He experienced the WORST medical screw up ever (*MATURE AUDIENCES ONLY*)

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  • Опубликовано: 10 фев 2022
  • WARNING -- The final story is the reason for the MATURE AUDIENCES ONLY tag
    Time Stamps:
    #3 -- "Sideways" -- 0:40 -- A performer makes a mistake during a live show
    #2 -- "Bug Bite" -- 10:16 -- A reporter feels a pain in his leg and assumes its just a bug bite
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    For entertainment purposes only. Based on actual events.
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    #forbidden #surgery #mrballen

Комментарии • 23 тыс.

  • @JSowder21
    @JSowder21 2 года назад +27446

    The amount and quality of content you produce is incredible. I recently detoxed off drugs, and when my anxiety or the pain of the withdrawals got too bad I'd watch your videos and they'd distract me. In a way you saved my life... thank you Mr. Ballen and your team ❤

    • @katea3524
      @katea3524 2 года назад +1607

      That is awesome. Congratulations and keep on keepin on. I went through the same thing and it sucks but the other side is so much better. 👍

    • @jynx3978
      @jynx3978 2 года назад +466

      I'm 19 year old guy and i can't tie my shoes

    • @luismagana2059
      @luismagana2059 2 года назад +606

      Hell ya great stuff. Im over four years clean myself. Keep up the good fight. And yes hes a great story teller and great content

    • @MelaninSpeakzOut
      @MelaninSpeakzOut 2 года назад +398

      Congratulations 👏 Keep moving forward; you are strong, important, and your life has purpose!!!

    • @highstrangeness6329
      @highstrangeness6329 2 года назад +468

      The hardest thing you'll ever have to do and you got through it. Congrats and realize how powerful you are for getting through it.

  • @ronniemason7827
    @ronniemason7827 2 года назад +7417

    I couldn’t imagine accidentally torturing someone for sixteen minutes and then having a lawsuit be my main concern. Then to try and cover it up by giving him more drugs? It’s honestly despicable.

    • @cazred7882
      @cazred7882 2 года назад +282

      imo i wouldve wanted to forget, it obviously didn't work, rip sherman.

    • @stellabrown909
      @stellabrown909 2 года назад +72

      Very sad and painful.

    • @jamescarrington5521
      @jamescarrington5521 2 года назад +349

      Well, I've always said this, there is something....off, sadistic even, about MANY doctors, surgeons in particular. My mother always said this as well, and I'm inclined to believe this is quite true.

    • @existenceisrelative
      @existenceisrelative 2 года назад +176

      Personally if given the choice that i _"might"_ be able to forget an experience like that, or else just live with it; i'd take my chances with the amnesia drug. They should have disclosed that it happened though.

    • @Zeppelin616
      @Zeppelin616 2 года назад +421

      @@existenceisrelative I think the amnesia drug made things worse. He had horrible PTSD but he didn't understand why, he probably thought he had dementia or some other mental illness. Had he understood what happened to him maybe he would have been able to come to terms with it and not take his own life.

  • @MartyandMichael
    @MartyandMichael 2 года назад +19233

    It’s like bedtime stories but for adults

    • @MrBallen
      @MrBallen  2 года назад +1616

      Haha thanks dudes!!

    • @linpekngulom6611
      @linpekngulom6611 2 года назад +85

      Yep... Exactly

    • @baba_yaga3456
      @baba_yaga3456 2 года назад +163

      I will often put on your videos and have no problem falling asleep just listening to you telling the story

    • @_vizla_
      @_vizla_ 2 года назад +12

      Fax

    • @rutherfordn7560
      @rutherfordn7560 2 года назад +143

      What kind of f’ed up bedtime stories did you listen to as a child

  • @riversnow5771
    @riversnow5771 9 месяцев назад +1068

    Fun fact for those who are freaked out by the last story (so basically everyone): Most hospitals have equipment that watches your vitals and can tell if you're experiencing anesthesia awareness. Before going into surgery make sure to ask them what their anesthesia awareness prevention methods are.

    • @sandralinkenback1750
      @sandralinkenback1750 8 месяцев назад +42

      I've had three surgeries and haven't woken during them that I'm aware of, but it still worries me.

    • @riversnow5771
      @riversnow5771 8 месяцев назад +18

      @@sandralinkenback1750 I've had one surgery before I knew about anesthesia awareness and had no issues either. It's good to know the worst that could happen before going under though lol

    • @liben5052
      @liben5052 7 месяцев назад +66

      had my wisdom teeth taken out and the anesthesia did NOT work, they literally were like "wait is the patient still awake?" because i was twitching and shaking from the pain. did not get compensated, was too young to even realize thats not what the procedure was supposed to be like.

    • @Anna1002
      @Anna1002 7 месяцев назад +20

      Then how come there are 20.000 cases annually of this blunder all over the world?

    • @keezjordan1619
      @keezjordan1619 7 месяцев назад +16

      Wrong! it happens A LOT

  • @kylehill4437
    @kylehill4437 10 месяцев назад +323

    I cant begin to imagine what Sherman felt. To take your own life days after just because of the thought of that pain, has to be something out of this world that most of us hopefully never comprehend. That anesthesiologist should be criminally liable. RIP Sherman my deepest condolences to his family.

    • @metalcovers9974
      @metalcovers9974 8 месяцев назад +34

      I have a feeling he may have not killed himself if it weren’t for the amnesia drug. At least being able to link your trauma to something and know where it came from definitely helps you overcome it. I can’t imagine having to experience the trauma of that type of pain and not even knowing where it all came from

    • @williamblackfyre4866
      @williamblackfyre4866 4 месяца назад +3

      ....I guess. But what Sherman endure is a drop in the bucket compared to almost any surgery before the 19th century. I mean...check out the Bradmore extractor and it's first use. What Sherman dealt with sucked...but I mean, that was the way it was done for hundreds of years before anesthesia was discovered.

    • @ssnowstarr4985
      @ssnowstarr4985 4 месяца назад +3

      @@williamblackfyre4866 not in combination with the amnesia drug. part of it was the mental torment of experiencing that trauma, but not consciously

    • @user-yf8lb4hf2c
      @user-yf8lb4hf2c 3 месяца назад

      I’ve felt everything during two dialysis catheter surgeries….cutting, stitches, insertion AND removal!!

    • @salvadoramezcua203
      @salvadoramezcua203 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@williamblackfyre4866 I mean deTh rates of procedures was over 50% and increased with time after the procedure so I guess at least they didn't have to deal with it and they did still drink to numb sensation

  • @laurennichole161
    @laurennichole161 2 года назад +3900

    That last story really is horrifying. I’ve ran anesthesia in veterinary medicine and you can tell when a patient is experiencing pain without them being able to move or vocalize just by paying attention to the monitoring equipment. For an anesthetist to not notice for that long of a period of time should require some serious repercussions and the fact they tried to cover it up by administering drugs makes this story a billion times worse. I’m so sorry for Sherman and his family.

    • @Gewbort
      @Gewbort 2 года назад +200

      i say a few life sentences for everyone in on giving him amnesia

    • @loulabelle5082
      @loulabelle5082 2 года назад +284

      I'm a nurse and even I struggled to listen to this. That poor man! He was obviously suffering from PTSD caused by the trauma but he didn't even have a concrete memory to pin his symptoms to. Imagine the confusion and terror he must have experienced! And then he killed himself! That shocked me. Poor man. And his poor family.

    • @UsableNumber6
      @UsableNumber6 2 года назад +17

      The last story is actually a movie with Jessica alba in it from like 07’

    • @AnnaMaria-zm8cv
      @AnnaMaria-zm8cv 2 года назад +80

      Exactly. I also wondered that. Long before a horse starts to move his legs as first visible sign, his heartbeat and breathing go up, especially when certain pain related to the surgery is invoked like cutting, stitching, or working on bones. We would give extra sedation at that point of course. I wonder why this isnt monitored in humans. Knowing that in human anesthesia often brainwaves are also monitored.

    • @TowGunner
      @TowGunner 2 года назад +46

      Gotta say, of all of Ballen’s stories, this was the worst by far.

  • @RowanWarren78
    @RowanWarren78 2 года назад +5103

    The surgery story is one of my biggest nightmares. That is beyond terrifying. Thank God for that one nurse who noticed that Sherman was conscious. The fact that they tried to give him chemical amnesia to avoid a lawsuit is beneath contempt.

    • @munjarez1721
      @munjarez1721 2 года назад +32

      @Instagram User wtf is this bruh?delete it

    • @bri-manhunter2654
      @bri-manhunter2654 2 года назад +262

      I actually woke up during my wisdom tooth surgery for what felt like a min or so; it was pretty cool to listen to what was happening. It sounded like shop class, and I remember hearing someone say they thought I was awake, and I passed back out. Thankfully I didn’t feel anything. RIP Sherman.

    • @heidi2166
      @heidi2166 2 года назад +83

      Come on you can't tell me you're surprised. The medical team probably used to work for the CDC or WHO. Nowadays in America the ends always justify the means

    • @jimfowley9941
      @jimfowley9941 2 года назад +17

      Why would anybody want to remember this?

    • @munjarez1721
      @munjarez1721 2 года назад +26

      @@bri-manhunter2654 wow thats interesting..i actually had both of my wisdom teeth removed but under local anaestesia when i was like 10,to rhis day i dont understand why they didnt knock me out completely

  • @I_Love_Rainbows510
    @I_Love_Rainbows510 9 месяцев назад +142

    It's unconscionable that the doctors cared more about avoiding a lawsuit than about that poor man's wellbeing. ALL of them should be held criminally liable for going along with the cover-up involving that amnesia drug.

    • @sugarkane1571
      @sugarkane1571 3 месяца назад +5

      Not advocating for the doctors here, but I feel like using an amnesia drug was also the conscionable decision there despite the massive malpractice. What he went through was horrible and shouldn’t have happened, so making him forget about it would’ve saved a lot of misery for everyone. But the fact that the human body doesn’t work like that also doomed everyone in the situation.
      Not to mention the doctors using that to avoid a damn lawsuit.

    • @I_Love_Rainbows510
      @I_Love_Rainbows510 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@sugarkane1571 That's a really good point about how great it would've been for the amnesia drug to have actually worked!! For this poor man's sake, I wish it had!! Ugh. Yeah, it's sort of a weird issue. I have some traumas that I remember, and some that I don't. They both affect me. But it would be really cool if there was a legit way to shut it out of your mind for reallish, you know? Like in that movie, "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind", but I only saw it once when it came out, so I'm not sure, but it came to mind.

    • @dod2304
      @dod2304 3 месяца назад

      Versed is one of the amnesia drugs and it's routinely given before surgery. Not unusual.

    • @I_Love_Rainbows510
      @I_Love_Rainbows510 3 месяца назад +4

      @@dod2304 Yeah, but they gave him an amnesia drug AFTER, once they discovered that he'd been awake the whole time, because they wanted to make him forget and hide their error to avoid a lawsuit.

    • @collingrawien6621
      @collingrawien6621 Месяц назад +1

      I think, if i were in the hot seat, or should i say table? I would lean towards not wanting the amnesia drug just for the sake of actually knowing the root cause of the mental trauma that would inevitably follow me around my entire life either way. Might as well start the rehabilitation from a better vantage point. I also think that with him thinking they were dreams vs actual memories it might have been worse for him because being it came on so randomly yet so intensely one can only assume the worst. Recovering from seeing your insides torn open seems immensely easier, especially considering that unless you have to have surgery again, you almost certainly wont ever experience it again. And brain is really good at making you forget the intensity of pain.

  • @kaos2405
    @kaos2405 11 месяцев назад +252

    Very very few stories ever actually distress me, but Sherman's story made me physically nauseous. You are a great story teller.

  • @abigailbrentlee
    @abigailbrentlee Год назад +2077

    The surgery story is one of my worst nightmares. Not falling asleep during surgery is literally one of the most terrifying thoughts to me

    • @joelschmierer3544
      @joelschmierer3544 Год назад +23

      There must be safeguards like taking someone with you who makes sure the doctors are doing their job

    • @kaymarie1246
      @kaymarie1246 Год назад +91

      When I had my first child, it suddenly turned into an emergency situation, I had to have a cesarean, and they had to put me out quickly. There was no time for an epidural or spinal. I went from having constant contractions to rushing to the operating room to everyone yelling, counting off instruments, and someone holding the breathing tube above my face, waiting for me to be put out so they could secure my airway. It was terrifying. The next thing I remember was the most excruciating pain ever. I could feel them cutting, everything and tried and tried to tell them to stop - I can feel it. The pain was horrific. I could hear but I couldn’t move, I couldn’t tell them and then I was out. I woke up in the recovery room screaming my head off stop stop I’m awake I can feel everything! I can feel it. My husband who couldn’t come in to the operating room, so also missed the birth, was very upset by the scene in front of him. I was covered in blood, Betadine and screaming my head off. The nurses got my pain under control, and I just kept saying I could feel them cutting. It was so bad I didn’t even care I’d had the baby at that point. Hours later, the anesthesiologist came in and I told him that I was awake and I felt everything and he said no that was not possible and quickly left. When my doctor came in, I told him and he said yes it was possible, he believed me and that the baby was okay and I was going to be okay. 6 months later, I had to have another procedure done, from the complications and was traumatized about going under. I had the same doctor and nurses. While talking to the nurse, she told me she saw my hand move and they realized I wasn’t all the way out. The Anesthesiologist had been fired, I wasn’t the first and ultimately we were included with 4 others in the lawsuit against him. I received $150. I probably should’ve had a lawyer.

    • @aviationdylan3353
      @aviationdylan3353 Год назад +57

      @@kaymarie1246 that’s so awful, only $150 is ridiculous.

    • @dosidicusgigas1376
      @dosidicusgigas1376 Год назад +21

      I was getting a root canal a few years back and the local anasthetics failed, needless to say it hurt like a mf. I went about 20 minutes before stopped the procedure and had them refreeze the area. I couldnt imagine dealing with something like that in the case of more intense/invasive surgeries.

    • @jenljames74
      @jenljames74 Год назад

      M??m?ñ

  • @adamstewart1092
    @adamstewart1092 2 года назад +2940

    The 16 minutes story is, by far, one of the scariest scenarios. I couldn’t imagine being sliced open while being paralyzed and unable to stop it. It’s a shame that instead of the hospital helping Sherman through his trauma and owning their mistakes, they decide to play naive to cover their own skin. Prayers to Sherman’s family ❤️

    • @jameswood3541
      @jameswood3541 2 года назад +28

      Smh bunch of quacks lol.

    • @sealyoness
      @sealyoness 2 года назад +38

      I can imagine it. I've been in such pain a few times where no anesthetic worked, and the medical was not incompetent, it's a quirk of my personal biology.

    • @jackhoff3910
      @jackhoff3910 2 года назад +54

      How do you help someone through such a pain-inducing experience? You say sorry? Oops? My bad? No, the best way is to try and make them forget the whole experience by giving them midazolam "amnesia" and pray they won't remember the pain. The potential for lawsuits was not the priority for the surgeons and nurses. They would still get their paychecks regardless if their employer was sued.

    • @vvtor
      @vvtor 2 года назад +5

      Maybe he thought aliens were operating on him.

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 2 года назад +1

      @@jackhoff3910 ruclips.net/video/KezHKbUzy0A/видео.html

  • @ph34rbucket91
    @ph34rbucket91 10 месяцев назад +98

    Dude, you are one hell of a storyteller. That last story had me on the edge of my seat. Heart goes out to Sherman and his family. May he RIP

  • @kilpoppo
    @kilpoppo 11 месяцев назад +71

    This was so anxiety inducing. I cant even start to imagine how horrifying it would be to be basically powerless but still have to endure that pain. I was physically shaking thinking about this.

  • @amandajay9058
    @amandajay9058 2 года назад +1691

    So, we're they not paying attention to his heart rate?! The machines would've registered that his heart was going nuts and that he was feeling pain even though he couldn't respond! That's crazy! That anesthesiologist deserved to be sued!

    • @nikkid7963
      @nikkid7963 2 года назад +115

      That’s a great point.

    • @Chewbecca101
      @Chewbecca101 2 года назад +194

      That makes no sense that heart rate and blood pressure alerts were ignored for so long.

    • @achaides
      @achaides 2 года назад +291

      That's literally the anesthesiologists entire job due9ng surgery... how incompetent. Failed both parts of their job. Should definitely be sued

    • @ms.prickle1651
      @ms.prickle1651 2 года назад +64

      My thought exactly as I was listening! Not just that, but midazolam or Versed, prevents the ability to create NEW memories (anterograde amnesia), it doesn't keep you from remembering things (retrograde amnesia). This is sus AF!

    • @lindaskidmore9507
      @lindaskidmore9507 2 года назад +47

      My thoughts exactly. Heart rate in an operation is usually monitored. What a nightmare...poor guy.
      .

  • @1Moishele
    @1Moishele 2 года назад +1331

    Poor Sherman. :/ They now have a device that attaches to the patient’s forehead and monitors muscle movement. It can tell if the patient is awake or waking, and anesthesia can be adjusted accordingly.

    • @danteb1926
      @danteb1926 2 года назад +66

      Well they apparently don’t here in Australia, doctors somehow left a family member of mine just conscious enough to hear them sawing through the bone in his leg just a couple of years back, still better than what the Romans had I guess :/

    • @barbaramarshall8095
      @barbaramarshall8095 2 года назад +18

      Dante B I had a hip replacement using sedation not an anaesthetic, the anaesthetist sat with me monitoring. When I had sedation I was aware of what was going on and talked to the anaethetist. Possibly your relative had the same. I didn't feel anything by the way.

    • @robertboudrie2234
      @robertboudrie2234 2 года назад +26

      This was developed at MGH (Mass General Hospital), and monitors brain wave activity, not muscle movement. When I was surged at MGH the anesthesiologist told me this is part of their routine and that it would be used during my surgery.

    • @1Moishele
      @1Moishele 2 года назад +14

      @@robertboudrie2234 - I had the device used in Atlanta when I had a hysterectomy. Monitoring brain waves does make more sense as they administer a paralytic. I remember talking with the anesthesiologist about it. I may have already been lightly sedated at that point.

    • @mandypohl3461
      @mandypohl3461 2 года назад +41

      …also watching their heart rate and blood pressure clues you in to distress! Monkeys could have done a better job, shame on that ENTIRE surgical team for now being aware or watching this patient!!!!!!!

  • @user-we4kf5xm5u
    @user-we4kf5xm5u Год назад +83

    As an adult, I need an adult for the last one. That is so terrifying and I am physically sick even though I have had semi risky surgeries done on me that haven’t resulted in this. I’m glad this story exists so hopefully the victim could get justice

  • @GtMatt
    @GtMatt 9 месяцев назад +36

    @MrBallen Just for your information, you mentioned in "#2 Bug Bite" that Georgi Markov would stop on the Waterloo Bridge in late 1970's and enjoy the view of the West Minster Palace and the London Eye... There was no London Eye back in the 70's, it was made for the Millennium which opened on New Years Eve in 1999 (However only took its first passengers in Feb 2000). There was a ferris wheel before this but, that was the Great Wheel at Earl's Court that closed in 1906. He would however, definitely been still having a great view of Big Ben, the Royal Festival Hall, and Whitehall Gardens!
    Great video, just wanted to help :)

    • @magentanyx4847
      @magentanyx4847 3 месяца назад +5

      Came here for this comment! 👍

    • @Heykittygirrrl
      @Heykittygirrrl 3 месяца назад +4

      Thank god it wasn't only me thinking this lol

    • @myriambasoah3888
      @myriambasoah3888 3 месяца назад +5

      What a lovely way to provide information. Some facts gets lost when it’s not a focal part of the story didn’t bug me at all that he included the london eye but it’s nice to gently inform people without revelling in catching someone’s oversight

    • @0gsamy
      @0gsamy Месяц назад

      nobody cares 😊

    • @GtMatt
      @GtMatt Месяц назад

      @@magentanyx4847 👍

  • @stwartic4296
    @stwartic4296 Год назад +1160

    The anaesthesiologist forgetting to administer anaesthesia which is literally in his name is ridiculously ironic. What happened to Sherman was absolutely horrific. A nightmare.

    • @annemcgregor1514
      @annemcgregor1514 11 месяцев назад +33

      I think it was not an accident. I'm pretty sure that the drug they are referring to is propofol. The same drug that Michael Jackson got hooked on. I bet the anesthesiologist was either using it or selling it. The amnesia drug doesn't seem like something that would be necessary to have on hand during a surgical procedure.

    • @JinxMarie1985
      @JinxMarie1985 11 месяцев назад +13

      ​​@@annemcgregor1514 totally agree. And yes, Michael (rip) died of a massive amount of propofol that he himself couldn't have done because he already couldn't move at that time he was so drugged up, its impossible he could have put it in his IV. His doctor is the one that gave him the final fatal dose.

    • @fuzzybutkus8970
      @fuzzybutkus8970 11 месяцев назад +4

      I was given Propofol for a shoulder replacement. I felt it going up my arm burning all the way up. I told gas passer and he just said hang on.I would of had plenty of time to start drip out of the IV.I’m sure Michaels tolerance was way high.

    • @kimberlysevastyanenko3798
      @kimberlysevastyanenko3798 10 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@annemcgregor1514 Not an accident? You really think they would knowingly put a patient through that kind of horrendous pain? Btw, that drug is routinely stocked in ORs.

    • @dottie3166
      @dottie3166 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@kimberlysevastyanenko3798 My son 's friend had back surgery a few years ago and in the middle of the operation the doctor walked out of the OR and went and bought drugs and got high. It was all over the news when it happened. I've worked in two different hospitals and you wouldn't believe what goes on.

  • @jennteal5265
    @jennteal5265 2 года назад +1801

    I've been paranoid about general anesthesia not functioning properly ever since I first heard of this exact same scenario 20 years ago. What a horrifying experience. I feel so bad for poor Sherman.

    • @zozocecp
      @zozocecp 2 года назад +88

      Just know if you smoke weed, DEFINITELY make sure to let the doctors know. It can mess with how well anesthesia works

    • @savannahjohnson633
      @savannahjohnson633 2 года назад +58

      Let ur dr know about any medications even otc, alcohol, cigarettes, vitamins, and especially drugs
      My dumbass about died from anesthesia.

    • @cobalt-snake6125
      @cobalt-snake6125 2 года назад +40

      @@savannahjohnson633 You should also let your doctors know if you are a natural redhead. Anaesthesia works differently on natural redheads.

    • @noomoon2833
      @noomoon2833 2 года назад +12

      Hi John. Could you please do some more of the 411 Series? I know people love them as much as I do. I'd appreciate it greatly as I'm sure others would too. You're AWESOME!! THANK YOU! Thank You for your service! ( I'm also a vet).

    • @MKSQUADofficial
      @MKSQUADofficial 2 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/IA3dqQTp56s/видео.html

  • @onepoundofcheese8356
    @onepoundofcheese8356 Год назад +95

    I had the same "Anastesia awareness" this guy had on my first hernia surgery. I only had for like the first 2 to 3 minutes but I felt the cut in my lower abdomen and the intubation. I wasn't able to move, talk or open my eyes. Eventually they must have figured it out because i did go out. What gets me is that they have monitors that register blood pressure, heart rate, etc. Since then I've had another hernia surgery and told the doc about my previous surgery. It didn't happen again thankfully but the first docs tried telling me I dreamt it or imagined it.

    • @Frecks-n-Specks
      @Frecks-n-Specks 9 месяцев назад +16

      Same! I have a condition where my BP drops when I'm in pain. I was paralyzed but aware the entire time from a horrific intubation through the cutting beginning to end. Listened when my BP dropped dangerously low making them fight to keep me alive. The med staff argued i wasn't aware until I told them the conversations during my surgery. I have night terrors because of it.

  • @thetherrannative
    @thetherrannative 10 месяцев назад +77

    My father is a nurse anesthetist. He was a regular nurse for many years before this, and he went through many more years of school while I was a child to get to where he is now. Having seen firsthand how hard you have to work to get into anesthesia, I have to believe that last case was either laziness, malice, or both. A deliberate choice went into withholding the correct medications from that man, even if that choice was to not pay attention despite knowing full well the importance of correctly-administered anesthesia during surgery.

    • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
      @JohnGardnerAlhadis 8 месяцев назад +4

      I smell nepotism.

    • @harls_974
      @harls_974 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@JohnGardnerAlhadiswhat?

    • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
      @JohnGardnerAlhadis 6 месяцев назад

      @@harls_974 What part of my comment was difficult to understand?

    • @AnalyticalMenace
      @AnalyticalMenace 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@JohnGardnerAlhadis Yeah...wut?!

    • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
      @JohnGardnerAlhadis 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@AnalyticalMenace Do neither of you know the meaning of the word "nepotism"...?

  • @underbossgamingdunce7018
    @underbossgamingdunce7018 Год назад +377

    My grandmother had a very similar experience as Sherman. She had to get surgery on her eye as she had multiple issues related to cancer around her eye. She was put under but they think she reacted to the anesthesia and was never made unconscious, but she was also not meant to be paralysed either. So once surgery had started she was completely conscious while they started cutting around her eye. She couldn't even move her eyes to make them aware. They only realised she was conscious was because she started crying and her blood pressure and heart rate went through the roof and eventually she passed out. She didn't have psychotic episode like Sherman, but she had nightmares almost every night for years about a surgeon running at her with a scalpel and stabbing at her eye. I have unbelievable respect for my grandmother.

    • @dthompsont3796
      @dthompsont3796 5 месяцев назад +6

      They don't put you to sleep for eye surgery unless it's to remove the entire eye.

    • @fairyprincess911
      @fairyprincess911 3 месяца назад +8

      @@dthompsont3796I’m not sure you should make an assessment about her grandmother’s eye cancer surgery.

    • @fairyprincess911
      @fairyprincess911 3 месяца назад +2

      God bless her; so do I🥰

    • @underbossgamingdunce7018
      @underbossgamingdunce7018 3 месяца назад +3

      @dthompsont3796 it was probably not to put her to sleep but to relax her but it was either too string or she reacted to the anesthesia and it didn't numb her. Either way that's what happened. Not saying my details are 100% correct but what happened, happened.

    • @ashleymarietv2
      @ashleymarietv2 2 месяца назад +1

      @@dthompsont3796this is not true, at all. I’ve had multiple eye surgeries. I was put to sleep for all of them. There are many types of eye surgery where the patient must be or can be put to sleep for.

  • @trishg5820
    @trishg5820 5 месяцев назад +18

    That anesthesia awareness story actually happened to me. I wasn't able to move but my vocal cords still worked. Right after the initial cut I remember the anesthesiologist patting my arm & whispering "You have to stop screaming now.". I was a mezzo soprano at the time so it must have been loud. Later on, one of the assisting docs told my husband "She felt everything.". Should have sued too.

  • @beavinator
    @beavinator Месяц назад +4

    I've watched a number of your "mature audiences only" videos now...this is the first one that seriously messed me up. The fact that last story is something that can and did actually happen is the most horrifying thing I think I may have ever heard, and I'm pretty sure I'd rather die than ever submit to surgery again...

  • @UzumakiKhanHOKAGE
    @UzumakiKhanHOKAGE 2 года назад +7148

    That 3rd story😔
    First time i literally struggled to finish a story. The pain must of been immense

    • @soupricemf1260
      @soupricemf1260 2 года назад +291

      Same.. i was like 'man this is too tragic, i want to quit now'

    • @alexh8732
      @alexh8732 2 года назад +245

      @@soupricemf1260 I had a similar experience with a c section in 2004 , the spinal block only took effect on one side so I could feel the whole thing

    • @monnke
      @monnke 2 года назад +120

      MUST HAVE

    • @tulesg2008
      @tulesg2008 2 года назад +29

      Tought the same..ong poor Guy.

    • @msbling9
      @msbling9 2 года назад +304

      But even if they weren't looking at him, he was hooked on the monitors and any good anesthesiologist should have noticed the curve, the TOF, the spikes and the brain waves would. The machine would have been beeping!! What were they doing? Omg WTH?!? POOR MAN

  • @TheTrueGrindSetMindSet
    @TheTrueGrindSetMindSet 2 года назад +569

    That last story was probably one of the hardest to actually listen to because it could happen to anybody. The fact that tho hospital tried to cover up the trauma they caused him is absolutely unreal, they are the people who are supposed to help you, not ruin you

    • @rokkenrobyn9767
      @rokkenrobyn9767 2 года назад +19

      Scary when you realize what the world is REALLY like

    • @jaketrat3725
      @jaketrat3725 2 года назад +14

      They should keep the tape off their eyes or something so they for sure the individual isn’t awake how can that happen to 20k people a year

    • @privateemail9755
      @privateemail9755 2 года назад +7

      Yeah, my mom was prescribed medicine that rotted her fingers and toes. The doctors took no responsibility. Don't ever trust anyone who associates with Monsanto. They and their doctors are evil.

    • @1lukarioz
      @1lukarioz 2 года назад +3

      "Saving" or ruining" you depends on what makes the most profit. In this case it was obvious wich one was the correct answer.
      Just the tought of becoming financially broke makes people panic and commit atrocities. Thats how scary economy is.

    • @kdizzle901
      @kdizzle901 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely disgusting

  • @williedog1127
    @williedog1127 9 месяцев назад +15

    Hey Mrballen, I had this happen to me in early 2000. A second back surgery. I was face down looking at the floor and paralyzed. Couldn't move, scream nothing! Felt the doctor cut into my lower back and rig on my spine. What a ride. I told the doctor what happened while I was in recovery. Explained to him exactly the steps he took. I finally blacked out. Wow

  • @ciganyweaverandherperiwink6293
    @ciganyweaverandherperiwink6293 11 месяцев назад +5

    The way you told that last story in particular was fantastic. All of them were great, but that was a zinger. An absolute nightmare of a scenario. Thanks so much for monetising your talents and skills in story telling, all success much deserved.

  • @jamescarrington5521
    @jamescarrington5521 2 года назад +879

    This last story explains SO MUCH to me, all these years later. They always administer a drug called succinylcholine along with the narcotic painkillers used for the anesthesia; the Succinylcholine is used to prevent sudden, involuntary muscle spasms during the surgery, but that's ALL it does, it does absolutely nothing for pain, so you're fully awake but completely paralyzed. My now-deceased wife described this very thing when she had her hysterectomy; she kept trying to move, scream, do ANYTHING at all to let someone know she was still awake, but no one ever noticed. Afterward, once she was back in her room, the surgeon came in to tell her how everything went, but she interrupted him and told him that something had either gone terribly wrong, or she had had one Hell of a nightmare, as she recounted what she felt and what she heard them talking about (some Goddamned baseball game or something) and she finished by asking him if this was real or if it had just been some insane, drug-induced, terrifying nightmare. Well, he stared at her for a minute, then he slammed his tablet shut, jumped up off his chair, and he snapped at her, "Well, if you know all of THAT, then you already know how everything went!", and he stormed out of the room! In the years following this, she would be tormented with night terrors, really gruesome, blood-and-guts stuff; she would attempt suicide at least twice, she began to have unreasonable, angry outbursts, which was entirely out of character for her, because prior to this surgery, she used to be so quiet and reserved, basically seen but not heard. She became a very prolific shoplifter, eventually getting arrested for it a few times; she ended up on antidepressant drugs, and she had to eventually take drugs for the constant, crippling anxiety and panic attacks, addictive drugs that she would indeed become addicted to, along with narcotic pain killers due to permanent, chronic pain; this woman, my wife, became a stranger to me, she had changed so much from the quiet, church going lady she once was. We never did sue anyone over it; she was quite kind and very meek, and she just saw it as an accident that anyone could make, and she tried to go on with her life, but we NEVER.... neither her nor me, NEVER had it even remotely occurred to us that THIS had been the cause of her sudden onset "mental illness"!! Well, she's in a better place now, Lord willing and God rest her soul, but this just infuriates me because NOW I finally have an answer as to WHY she basically went crazy! She hadn't just suddenly become a psychopath, it was actually PTSD!

    • @new_to_planet4424
      @new_to_planet4424 2 года назад +165

      Oh my God this must’ve been a horrible realization for you. I’m sorry for your loss and what your wife suffered through. Maybe you should seek legal advice as you may still be within the statute of limitations and you can help protect other people.

    • @dfgiuy22
      @dfgiuy22 2 года назад +4

      Not sure if it's PTSD bro... just saying.

    • @AJDaniels5298
      @AJDaniels5298 2 года назад +164

      @@dfgiuy22 What do you think it was, then? 🤨
      It sure as Hell wasn't a trip to Disney!

    • @donaloizzo
      @donaloizzo 2 года назад +48

      I'm so sorry for everything you both went through.. I'm glad she can rest now.. hopefully you can to...

    • @quickcali1377
      @quickcali1377 2 года назад +28

      My best friends gf was givin the wrong meds by a doc meant for the patient behind her last year, her hair fell out and almost died ,but since docters in high demand they take no responsibility.

  • @mollagwenchana6372
    @mollagwenchana6372 2 года назад +899

    As an OR nurse, I know that a lot has already happened in that 16 minutes. I couldn’t imagine the unthinkable pain that patient went through. That anesthesiologist is very incompetent and shouldn’t be allowed to practice again!

    • @pbjt2396
      @pbjt2396 2 года назад +48

      Probably the doctor as well. I doubt any truly competent surgeon, or at least one that is concerned about the welfare of his patient and his own reputation and liabilities as a surgeon, he would require the anesthesiologist to be beside the patient throughout the surgery. So, although I’m not surgeon or doctor, I really think the surgeon is in control in the OR and definitely the main culprit so to speak.

    • @ThePumpingiron27
      @ThePumpingiron27 2 года назад +34

      That's what I was thinking. Not an OR nurse, but my mom was an RN, my aunt and a few other ladies in my family. So I have some medical knowledge. The anesthesiologist should of been fired and investigated. The whole team should of been for not even noticing it.

    • @scotthenley1797
      @scotthenley1797 2 года назад +14

      Your very VERY polite.
      The person responsible is what we have a lot of today a lot of people who can't be arsed to do there Jobs properly.

    • @suzymoroka297
      @suzymoroka297 2 года назад +12

      @@ThePumpingiron27 should HAVE been fired 😒

    • @terskataneli6457
      @terskataneli6457 2 года назад +44

      Such a major blunder from the anesthesiologist. Not only did they forget to administer the anesthetic but totally neglected to monitor vital signs that would have given the whole situation away.

  • @snookieg2409
    @snookieg2409 Год назад +14

    I have had 17 major surgeries and the thought of anesthesia awareness goes through my mind everytime. My heart really goes out to the man and his family. What a horrible experience!

    • @Limelaz23
      @Limelaz23 11 месяцев назад +1

      I know it sounds weird, but you having 17 major surgeries gives me a little bit more hope that I won't die or be forever traumatised from one.
      Not sure what the future holds, it is scary to think about...

    • @gavinjenkins899
      @gavinjenkins899 10 месяцев назад

      Luckily the vast majority of the time the reason is not this kind of extreme negligence, but rather people being resistant to the drugs. So at this point, you know you are not one of those people with such a resistance, and your likelihood of experiencing it goes way down compared to average.

  • @exploringdimensions4all853
    @exploringdimensions4all853 7 месяцев назад +15

    My stepmother did her Master's thesis in Psychology on people who survived suicide attempts made by jumping off the Golden Gate bridge. One of the people she interviewed had been a diver. Midway through his attempt, he changed his mind and changed his position in midair, to ensure his survival.

    • @seadragonwitchbitch
      @seadragonwitchbitch 5 месяцев назад +1

      That's beyond fascinating, I'd love to hear more if you're willing to share

    • @exploringdimensions4all853
      @exploringdimensions4all853 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@seadragonwitchbitch Unfortunately, that's all she told me. My stepmother died several years ago, so I can't ask her.

    • @Dilligaf1
      @Dilligaf1 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@seadragonwitchbitchThere's a documentary called The Bridge. It's about suicides/attempted suicides off Golden Gate Bridge. Kevin Hines, one of the people featured, has a similar story...

  • @sierra565
    @sierra565 2 года назад +884

    Had Sherman's doctors been honest instead of worrying about being sued, at least he may have been able to get some therapy or something... That's so tragic...

    • @aduckwithayoutubechannel
      @aduckwithayoutubechannel 2 года назад +101

      Exactly. And they still got sued in the end, so the only thing they accomplished was killing an innocent man.

    • @braddean1247
      @braddean1247 2 года назад +13

      The administration of Versed (midazolam) in that situation eould likely still be protocol, with the hope that it would completely remove the memory of the trauma, however some honestly after the procedure would have been nice

    • @Chi-Drumming
      @Chi-Drumming 2 года назад +9

      I thought the amnesia drug would stop the mental trauma, guess not. I have a surgery soon...Ca';t wait...

    • @mecahunter7092
      @mecahunter7092 2 года назад +11

      This made me physically ill. I send love to his precious soul in heaven as well as love, prayers and peace to the family.

    • @trinitylis
      @trinitylis 2 года назад +9

      Such evil people.

  • @kristamkm
    @kristamkm 2 года назад +646

    The last story just actually caused a mild anxiety attack for me. That was too much to hear and imagine. The idea of going through that pain and terror, then adding not being able to connect the feelings to something is just too much. Your storytelling is beyond amazing!

    • @NekoFinland
      @NekoFinland 2 года назад +17

      Literally same, it's a whole new found fear I had never considered.

    • @tracieshelfer9647
      @tracieshelfer9647 2 года назад +5

      Same…I found myself at work not working but frozen in fear and anxiety for this poor man…

    • @brandondaniel47
      @brandondaniel47 2 года назад +4

      Unfortunately it happens enough time that they have a machine to uh monitor your brain waves in order to make sure you are past our. I believe there's a whole movie about it about it. One of my biggest fears to be honest

    • @tipsing6421
      @tipsing6421 2 года назад +10

      I think it's worse that the hospital tried to cover it up. At least if they just took responsibility that would've been better.

    • @HyzerFlexOnYou
      @HyzerFlexOnYou 2 года назад +3

      Yep i had to really battle through this one. And it happens to 20k people every year... how long until we can automate entire surgeries using robots?

  •  7 месяцев назад +7

    How does content this awesome manage to hide from me for so long? I just discovered MrBallen's RUclips channel earlier today and I've lost track of how many videos I've already watched and enjoyed. You're an amazing storyteller, MrBallen! I'll keep watching!

  • @Nunya520
    @Nunya520 5 месяцев назад +9

    Both of my kids woke up in the middle of wisdom teeth removal surgery. They were almost immediately put back under. The dentist told them both that they metabolized the anesthesia more quickly than is normal, and to be sure to mention it before any future surgeries. From reading the comments, it's more common than I realized!

  • @Sweets77
    @Sweets77 Год назад +1251

    As an OR nurse, Sherman’s story breaks my heart. This is why we are always at the bedside when patients go to sleep and wake up. I know patients most likely will not remember me but I am their advocate when they are under anesthesia. I’d like to think that the extra amnesia medication was in hopes that he would not be traumatized by what he went through, not to avoid a lawsuit. But the fact that they were not forthcoming with what took place tells me this wasn’t the case. Had they informed the family of what happened they may have been able to acknowledge his trauma and work through it in therapy. Instead he had to live in paranoid fear. 💔 What a horrible thing.

    • @happysurvivor9038
      @happysurvivor9038 Год назад +1

      Should have been handled exactly as you hope.

    • @stephaniehustead2585
      @stephaniehustead2585 Год назад +34

      Oh I definitely remember you guys being in there every time I have woken up(50+ surgeries so far) it would be freaky as all get out if you woke up alone in recovery. Reminds me too much of the movie Resident Evil. I appreciate you guys. I imagine you have stories yourself of folks being in altered states of mind when they wake up. My birth father is an OR nurse and his woman is an trauma/OR nurse. One of the most demanding jobs ever. Not just physically but psychologically/emotionally..

    • @theresas740
      @theresas740 Год назад +20

      My OR experience is limited to my tole as Nursery personnel so always C/Sections but I have never forgotten the class day in Nursing school that we were taught that to paralyze someone without also sedating them is cruel. For a patient to be unable to move at all, to breathe, to scream, unconscionable.

    • @stephaniehustead2585
      @stephaniehustead2585 Год назад +14

      @@theresas740 and the scariest thing I ever went through. I really thought they were trying to kill me when it happened. Especially when you didn't have a clue that the paralytic lowered your breathing like that, you really feel like you can't breathe. But it is amazing to know that that is how little air you get when on a paralytic and under sedation and it's actually enough air to live.

    • @TheHighlanderGirl
      @TheHighlanderGirl Год назад +10

      @Amanda Young, since you’re an OR nurse, what say you - how can this patient “see” what was happening if he’s paralyzed and draped off? There’s so many things about this story that’s sketchy. Wouldn’t he be intubated? Why weren’t his vital signs monitored? Wouldn’t his pain level be reflected in his heart rate, blood pressure and pulse? Why are they using laparoscopic equipment if Mr. Ballen’s narration makes the viewer believe his abdomen was open and retracted? I don’t doubt the man experienced an anesthetic “event”, what does the surgeon’s and anesthesiologist’s notes/summary state?

  • @rachelmoore1974
    @rachelmoore1974 2 года назад +1237

    That last story is appalling! Everyone involved in that surgery should've lost their medical licenses. Not for the initial mistake, but for the cover-up which subsequently cost Sherman his life!

    • @csssaundrasmith7018
      @csssaundrasmith7018 2 года назад +8

      Dear GOD

    • @heatherm8736
      @heatherm8736 2 года назад +7

      Wonder if they did?

    • @missshady1760
      @missshady1760 2 года назад +80

      Even for the initial mistake. We put all our faith in the medical staff to have us knocked out and no pain in surgery. Shit like that should be double, even triple checked.

    • @katie3248
      @katie3248 2 года назад +64

      They really traumatized him for life and then took away his ability to mentally heal from it. This story is beyond f**ked

    • @HandymancraftDIY
      @HandymancraftDIY 2 года назад +44

      From my wife who is a doctor told me that if this happens, usually the Anesthesiologist lose their licenses, but the other people get fined or fired, I’m sure ppl got fire, the Anesthesiologist has one job, you f that up, you don’t deserve that job.

  • @LeatherLaceStudios
    @LeatherLaceStudios 11 месяцев назад +13

    The episode about the man who felt his surgery was definitely reality, I have been in advanced medical care as an advanced medical professional for over 20 years, first as an Expert Combat Medic to Emergency Medicine RN to PhD Health Psychology & Doctor Of Naturopathy (ND), and as a nurse, I assisted with a few surgeries and witnessed several major screwups, i.e wrong limb amputated, eye destroyed with a laser scaple, removal of the wrong section of intestine, and several other major screwups as well as countless minor ones and I came to truly believe that something, regardless of how significant, but something goes wrong during every surgical procedure, and you definiently don't want to hear what the surgical team talks about during your procedure, I've rarely seen anyone talk negative about the patient on the table, but they certainly talk about everything else and some of it is down right funny but some is extremely private information about previous or upcoming patients, I left the nursing field mainly because of the "political" nature of advanced nursing, clicks, cover ups, candles, etc, you'd think you were working for congress, but as a psychologist/ND I truly love my profession and I go out of my way to be as professional as possible but we're all human and mistakes and down right crap judgement happens every day, so I warn every one to do extensive research on any Doctor or other Professional that you entrust major medical treatment to, get to know them, I for one allow my patients to ask me any thing they won't to, and I actually answer honestly regardless of if its embarrassing or positive, and if my patient shares something embarrassing or odd or what have you with me I share a similar story of my own if I have one that is relevant and I have found that in my case at least, it builds greater trust and respect with my patient and I

    • @globalfamily8172
      @globalfamily8172 10 месяцев назад +2

      I had to have a urology/nephrology procedure under anesthesia with an intern and trust me, as a woman, I do not like interns judging my privates. I know they try to be professional, but I'm sure if you're not perfect and get the wrong kind of person, they have some things to comment on (at least in private).

  • @evelynsahoe8896
    @evelynsahoe8896 11 месяцев назад +4

    The fact that 20000 people A YEAR are traumatized during surgery is mind boggling and absolutely horrifying. all of those doctor's and nurses are probably still practicing and it makes me sick, they tried to wipe this guys mind instead of admitting they fucked up and killed a man. should be in prison

  • @TPWM
    @TPWM 2 года назад +302

    Sherman’s case happened in 2006. Monitors to trend patient vitals during general anesthesia have been around for decades. Any mid-level or above anesthesia provider would have been able to tell something was amiss even prior to incision (increased heart rate, blood pressure, etc) due to Sherman’s nerves given that he knew what was about to happen. This was a case of gross incompetence pure and simple. Anesthesiologist must have been on the side somewhere talking to one of the nurses as the surgeon proceeded, and should never be allowed to practice again.

    • @miloa5833
      @miloa5833 2 года назад +21

      I agree, I'm almost livid listening to this story, because medical malpractice especially of arrogant and ignorant anesthesiologists really irk me.

    • @zac1497
      @zac1497 2 года назад +17

      If you think about it, it's something easy to solve no? Why pump the chemicals at the same time? Why not the sleepy chemical before the paralyzing? Why didn't they loudly announce SCAPEL since if you're not asleep, you can notice the nerves as you said. Like it's so simple to prevent and yet they neglect to do so.

    • @Gui_Silva_GIA
      @Gui_Silva_GIA 2 года назад +6

      Thank you, you just calmed my mind a lot with this information.

    • @GrizzledTanker
      @GrizzledTanker 2 года назад +2

      My thoughts exactly

    • @missybuchanan9631
      @missybuchanan9631 2 года назад +12

      I was thinking that too, the machines should have been screaming.

  • @enochianwolf
    @enochianwolf Год назад +462

    I had my entire abdomen opened up to repair a hernia in my diaphragm when I was 17. I remember a nurse telling me that I was screaming at some point during the operation, I have no memory of it but it's rather chilling to think that I woke up somehow. On top of that, the nurse who wheeled me to my recovery room, as I had first woke up after the operation, told me to get off the gurney and get into the bed, no one helped me and I moaned the whole time because my entire body felt wooden and sore, but she really couldn't have cared less. I must say that nurses do important work but when you're that vulnerable and get looked after by one like that, it really sours your entire perspective of hospitals.

    • @abbigailbonner5074
      @abbigailbonner5074 Год назад +42

      Oh I'm so sorry this happened to you, this kind of treatment is ridiculous. Theres no excuse for it at all.

    • @ritanoel2828
      @ritanoel2828 Год назад +9

      How horrible for you. I am so sorry.

    • @jenniferscott47
      @jenniferscott47 Год назад +18

      I wake up and remember. I tell the names of ppl I. The room to my Drs and they are horrified, but are still scared to do better pain control because the stigma on med-seekers! But I can remember the woman's name who handed you the saw and the student who observed- yeah, the one I said I wouldn't allow to watch.
      Nurses dont lift a hand to help me into a bed in my last three spinal surgeries where my spine was fused with rods and screws. They dont give a rats tail about helping.

    • @autarko
      @autarko Год назад +19

      Some nurses are incredibly professional and compassionate but others seem to be stone cold.

    • @christopherdodson4300
      @christopherdodson4300 Год назад +15

      I remember after a surgery the nurses rushing me out to my sister's car so they could prerpare for the next patient. I just woke up from major surgery, could barely breathe, was vomiting like crazy. Nurse tried shoving a cheese cracker and a pain killer down my throat, which was so dry my tongue felt like it could disintegrate, and then gave me a plastic baggy and pushed me out of the door! I vomited many times in the parking lot and then we just drove home. Really made the experience kinda crappy.

  • @Youfukinwish
    @Youfukinwish 10 месяцев назад +9

    I just found your channel and I have to tell you that you’re the best story teller I’ve ever heard! Love your channel so much!!

  • @007theluckyboy
    @007theluckyboy 6 месяцев назад

    You are an excellent "STORYTELLER". The way you narrated how Sherman felt during those 16 minutes (even though he didn't even remember the event) is uneasy.

  • @God_save_our_souls
    @God_save_our_souls 2 года назад +720

    The worst part, is that if they hadn’t taken away the memory. He wouldn’t have felt insane, it still would’ve been traumatizing but he would know that the images that plagued him were from an event that has past and he could get therapy and heal. They basically forced him into a position where he could only be gaslit. What an awful thing to put someone through.

    • @W0lfMan26
      @W0lfMan26 2 года назад +13

      Honestly, I'm surprised he handled it as well as he did.

    • @Elena-tq9vs
      @Elena-tq9vs 2 года назад +27

      They might have thought they were doing him a favour; if you can't remember pain, can it still hurt you? (Obviously the answer is yes in this case, but they might not have known that.)

    • @intuitivemischief3167
      @intuitivemischief3167 2 года назад +64

      @@Elena-tq9vs they were just trying to cover up their mistake to avoid being sued.

    • @squagz5830
      @squagz5830 2 года назад +28

      I don't blame him for taking his life. It's sad but I've had a traumatic childhood that my family forced me to try and forget. They constantly gaslit me and told me it was all just my imagination. They finally told me the trauma I am experiencing was real and it all happened the day after I tried to take my life. It's horrible, it makes you feel so crazy and just out of touch with the world. It makes you feel like you're attention seeking and you can't get help. It's a horrible hopeless feeling that seems like it never has an answer and you just can't escape it. I have nothing but pure love and empathy for Sherman. I have ever since I first heard about this and I can never ever stop coming back to it.

    • @Miss.Demeanour
      @Miss.Demeanour 2 года назад +3

      @@intuitivemischief3167 - I think if they were trying to do that, they could have just stopped his heart & killed him... so I don't think that's what they were trying to do. I sincerely think they were trying to help him AND themselves, both

  • @mounicachangari852
    @mounicachangari852 2 года назад +234

    I’m a doctor myself and listening to the last story made me tearful and gave goosebumps.. I can’t even imagine what he must have gone through and what he felt for those 16 mins. I just can’t.. its scary to even think about it.

    • @MrBallen
      @MrBallen  2 года назад +38

      Ya it’s just so horrifying!!! Good on you for being a doctor!

    • @josephvanwie6706
      @josephvanwie6706 2 года назад +15

      I'm 70 years old and could write a book about medical malpractice on personal experiences with family, friends, and acquaintances! I had medical training during the Vietnam War so I understand more than the average Joe. Many in your field are butchers! I choose DNR instead of the meat factory! I pray that you make a difference in those who's lives are placed in your hands.

    • @ctrl8337
      @ctrl8337 2 года назад +11

      As an MD, can you think of any reason as to why he wouldn't have experienced tachycardia and increased BP under those circumstances? I've heard these stories before and always wonder why that is. Surely the monitor would alarm if the Anesthesiologist wasn't paying close attention to vitals throughout. Do certain paralytic drugs have an effect on vasoconstriction?

    • @laurenw3300
      @laurenw3300 2 года назад +7

      Not only did they make that mistake, but they tried to cover it up. Unbelievable, I’m glad they got sued. They ruined a man’s life and permanently traumatized him and his family. Everyone involved should’ve been fired and barred from any medical occupation in the future.

    • @NoNo_IStay
      @NoNo_IStay 2 года назад +6

      Can you imagine being the nurse that noticed. My god

  • @perkinsmariaeleana3809
    @perkinsmariaeleana3809 2 месяца назад +2

    I've had about 14 surgeries. The last one was a month ago. I know I was having a local block so I was surprised when the anesthesiologist came in and said we're going to be giving you a general anesthetic. I was shocked and told her that I was having a femoral block and sedation. She said the surgeon only uses general. She suggested a spinal and the block with sedation if the doctor approved it. He approved it and the anesthesiologist said that she was glad I opted not to have general anesthesia. I only had general once and I started to wake up. That's why I won't have it unless absolutely necessary. Thank you for letting me tell my story. And here is your fyi...if you are having any surgery below the waist you can have a spinal with sedation which is less invasive than general anesthesia. Believe me when I say that. I've had enough surgeries to know.

  • @iangray7410
    @iangray7410 3 месяца назад

    Man ! You find great stories and present them so well. I sent a link to this video to my Canadian-born physician son who is an internist in Louisiana. He ended up where he is after watching endless reruns of "House". I reckon he'll soon be attending your story tellings too.

  • @thezuguprojectANTHONYALBANESE
    @thezuguprojectANTHONYALBANESE Год назад +233

    My Stepfather experienced "Anesthesia Awareness" for the entire surgery to fix his torn Achilles tendon. When he finally came out of it and told the nurse and doctors what happened, they didn't believe him..... Until he repeated back all the various conversations the doctors and nurses had between them during the surgery. They were shocked....my Stepfather said it was the most brutal experience of his lifetime.

    • @pbpb-he6gx
      @pbpb-he6gx Год назад +7

      always get spinal ansethetic tfor limb surgery then you are awake and you can tell them if it hurts

    • @dakshinanair2398
      @dakshinanair2398 Год назад +3

      for lower limb surgeries,u remain awake.u can talk,joke move ur hands,anything other than movement and sensations below belly button

    • @dakshinanair2398
      @dakshinanair2398 Год назад +1

      people get terrified coz they cam hear and understand staffs talking with each other.they probably imagine it when they say,cut the ligament or suture the skin

    • @bobbywinston116
      @bobbywinston116 Год назад

      ​@@dakshinanair2398i had 3 knee surgeries, 2 of them i was put to sleep and the first of those 2 was so much work they gave me a 36 hour nerve block in my hip down to ease the pain a little when it wore off. Not being a smartass, im not a nurse or anything but in my case, [acl, mcl, meniscus & patellar tendon surgery] i was put out twice. The 3rd surgery on the same knee months later was just for scar tissue removal and i was awake for that one

    • @anntunaley9974
      @anntunaley9974 Год назад +3

      Yes its awful. They didnt believe me either until i repeated their conversations and told them everything i saw and felt

  • @nasaandtheesa5400
    @nasaandtheesa5400 Год назад +491

    Sherman’s story is probably one of the most horrific things that a human being can experience. May he Rest In Peace.

    • @YamaXI
      @YamaXI Год назад

      Not nearly close to the most horrific way to go.

    • @carolfromalbertacanada
      @carolfromalbertacanada Год назад

      Good Lord I can’t even imagine!

  • @Leehunglow
    @Leehunglow 11 месяцев назад +6

    Dude you're a great storyteller, keep up the good work.

  • @WickedT312
    @WickedT312 4 месяца назад

    You're such a gifted story teller. Absolute supreme content! I'm so hooked on this channel! ❤

  • @Kardinaalilintu
    @Kardinaalilintu 2 года назад +819

    I have to admit.... I've heard several of the stories you've told us, from other sources, but somehow your way of telling them is so unique that over and over again I don't immediately regocnize them!

    • @kristyp2585
      @kristyp2585 2 года назад +2

      I agree!

    • @alisonmary1443
      @alisonmary1443 2 года назад

      The explanation of the metal pellet in the reporters leg was the first time I have heard exactly how the poison was released, I new he'd been jabbed with a brolly but wax covered ball was fascinating , best story teller.

    • @mhail7874
      @mhail7874 2 года назад +3

      I like how he animates with his whole body over the tense parts of the story. Really makes the story a little more…tense, haha

    • @sunnyscott4876
      @sunnyscott4876 2 года назад

      Yes..heard them too. There' only some many horror stories to go around.

    • @lovisawi02
      @lovisawi02 2 года назад +1

      Yes I agree, his storytelling is on another level.💯

  • @prosperity3370
    @prosperity3370 2 года назад +965

    That last story is the most stressful and disturbing story I have ever heard. Tragic and absolutely bonkers. As usual you do a great job telling it, what a great channel and awesome job your doing!

    • @DSP_Gaming0
      @DSP_Gaming0 2 года назад +29

      Bro the way he told it, I feel like I was there. That really fucked me up

    • @reddbabyy95
      @reddbabyy95 2 года назад +17

      I was having anxiety the whole time 😭

    • @aron1632
      @aron1632 2 года назад +6

      Yea and I had to listen to it after going to bed, just trying to imagine the pain he went through will mess with your mind.

    • @bmaluginthevanishingman6034
      @bmaluginthevanishingman6034 2 года назад +7

      I had to turn it off

    • @ThatLoud3v
      @ThatLoud3v 2 года назад +6

      @@DSP_Gaming0 for real I have had surgeries in the past and luckily that never happened to me and i was just horrified when I was listening to that guy's story

  • @ZaraTGgirl
    @ZaraTGgirl 10 месяцев назад +11

    I had a heart surgery and several years later eye surgery in the hospital. They had to cut both eyes open and fiddle with the stuff inside. I normally get about 9-12 shots, at the eye drs office, in each eye every 3 weeks due to a medical condition causing my sight to fail. But this full surgery was neccessary as it was getting worse. I could still see. I'm never numb for the shots. And you very much can feel those needles and pressure of liquid into the eyes. I was fully awake for everything and could feel everything every time. Couldn't speak during the hospital surgies though. And they had administered the full dosages of everything those times. I would rather die than go through that again. And during my emergency c-section, the epidural didn't work. They shot me 3 times with a numbing agent, i felt the needle wiggling in my spine. Then they tried 3 more times with the epidural. I also felt all 3 of those wiggling in my spine. But none of it worked. I felt everything then too. But they had to do it, as both me and my son were dying. He was suffocating and my organs were failing fast. I will never go through it again.

  • @merengueardiente
    @merengueardiente Год назад +1

    that surgery gonna give me nightmare from now on smh, excellent way to tell story ,love what you do

  • @AkIsUkIro
    @AkIsUkIro 2 года назад +958

    Anesthesia awareness happened to my mother when she underwent an emergency C-Section for my sibling.
    They didn't administer enough of the anesthetic and she felt everything they did to her. Every cut. Every break. Every stitch. She always gets anxious when she needs to get surgery and has panic attacks when she needs to lie on a hospital bed.
    The fact that she's still alive and (mostly) sane with us almost 30yrs later is a miracle. She's a strong woman.

    • @AshNikkosWife
      @AshNikkosWife 2 года назад +27

      Happens all the time with C-sections. They can and should numb you, but as far as actually putting you under they can’t. Not safe for the baby or mom. Why didn’t she say she could feel it? Where are you from if you don’t mind my asking cause I know all countries are different.

    • @pupsap7714
      @pupsap7714 2 года назад +55

      Extremely common for women’s medical problems to be horrifically neglected.

    • @kristencat
      @kristencat 2 года назад +35

      Yep. I went through this during my cesarean as well. They tried to give me an epidural. I have cardiac complications and they tried to administer the medicine very slowly but my son was in such distress I had to be cut open immediately. I felt everything. I’m sure the entire hospital could hear me screaming. However, we are both doing very well now.

    • @meghancunningham453
      @meghancunningham453 2 года назад +20

      @@kristencat this happened to me as well. It was an emergency and I told them to just cut me and get my baby out and I could feel it all. Worst experience of my life

    • @jamesandrews568
      @jamesandrews568 2 года назад +4

      Having a cesarian makes it twice as likely your child will have ADHD.
      My friend was born cesarian and you would never know. Though he insists on leaving his house through the window.

  • @JB_Fraulein_Kunst
    @JB_Fraulein_Kunst Год назад +1089

    What's bizarre for the last story is don't they monitor your heart when you're in surgery? Surely his heart rate would be through the roof

    • @williebeamish5879
      @williebeamish5879 Год назад +64

      Cover up.

    • @ScrewgeMcF_ck
      @ScrewgeMcF_ck Год назад +141

      It’s quite common that general anesthesia lowers heart rate in older patients, mostly caused by the paralytic. Usually 40-60 bpm. Most cases of death in the operating room in age 60+ is due to minor undetected heart issues which were exacerbated by anesthesia. That’s what makes it so risky.
      Despite being panicked, the medication definitely could’ve kept him in the 40-60 bpm range.

    • @MaranDavid
      @MaranDavid Год назад +63

      In this day and age they definitely do measure the heart, but, more importantly, also an EEG (brain scan) to be able to see differences in consciousness. This -shouldn't- happen anymore, though it still does sometimes (as anesthesia is still a badly understood field of medicine). Keep in mind, though, that part of the anesthesiologist's job is also to keep the heart rate & blood pressure stable, so the heart rate would likely not spike as much as you'd think -- hence the EEG.

    • @niggo3049
      @niggo3049 Год назад +7

      So U can amnestesiate someone and give them Trauma without even getting problems lol

    • @jade4994
      @jade4994 Год назад +9

      @@ScrewgeMcF_ck he didn't have the anaesthesia though did he? Or have I misunderstood and he had it but it just didn't work?

  • @elizabethsteer6883
    @elizabethsteer6883 Год назад +1

    Just found your channel. I’m subscribed to a lot of channels but I have to say you are amazing! Your narrating skills are second to none. I wish I’d found you sooner!

  • @professor_of_logic
    @professor_of_logic 7 месяцев назад

    Sometimes I re-watch some of the episodes, and every time I think the same thing: the most brilliant storyteller ever!!!
    Now I'm recovering from surgery, and recovering mentally thanks to my laptop - and re-watching some of the older episodes, enjoying the way mr.Ballen portrays everything with his incredible intellect, rich vocabulary and amazing gift for keeping your attention (in my case far from pain)...Thank you Mr.Ballen, and God bless you!
    Regards from Serbia!

  • @kiksiidiriiksii7194
    @kiksiidiriiksii7194 2 года назад +485

    Holy moly, Sherman’s case is so incredibly screwed up. The fact that doctors made the decision to give him an amnesiac unwillingly because of something they screwed up with? That is horrible!

    • @zaculliz
      @zaculliz 2 года назад +29

      Might not be the first or last time.

    • @AztecDannyboy
      @AztecDannyboy 2 года назад +12

      Makes me wonder about those that do not like going to a doctor.

    • @juicedup14
      @juicedup14 2 года назад +9

      I heard doctors have a god complex.

    • @duckarmy4416
      @duckarmy4416 2 года назад +14

      Or maybe They did it so he would not be scared for life but in the end it did not work either way it was a bad choice and should of instead got the family and ask them if that’s what they want them to do and then give him mental help.

    • @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe
      @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe 2 года назад +4

      @@juicedup14 not all nor most doctors, but a few doctors do have a chip on their shoulder something about the power to kill someone n have the knowledge to bring them back to life so dont mess with me, or their worried about the higher cost of malpractice insurance rates going up

  • @elliec7677
    @elliec7677 2 года назад +480

    My crazy surgery story… I went in for back surgery back in 2014. I was nervous but hopeful. The same doctor had operated on me a few years prior so I had faith that things would be ok. This surgery was a bit more intense than the last though, it was a 360 fusion. Essentially they cut your abdomen open and move your organs around and reach through and take out the bad disc. Then they stitch you up and rotate you, all whilst you’re still under anesthesia and then they cut you back and fuse the spine where the disc was removed.
    I woke up from surgery and was on a heck of a lot of pain medicine. I don’t really remember much of me being in the hospital except for being hooked up to a drain and pain pump. The doctor didn’t come and see me which I thought was super odd but I just shook it off and she sent her PA to come and handle my case. I should have known this was wrong of her. Well two weeks after surgery I was experiencing extreme pain. My right leg was throbbing in pain so bad and I couldn’t sit down or walk very well without being in excruciating pain. I went to the doctors office for 2wk post op check and she took X-rays and the doc was being such a bitch. I couldn’t understand why she was being so grouchy with me. Well I left the appointment and just dealt with it and she assured me I would start to feel better and my pain was just post op pain. After all I just had spine surgery. Unfortunately for me we moved to Colorado a few weeks later (husband was a US Marine!) and when we got to Colorado I just tried dealing with the pain, it did get a bit better but the physical therapy wasn’t really doing anything for me, I wasn’t feeling 100% and I couldn’t walk very far or sit for long periods of time without getting intense pain. I ended up making an appointment to see a different orthopedic surgeon. She was amazing and very thorough. She took pelvic X-rays and told me to go back the next day for an MRI. This never usually happens and you usually have to wait weeks for an appt! I went for the mri and a few days later I received a phonecall from her nurse saying I needed a new surgery. I about collapsed because if you have ever had spine surgery you know how painful it is and if just endured a really big surgery a few months earlier. Being under anesthesia for 8hrs wasn’t something I wanted to do again. A few days later my husband drove me to my appointment and the doctor was waiting for me with a few other hospital officials. She explained to me that the reason I was in so much pain was because the previous doctor has done what’s known as a Never Event. She had taken a healthy disc out of my spine and replaced it with bone and left the bad disc that had needed removing inside my spine and it had begun to calcify. The doctor said that I needed another fusion to repair the damaged disc and that it would be another extensive surgery but she had to do it otherwise I would lose function of my legs. She was surprised I hadn’t already lost control of my bowel and bladder. I was terrified of getting another surgery. A couple of weeks went by and i went into my second surgery after kissing my two babies goodbye and holding my husbands hand. Funny thing was it was the Marine Corps birthday, 10th November and we were supposed to be attending the ball that night 😔 Wasn’t going to be any dancing for me for a while!!
    Thankfully the surgery was a success. We had to file a lawsuit against my original doctor and because she had removed a healthy disc and it was proven she had done so, she couldn’t deny it and they had to put out. It’s just shit that the California law hasn’t been changed since the 70s (I think) and there’s a cap on the amount for malpractice cases. It’s not about the money but if I’d had the first surgery in Colorado I would have been a millionaire by now. It would have made the fact that I’ve now developed fibromyalgia a lot easier to swallow! The mental turmoil that I went through was really tough. Just knowing what the doctor did and not being able to change it has been rough. I’m just thankful that my second doctor in Colorado was able to give me my quality of life back. Long story. It’s 4am and I’m an insomniac… if you read this far, God Bless 💕

    • @TheMistereeSAKA
      @TheMistereeSAKA 2 года назад +12

      Bless your heart

    • @quixotica726
      @quixotica726 2 года назад +21

      Your story makes me think of Christopher Duntsch aka Dr. Death. He was a spine surgeon and his story is a doozy.

    • @mermaid_at_heart213
      @mermaid_at_heart213 2 года назад +18

      *hugs* I am sorry that happened to you. I understand, though. I have had Fibromyalgia (among other things) since I was a child. Over the years, various types of traumas have caused it to get worse and worse, but I keep fighting to have as normal a life as possible. Fibromyalgia affects people differently. My entire body, including my insides, hurts. The severity and portion of my body that hurts varies day to day, hour to hour. I feel for anyone living with invisible illnesses. It's difficult enough being sick. Having people not believe you can be very hard, as well. ❤

    • @garyjohns4711
      @garyjohns4711 2 года назад +2

      GOOD GOD THIS IS A NOVEL SIZED WRITING I AINT TAKING THE TIME TO READ YOUR NOVEL

    • @odurthomasmande1723
      @odurthomasmande1723 2 года назад +40

      @Gary Johns you could at least have some empathy, she suffered a very traumatizing experience that is life threatening.
      How you feel in her shoes?
      Sometimes it's better to not comment🙄

  • @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786
    @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786 6 месяцев назад

    I’ve watched so many of your videos. But these two stories were my all-time favorites.

  • @LifeOfABrokenDoll
    @LifeOfABrokenDoll Год назад +3

    My brother’s son took his own life due to extreme bullying. They got him to the ER in time for them to save him. They were ridiculed and put downs and they sent him home. He died at home with his parents and brothers. My family has been torn apart. Nothing is being done about the school where he was tortured or the hospital where he was sent home to die or to the bullies. Parents pls protect your kids from bullies and adults who just don’t care.

    • @TheMercyah
      @TheMercyah 19 дней назад

      I'm sorry for your loss 😔🙏🏼

  • @SHAYUPIVER
    @SHAYUPIVER 2 года назад +390

    I've had multiple surgeries over the years. And the last story, is literally my worst nightmare. I can't imagine what that man was going through. The story gave me chills, just hearing it.

    • @SeneeuhVision
      @SeneeuhVision 2 года назад +18

      I’m scheduled for a surgery on 2/21 and now I’m even more anxious/nervous than I was before 😫

    • @adamhudson4349
      @adamhudson4349 2 года назад +6

      @@SeneeuhVision its gonna hurt SO much!

    • @SeneeuhVision
      @SeneeuhVision 2 года назад +9

      @@adamhudson4349 staaaahhhp 😭😫😅

    • @Melissa-rb6ct
      @Melissa-rb6ct 2 года назад +2

      @@SeneeuhVision for what omg

    • @tanyalarose8907
      @tanyalarose8907 2 года назад +14

      @@SeneeuhVision Remind the anesthesiologist to be sure he/she gives you both drugs!

  • @hiya103
    @hiya103 2 года назад +609

    As I listened to 16 minutes I literally had goosebumps. Thinking about this story from my point of view as a nurse in the OR makes me physically sick. We are there for our patient. When they don’t understand what is going to happen, we prepare them. When they don’t have a voice, we yell for them. When they are at their most vulnerable we protect them. And to hear how this team failed him is utterly heartbreaking. There were so many signals to look out for and they were completely ignored. I just want anyone who is reading this to know, the majority is looking out for you, and this nurse will scream justice for you at all costs.

    • @a_n_g_e_l_tash
      @a_n_g_e_l_tash 2 года назад +69

      You don't know how comforting it is to read this. Thank you.

    • @lesliebean4594
      @lesliebean4594 2 года назад +5

      @@a_n_g_e_l_tash agreed

    • @Gaarakunpro
      @Gaarakunpro 2 года назад +26

      My sister was in a car crash due to a drunk driver when she was 14. She was heavily intoxicated and the left side of her face and chest were crushed by a phone pole. She laid on a gurney for 14 hours while they worked to get the alcohol and drugs out of her system when she was cleared she was rushed into surgery. The anesthesia didn't work for the first 6 minutes. They knew because her heart rate kept jumping and she would move her tongue with the pain. Because of all the pain and damage to her face and organs and trauma done to her they placed her into a medically induced coma to recover. My parents met with doctors and had agreed to give her this amnesia drug to help her forget the 14 hours of pain on the brink of death and the 7 minutes of surgery. My sister doesn't remember much but has had severe sleep Paralysis since. She's 35 now and has made quite a life for herself as a massage therapist and PI. She has made statements at schools about drunk driving and drug use as well as prescribed medication abuse. She amazes me that she's still with us.

    • @blackcat6.2.
      @blackcat6.2. 2 года назад +4

      @@Gaarakunpro ♥️ that was super terrifying to read hope she had a great recovery take care my friend

    • @Gaarakunpro
      @Gaarakunpro 2 года назад +6

      @@blackcat6.2. she still has trauma but she can see smell taste and hear. She doesn't have much feeling in her face but it's mostly metal plated. Her left eye cries almost constantly. She's learned to live again.

  • @AnimaSola3o4
    @AnimaSola3o4 Месяц назад

    Oh no. I've watched and listened to like hundreds of your videos and this one - of the surgery - is the only one to make me hit pause and question if i wanted to keep watching it. I do this weird thing when people get hurt or describe getting hurt sometimes and i can like feel it. Not their pain, but hearing them talk about it causes me physical discomfort. This one did it for me omg.

    • @AnimaSola3o4
      @AnimaSola3o4 Месяц назад

      This is why I never became a nurse or a doctor because I couldn't hack it

  • @HeWentThattaway
    @HeWentThattaway 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the surgery detailed graphic descriptions. The story wouldn’t be the same without it.

  • @swagbacon6838
    @swagbacon6838 2 года назад +537

    Imagine the amount of fear that man felt when he heard the word “scalpel”

    • @angielichtsinn4343
      @angielichtsinn4343 2 года назад +12

      Yes when I was awake during my surgery and the Doctor said scalpel I thought I was going to lose my mind and what came next was a pain that I cannot describe! I went through the whole surgery and felt everything!!

    • @swagbacon6838
      @swagbacon6838 2 года назад +13

      That’s horrible! I really hope you are okay now.

    • @muhammadsalafiahlulhadith
      @muhammadsalafiahlulhadith 2 года назад +3

      @@angielichtsinn4343 *Did u sue them? I hope u did plzzz*

    • @Lebeauski
      @Lebeauski 2 года назад +10

      Almost made me puke knowing that's happened 20,000 times a year.. imagine how often that was an every day occurrence in the early studies of surgeries 😕

    • @PEGGLORE
      @PEGGLORE 2 года назад

      What happened to Angie?

  • @zackt.7727
    @zackt.7727 2 года назад +278

    That last story did not disappoint. I’ve built a tolerance to scary stories, but that one was on a whole other level. I legit started to have anxiety. Well done, Mr.Ballen. Well done.

    • @iansmith5052
      @iansmith5052 2 года назад +1

      this is my biggest fear I think this is all I thought about before my appendectomy

    • @jdawg119
      @jdawg119 2 года назад

      Same here

    • @Connorscarlos
      @Connorscarlos 2 года назад

      Yea kinda left a tear, a true shock

    • @JohnSmith-ux1zb
      @JohnSmith-ux1zb 2 года назад +3

      Crazy his heart rate didn't increase at all

    • @janet6421
      @janet6421 2 года назад

      My mom said that this happened to her once. She was aware of them cleaning her abdomen and the doctor asking for a scalpel then the nurse noticed her eyes open. That was all she remembered. I greatly fear that this might be a genetic resistance.

  • @funkinthatrunk3795
    @funkinthatrunk3795 11 месяцев назад +1

    I actually fainted last year listening to the surgery mixup story 😂. It was brief but still nothing I've experienced before or since. Now that's good storytelling right there.

  • @myrnamiranda1006
    @myrnamiranda1006 11 месяцев назад

    I subscribed to your ch cause I find these stories incredible thank u for sharing. Never heard any of these stories. Sorry for these people’s horrific endings. 😔

  • @crispyhoneybun1607
    @crispyhoneybun1607 2 года назад +442

    I had vericocele surgery when I was 15 and this actually happened to me too, except they caught it before the surgery happened and they didn’t tape my eyes shut. They administered the pain killer and paralysis drug but when I got knocked out, I came back like 15 seconds later and I heard a nurse scream “he’s awake!” And then they put me out again. Lmao then I woke after the surgery was over, strapped to a hospital bed in the upright position, and not like, slightly elevated. It was almost completely vertical. And they had a tube down my throat pumping oxygen into my system. Then I started screaming and they came to me and started laughing and were like “we had to put a breathing tube in you because your oxygen was too low!” Then they pulled the tube out and I was coughing up blood for the rest of the day because they didn’t lubricate it properly. I still wonder what else happened during that surgery. I think surgery’s need to be recorded. Crazy.

    • @chevyforever4420
      @chevyforever4420 2 года назад +73

      I think recording surgeries would be a great idea

    • @paranoyd70
      @paranoyd70 2 года назад +16

      I had something similar happen when I was a kid (decades ago). They put me out and began the procedure. There was no cutting, but it involved inserting a tube down my pee-hole, and at some point I woke up and saw what they were doing and felt it. They noticed I was awake and put me out again, but the experience caused long lasting fear & mental trauma. I was just a kid (maybe 5 or 6 years old) and couldn't tell anyone, as I was so young and just couldn't explain anything, other than it happened during the surgery, but my Mother didn't think anything of it and just attributed it to fear of a kid & didn't question any further. Over the years the memory would get triggered on rare occasions and I would remember waking up and experiencing the pain, followed by slowly drifting off again and waking up after the procedure in a hospital bed in extreme pain. It wasn't until I was much older that I could piece it together and figure out what happened. And I did some research to be sure and I found out that it was actually a medical procedure performed way back then, but has since been done away with long ago. So I know it actually happened.

    • @bari2883
      @bari2883 2 года назад +24

      I agree surgery should be recorded. It will never happen as then they will be open to lawsuits.

    • @ruthie_rosario
      @ruthie_rosario 2 года назад +35

      The anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist should be present during any procedure for this reason and they are supposed to monitor the patient the entire time. They should be monitoring brain activity the entire time. They don’t want to administer too little anesthetic so you don’t wake up, but they don’t want to give you a little too much so you don’t overdose either. I too have woken up during surgery, don’t remember feeling any pain, I do remember hearing the nurse anesthetist that introduced herself to me before surgery, but I promptly fell back “asleep.” God bless that woman. No doctor should just come in, knock you out, then go to the next person. They should also be monitoring what’s going on at all times.

    • @wendywalser6859
      @wendywalser6859 2 года назад +2

      @@paranoyd70 :(

  • @joshb6382
    @joshb6382 2 года назад +436

    It’s truly heartbreaking how those medical “professionals” valued avoiding a lawsuit over the life of another human being alike. No wonder we’re all so divided and distrusting of each other nowadays :(

    • @chrisa8283
      @chrisa8283 2 года назад +21

      Those are suppose to be the "higher class higher society" people as well. People that make big money over time become evil I'm convinced.

    • @lauren9004
      @lauren9004 2 года назад +10

      Literally. So disgusting

    • @morgan.mets5700
      @morgan.mets5700 2 года назад +23

      @@Travis00q86 everyone is different. people with compassion and sympathy would not have done something like that.

    • @rasenganchidori3544
      @rasenganchidori3544 2 года назад +11

      @@Travis00q86 it's just money, what they did was unacceptable

    • @amandapreece8362
      @amandapreece8362 2 года назад +7

      @Emmett00q8 exactly but that's the problem. What you are saying is that we should just settle for living in a world with no compassion?? That's depressing.. not very inspiring. Money really means nothing trust me...

  • @MrGraham1987
    @MrGraham1987 4 месяца назад

    Brilliant episode! I watch your channel and listen to the podcast! Fact check though as Markov died in ‘78 and the London Eye wasn’t built and opened until 1999/2000 to celebrate the Millennium. But still, love your stories my man and keep up the work.

  • @levifoster2992
    @levifoster2992 7 месяцев назад +3

    It's rare that videos like this actually disturb me as a lifelong horror enthusiast. They enrage, disgust, sadden, but typically do not give me that chilling, nauseating sense of terror. The last story did that for me. There are few things I can imagine that are as horrifying as that.

    • @Trending_gen
      @Trending_gen 19 дней назад

      Honestly I thought I had a dark persona until I found Sherman and realized my biggest fear yet

  • @lesliebean4594
    @lesliebean4594 2 года назад +475

    Poor Sherman, and his family. Pains me to think if they hadn’t been so negligent, and then shady on top of it he’d still be with us... the irony is they still had a law suit on their hands. Likely a much larger settlement after he took his own life.

    • @OHOE1
      @OHOE1 2 года назад +17

      He was trying to remember something like you try to remember a horrible realistic dream

    • @taylamarkova6100
      @taylamarkova6100 2 года назад +26

      I’m so fucking sad for his story, what an embarrassment of a medic team 🙃🥺🥺

    • @Snapper314
      @Snapper314 2 года назад +29

      If someone decided to locate all of those medical people involved in what happened to Sherman, and expose them to similar levels of pain... I wouldn't have a problem with that. Not at all.

    • @milesshepard7743
      @milesshepard7743 2 года назад +23

      I hope that medical team gets what they deserve for their involvement

    • @The_10th_Man
      @The_10th_Man 2 года назад +2

      Oh are you a doctor? Follow the science. :smug

  • @lauratreasures3816
    @lauratreasures3816 2 года назад +298

    Also, I thought the anesthesiologist is supposed to stay by the patient during the entire procedure to monitor them. When Mr Ballen said they yelled for him to "get over here" I was even more shocked.

    • @edgarfleming9308
      @edgarfleming9308 2 года назад +20

      these days ...more and more doctors and nurses are incompetent ... and I've had an experient with an lunatic doctor who's not at the medical practice anymore

    • @grantarmbruster6591
      @grantarmbruster6591 2 года назад +3

      Some have even gone golfing leaving an assistant

    • @scatdog1
      @scatdog1 2 года назад +4

      Why didn’t dude go into shock.

    • @lisadunn1138
      @lisadunn1138 2 года назад +12

      @@scatdog1 I was awake during an actual operation. I had to have a c section under general anesthesia because stuff wss going very wrong. While they were starting to knock me out I was very shocked and kept thinking I'm sure I'm not supposed to feel this. I then went under very briefly but woke again and could feel everything.. I couldn't understand why I wasn't passing out from shock. After all in TV shows etc they show patients.. Well anyone really gets so much pain they black out. I didn't. I had that thought foremost in my mind as it was happening, don't worry you'll pass out very soon, any second it iwll happen, now? Nothing. I did eventually go under but I don't know why. The Dr's didn't believe me until about 2 days later when I repeated a very detailed conversation two nurses were having with the anesthetist and surgeon. I'm not sure if the reason I didnt go into shock was heart meds they had given me to keep my heart rate slow. I suffer from SVT and take regular meds for it. But I have ptsd now so not too keen on asking Dr's questions about what went wrong and why. I have spoken to other people who have had a similar experience and they too didn't go into shock or anything. So maybe it's not what happens?

    • @jenniferdickinson-hanley4874
      @jenniferdickinson-hanley4874 2 года назад +10

      @Lisa Dunn - Back in 2003, I also felt a portion of my C-section and following tubal ligation. I was given a local anesthesia but still felt very groggy. At some point after the nurse taking my daughter, the anesthesia begin to wear off. Everything still felt very heavy as I tried to move my hand and fingers, even a small gesture to get someone's attention. Fortunately my anesthesiologist, who was amazing, noticed my anesthesia was wearing off. I clearly remember him asking my doctors how much longer because it was wearing off. I saw my two doctors, Obstetricians whom I trust wholeheartedly, look at each other and one responded honestly "We don't know. We are still sponging." The next thing I remember is a mask going over my face and then the recovery room. Apparently the procedure had taking longer than anticipated as I was not clotting properly. I count myself blessed to have had such a wonderful team. I shudder to think what Sherman endured knowing how I felt during those moments when I could feel their hands moving around within me. His whole team should lose their medical practice licenses.

  • @lopachilla
    @lopachilla 7 месяцев назад

    That’s so wonderful that you do that. I watch a really popular storyteller called MrBallen who talked about a guy who woke up during surgery. They put him back to sleep and gave him some kind of amnesia drug. The guy couldn’t consciously remember anything, but subconsciously he did. He would have horrible flashbacks and just a strong sense of dread all the time, but he didn’t know why because he couldn’t consciously remember what had happened during the surgery. The guy ended up taking his life because of it. It’s good you’re mindful of how it might affect the patient and try to prevent that from happening.

  • @JamesOdell-jf9ik
    @JamesOdell-jf9ik Год назад +1

    Great job on this video! Great content!!!

  • @jenniferhof9448
    @jenniferhof9448 2 года назад +240

    My husband experienced a portion of the anesthesia awareness when he went in for a colon resection. The surgeon had intended to use a lesser anesthesia for the surgery, but my husband's family has issues with certain types of anesthesia. He remembers feeling about 30 seconds of the cut, and then the doctors must have seen his blood pressure spike and they administered a stronger anesthesia, causing his recovery time to be two hours longer than originally planned. Add to that, the hospital had written his instructions down incorrectly when he said to only tell me or his father about his status, and instead said that they couldn't tell me anything as to why he wasn't out of surgery yet. When the nurse did finally decide to say something, she walked up and said "Can I talk to you privately?" My heart nearly stopped of course, and all she then said was "I'm not allowed to tell you, but he's okay." That day isn't anything that I would wish upon anyone else!

    • @xan8466
      @xan8466 2 года назад +3

      How was your husband after? Any trauma or other issues?

    • @jenniferhof9448
      @jenniferhof9448 2 года назад +15

      @@xan8466 He was definitely not happy after. They failed to notice that the pain meds weren't helping either for several days. But that got resolved thankfully. He hasn't seemed to have much trauma, but I know that he does get periodic nightmares. It's been over a decade now, and the dreams aren't as frequent.

    • @xan8466
      @xan8466 2 года назад +11

      @@jenniferhof9448 ah, I see. Im always terrified of large surgeries because I see examples of this. I'm sorry to hear about what happened, and wish you both the best, then

    • @jenniferhof9448
      @jenniferhof9448 2 года назад +5

      @@xan8466 I can understand that fear for sure! I have been through so many surgeries myself, and I can say that I have never had an issue like this. Thank you so much for the well wishes! Here's to good health for you and yours!

    • @gracekeepsittogether4322
      @gracekeepsittogether4322 2 года назад +2

      I feel horrible due to my mother inform about waking as proccess was almost finished. 😭how much I didn't grasp the impact.
      I pray her spirit knows my ignorance at the time. If I could only comprehended & been a voice😭😟

  • @seanjr7913
    @seanjr7913 2 года назад +341

    The last story about the surgery gives me flashbacks. When I was in 4th grade, I had bad stomach pains for days. Little did I know, it was my appendix. The doctors I went to, had no clue what was wrong with me, or why stomach was hurting. My parents finally take me to the ER. The last thing I honestly remember, was talking to the receptionist and telling them how I felt. Next thing you know, I get this bad taste in my mouth. All I see is bright lights gleaming down on me, I pull whatever is clinging to my face that's giving me the bad taste. (it was the oxygen mask) I leaned my head up, shaking of the groggy feeling, as the blurred surgeon and nurses started clear. I heard a soft, "ooop, woah buddy, you're not supposed to be awake" they proceed to reapply my mask.
    I then woke up in my room to recover.
    Still a crazy memory I have, never left my mind.

    • @multiply67
      @multiply67 2 года назад +4

      was it any painful? sounds funny

    • @seanjr7913
      @seanjr7913 2 года назад +29

      @@multiply67 Not at all lol I always wondered what went thru the nurses mind, as well as the doctor's 😂

    • @KristiContemplates
      @KristiContemplates 2 года назад +8

      Glad they noticed

    • @Carmen-us1ew
      @Carmen-us1ew 2 года назад +1

      Good thing you couldn't feel it.

    • @acidrazor66
      @acidrazor66 2 года назад +2

      That’s so cool to hear dude, I have a similar story to this but never heard of anyone who also went through similar stuff.
      I had a couple of knee surgeries when I was a teenager, and on the third time I had to undergo surgery I remember of a flashback I had during the operation;
      I just remember my vision going from very dark and blurry to just blurry but getting brighter, and soon enough I could distinguish some colours, which were mainly that light green from medical staff clothes and white.
      I also remember bringing my head slightly up and trying to change the focus of my sight, and when I tilted my eyes to the side, I just remember that it took quite a while for the image to become concrete. The best way I can describe this is: imagine you’re playing a first-person video game and when you control the camera, there’s a delay to display the image related to how fast you turned your head to look to the side; I don’t know if I was clear enough here but I tried.
      Last thing I remember is seeing the silhouette in the shape of a human standing tall right next to my lying body, which was obviously either a doctor or a nurse, and soon enough everything went black again, so I assume they noticed me awake and set me back asleep.
      This probably lasted something around 30 seconds only and I didn’t feel any pain at all too;
      to this day, 6-7 years later, I am not fully sure if this really happened or if that was a hallucination or something alike, but reading your story kind of reassured that for me

  • @louisparker6553
    @louisparker6553 Год назад

    Man 7.6 mil. I remember discovering Mr ballen right after a million. Not long ago. Absolutely blowing up. Couldn't happen to anyone better

  • @KillaKiRawBeats
    @KillaKiRawBeats Год назад

    I like your storys you keep my attention even in story format.

  • @redvines4142
    @redvines4142 2 года назад +241

    I was 14 when I was diagnosed with leukemia. Part of my treatment was to get a bone marrow biopsy every few months to check for lymphocytes. Because I was so young, they didn't want to overdo the anaesthesia so they wound up not giving me enough the 2nd time they did the biopsy.
    I woke up in the middle of them taking out a chunk of bone from my hip to get at the bone marrow. I still remember the sound of the machines, the extreme pain, and screaming. I remember them trying to calm me down, promising it was almost over, and calling over the anesthesiologist before I faded back to sleep. They at least told my mom what had happened.
    It was nearly 28 years ago and definitely not for 16 minutes, but I still remember bits and pieces. That clarinet run in Rhapsody in Blue always reminds me of the pain and awakeness (and the screaming) from that surgery.

    • @gypsyrose8485
      @gypsyrose8485 2 года назад +13

      scary how many times they cover things up. glad they atleast told your mom, so she could help you.

    • @queenexistence5735
      @queenexistence5735 2 года назад

      ☹️❤️

    • @OfficerNomad
      @OfficerNomad 2 года назад +8

      Red Vines, Dude! Similar story here!! Got diagnosed with leukemia as I was 4 year olds, don't remember much of the treatments I was administered it as i'm now 26 and on full recovery since i'm 13. But the ONE thing i remember is exactly that "bone marrow biopsy every few months"...
      Basicaly they use anaesthesia, don't know what the mix of drugs exactly is, but what I know is that they were using something called "Hypnovel" that was supposed to put you in a trance-like state so you don't feel anything... Turned out I was allergic to that stuff and instead of calming me down and put me to sleep, It had the exact opposite effect. Putting me in a verry agressive mood like if I was becoming ferral but capable of speech (as my mom told me), apparently i was biting and screaming insults (I supposedly wasn't supposed to know at my age) to every person present in the room. Right after they used an "antidote?" to stop the effect of hypnovel, I came back to conciousness being strapped on the bed with an arm splint and a transfusion, totally unaware of what had just happened.
      Since then I had to go through those bone marrow biopsy only with Nitrous oxide (laughing gas). So basicaly I felt every single one of them but also had to laugh during it... I can tell you it wasn't very fun at all and since you'd experienced that type of pain, I'm sure you can agree too... But all that is behind me now and I'm thankfull for the doctors hard work to get me rid of this cancer.
      Stay safe mate, happy you've beaten it too!
      (PS: Sorry for any misspells I'm french)

    • @bcreel83
      @bcreel83 2 года назад +1

      good pick for piece of music and instrument for sudden awakening into an unknown world.

    • @charliec.3518
      @charliec.3518 2 года назад +1

      @@gypsyrose8485 yeah, except this is "common", some people dont feel the effects of anesthesia and you could also develop a resistance to it, so while sometimes the doctors fuck up and cover it up, many times its just that they dont know, i mean, theyll ask you questions before anesthesia to try and tell if you wont be fully effected by it, the point of my comment being, its not always the doctors fault, nor is it always avoidable.

  • @jcsrst
    @jcsrst 2 года назад +391

    I woke up on the table during a surgery. The doctor tried to deny that it had happened. My shoulders were bruised from them trying to hold me down. I have vague memories of the trauma but I know it happened.

    • @sarahfeeder
      @sarahfeeder 2 года назад +15

      I woke during surgery and felt everything.

    • @hoathanatos6179
      @hoathanatos6179 2 года назад +18

      I've heard stories of anesthesiologists having patients that had very high tolerance towards the drugs they were given but I've never heard of them outright denying that the patients woke up and were feeling everything. They just usually keep giving the patient more and more until they reach the highest dosage they can give, and if that doesn't work then the patient just has to endure until it is over.

    • @spaceballsthechannel4153
      @spaceballsthechannel4153 2 года назад +31

      Me too, woke up during an appendix surgery. But luckily my doctor admitted that it happened and apologized a hundred times. I don't remember being in pain, but I remember very clearly I was not able to breathe and trying to get air so bad and of course panicked. But they knocked me out again right away.

    • @PostAPug
      @PostAPug 2 года назад +19

      I was in a reasonably bad road accident when I was a teenager and had to have emergency surgery at the scene, they couldn't administer anaesthetic as there was none/nobody to administer it so they just pumped me full of as much morphine as they could and went to work. The memory is a little hazy but I clearly remember looking down at my leg whilst they were going at it with scalpels and a drill, that shit terrified me.

    • @grantarmbruster6591
      @grantarmbruster6591 2 года назад +3

      Same same. But now they slip you vercet to mess up your memory.

  • @mistybettis3550
    @mistybettis3550 Год назад

    I really enjoyed learning about how it was in the past definitely be watching more for your channel. It's been very interesting learning about the past.

  • @krisej31
    @krisej31 11 месяцев назад +8

    I did an aesthetic rotation while doing my nursing degree. The pt is constantly monitored, and in a lot of cases we were actually monitoring brain activity as well. Just in case. Because it's rare, but it happens. I can also understand giving him drugs to forget what happened, but out of compation. They would have been horrified by what they had accidentally done. But it shouldn't have been covered up. We have procedures in place to handle things when they go wrong and make sure it never happens again.
    It's a horrific nightmare. And if they'd been honest, Sherman might have had a better outcome.

    • @citysick
      @citysick 9 месяцев назад +2

      That’s not compassion, that’s medical negligence and they should have been criminally charged. I hope for your patients sakes you don’t “understand” giving someone amnesia drugs to forget the trauma you just caused them. And it’s “anesthetic.” - signed, a rad tech.

  • @TheFreshPrinceOfSaiyans
    @TheFreshPrinceOfSaiyans 2 года назад +278

    The third story leaves me wondering how a heart monitor wouldn’t have alarmed everyone to the patient’s current state of panic. Surely his heart rate was incredibly high when he was panicking?

    • @MidnightBee
      @MidnightBee 2 года назад +49

      This is exactly my question! Did the paralytic impact heart rate? If not, the doctors should have been alerted to the skyrocketing rise of his heart rate to know something was seriously wrong!

    • @Jess-up5ou
      @Jess-up5ou 2 года назад +30

      Paralytics are weird. Some have no side effects others have literally everything. The changes they’re looking for have more to with the heart rhythm not the rate. So unless the rate is REALLY slow or REALLY fast it doesn’t pull much attention. They’re taught to look for changes in the rhythm / “pattern” of the heart squiggles. That go from normal to deadly. We also don’t know his medical hx. Most elderly people are on many different meds (like stuff for high BP, heart arrhythmias, etc.) over time they develop a therapeutic amount of those drugs in their bodies that don’t allow their HR & BP to show the same changes like you or I would to things like pain, anxiety, stress etc. I’ve seen elderly people with gnarly injuries & their HR not get above 80. One of the biggest reasons we tell people to “treat the patient not the monitor”. What a truly tragic event though, I couldn’t imagine his pain & trauma. Heartbreaking.

    • @jais327
      @jais327 2 года назад +1

      That’s my question

    • @raqueljimenez8137
      @raqueljimenez8137 2 года назад +9

      Sometimes the surgical team are too invested in the surgery and don't notice the monitor, specially because there's someone in the room precisely for that. That is the anesthesiologist job, they clearly were not in the room; I've seen anesthesiologists administer extra pain killers because they notice heart rate going up. This indeed sounds like a massive screw up

    • @The_Norse_Gael
      @The_Norse_Gael 2 года назад +4

      I always had a fear of these things so the last time I had surgery 10 years ago, as I was being wheeled in to the theatre I asked the anesthesiologist was it possible to happen and they assured me no, because they would be monitoring my heart rate the whole time and it’s horror story stuff 🤷🏻‍♂️
      It put my mind at rest but I still fear it to this day. Especially when watching videos like this 🤣

  • @echobase6372
    @echobase6372 2 года назад +135

    "Did I make a good jump?" What a legend. Even on the cusp of death, his concern was pleasing the crowd

    • @alexandriaburnett2801
      @alexandriaburnett2801 2 года назад +4

      He probably needed a distraction from the fear.

    • @Jaketheaxman
      @Jaketheaxman 2 года назад +7

      This guy mustve been one of steve-o's past lives

    • @CS-uc2oh
      @CS-uc2oh 2 года назад +5

      A legendary fool but not a true legend. Legends aren't attention seeking fools.

    • @buffyd5737
      @buffyd5737 2 года назад +6

      Nope not your best jump

  • @Colorofmysoul
    @Colorofmysoul 5 месяцев назад +1

    You are a great story teller!

  • @user-qn9wz6er2w
    @user-qn9wz6er2w 3 месяца назад

    Thank you always mr ballen. my night is not complete without listening to you stories, the only thing is all watch your videos. then again im listening again even i know the stories, bec it was really hunting. even in my office while working im still listening🤩🥰

  • @danielrusso8187
    @danielrusso8187 2 года назад +142

    The surgery story is terrifying. I’m not even scared of this happening to me but it’s just terrifying that he felt every second of it but then was drugged into forgetting it.

    • @RonBest
      @RonBest 2 года назад

      I am scared of this happening to me. So scared in fact that when i did a small surgery a few years ago i opted to be awake and instead only use local anesthetic on the area they did surgery on. It went all fine and i almost felt nothing, and i felt in control and most importantly, safe.

    • @multiply67
      @multiply67 2 года назад

      murica healthcare moment

    • @Travis00q86
      @Travis00q86 2 года назад +5

      That’s why its my biggest fear, surgeries scares the hell out of me

    • @lizc6393
      @lizc6393 2 года назад +6

      It happened to me. The anesthesiologist hadn't screwed up, but I was in organ failure and couldn't metabolize anything but the paralytic. I didn't know pain like that was possible. It actually sent me into shock and I died briefly on the table.

  • @aoibheallnirhiannon6390
    @aoibheallnirhiannon6390 2 года назад +376

    I knew Sherman, my aunt played piano in his church. It was a very sad and tragic event. Thank you for your storytelling and the way you captivate the listener and honor the victims you cover.

    • @Mr.DISRESPECT
      @Mr.DISRESPECT 2 года назад +11

      Stop the 🧢

    • @strawbawrri249
      @strawbawrri249 2 года назад +2

      ❤️

    • @nirajyadu
      @nirajyadu 2 года назад +8

      It was tragic.. May his soul rest in peace

    • @bmoka8164
      @bmoka8164 2 года назад +3

      You menice

    • @michaelgoodman7830
      @michaelgoodman7830 2 года назад +6

      That's such a sad story. I pray for that man's family. I would have a hard time dealing with knowing one of my loved ones went through so much by someone that's supposed to help you feel better.

  • @dannaangela4641
    @dannaangela4641 Год назад

    New subscriber here ✋ been binging on MrBallen's videos on my commute to work for a week now but I just did hit subscribe ✌️😂

  • @CerxFouquet9
    @CerxFouquet9 11 месяцев назад +9

    This is beyond a nightmare - if I happen to go through a surgery, I am going to tell this story to whoever my surgeon is and make sure every imaginable measure is taken that it doesn't happen and heck I'm going to tell this story on the day of the surgery, to every single person in the surgery room until I get knocked out.

  • @starlightbarking9495
    @starlightbarking9495 2 года назад +457

    As a nurse this really pisses me off. Anaesthatists have ONE job to do, and they get paid a Shit ton of money to do it. If the family hasnt done their own investigations, that incompetent anaesthatist would have gone and done it to the next patient. In my country New Zealand the patients must be informed of such incidents by law, and they are covered by a national accident compensation insurance that gives them extremely well funded, lifelong care if needed. There was no justice for Sherman though. Now I have to go to bed feeling upset.

    • @natethegoat1697
      @natethegoat1697 2 года назад +15

      Exactly, its so triggering knowing that if that one stupid person didnt do that one stupid and extremely avoidable mistake could've potentially saved an innocent man from commiting suicide.

    • @loulabelle5082
      @loulabelle5082 2 года назад +13

      Same here in the UK. Never mind the law it's your ethical responsibility to inform the patient and be totally transparent. Then you offer support, whether it be mental health or physical health. I'm a nurse too, and mistakes are made, but this was purely putting a patient at risk to save their arses.

    • @claresmith7437
      @claresmith7437 2 года назад +5

      If it is a FACT, as you stated, provide the proof please.

    • @loulabelle5082
      @loulabelle5082 2 года назад +3

      @@constitution_8939 I administer Midazolam all the time and like any drug that can have sedative effects there is always the possibility of an overdose. Which is basically what's happening if the kidneys begin to fail, or you get respiratory depression. However, in elderly patients the kidneys tend not to work optimally and I'm sure COVID was already causing massive problems in their respiratory system. The problem I have with your comment is this: was it the Midazolam that caused the death of these patients and how on earth do you know that they weren't going to die anyway? Kidney failure is often a part of old age, with or without this drug. COVID-19s effect on the physiology of the elderly patients will have been destructive anyway. The 2 points you made about kidney failure and respiratory failure ARE components of overdose BUT they are also components of Covid AND old age. I don't get how you know that ALL these deaths were attributed to ONE DRUG, when there are alternative possibilities for these deaths. Where did you get this info?

    • @rorygentry6802
      @rorygentry6802 2 года назад +1

      "If the family hasnt done their own investigations, that incompetent anaesthatist would have gone and done it to the next patient." So you are saying this happens in every one of his surgeries? He never gets it right? I would also think that a nurse would know how to spell "anesthetist", but I guess you never make mistakes. (How ironic!)

  • @BroncoJosh
    @BroncoJosh 2 года назад +208

    I love how intense you get while telling the last one. I can only imagine how traumatic that 16 minutes was for him.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano 2 года назад +9

      As soon as he said camera, I knew what the procedure is and the incision is around an inch or two, depending upon the camera/light unit (it's fiberoptic, but has dual channels for video and light to be piped in, as the human body is rather poorly illuminated inside for some reason).
      Still, that's still not the most pleasant experience in the world, given one's opening skin and then muscle and widening the opening with hemostats and fingers, then inserting a trochar to guide the fiberoptic unit. It's not quite as severe as many cases each year, where major open surgery is performed on a patient who had anesthesia fail.
      My wife was lucky. Went in for a C section, had a migraine and didn't think to tell doctor. She was wide awake when someone noticed tears and the surgeon lost all sense of decorum in a manner much akin to this retired US Army NCO's command of profanity. The anesthesiologist then increased the dosage, rendering her unconscious and shortly after birth, coding. Something undocumented, but the electrode burns are distinctive and it was in her chart.

  • @christinek.9298
    @christinek.9298 10 месяцев назад +5

    I've woken up twice during surgery in two separate occasions, but never felt any pain like this poor guy. Both times the doctor just said to go back to sleep and I did. I can't imagine what horrors Sherman went through.

  • @kimberlyrojas6675
    @kimberlyrojas6675 Год назад

    Long time listener !! So love your videos! 😊