in hospital I know that I would have to keep it together until they get better. They need to lean on someone stronger or bigger than what they're dealing with. After the adrenaline rush and I have a moment to relax I usually crash and need medical attention. It's like I know I need to be strong and I do it but someone to be ready to catch me when the crisis is over. 😢
Tino is gorgeous. I am so glad she got well :)
This goes to show you that a mothers love can see through anything. ❤
I am lucky and grateful to be alive. I kept telling doctors that I wasn't well for 4 years until I started almost passing out and having difficulty breathing. It wasn't mental health it was 7 blocked arteries around my heart. Now I'm recovering from triple bypass surgery. You know your body, trust your instincts.
The heartache Tino’s mum must have felt when she looked her in the face and said that she didn’t know her must have been crushing.
Reminded me of the days I watched the tv show ER. I am completely invested in watching this to the end!!
My MRI scan, the machine sounded like crickets on acid. The wonder counteracted the claustrophobia.
It depends on the type of the machine and type of scan. I had a CyberKnife scan and even with ear protection on- it was really loud.
How fabulous is Dr. Liz (in red). Love her.