Hospital Fire Safety

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Did you complete your modules?

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @DGlaucomflecken
    @DGlaucomflecken  Год назад +4552

    Congratulations, you all just completed your fire safety module.

    • @ChinlessNoKnees
      @ChinlessNoKnees Год назад +65

      Can I hang the certificate on my fridge?

    • @MrOrchidion
      @MrOrchidion Год назад +18

      thank heck. Now I don't have to try to do it for the 1341348th time before i'm pulled away fo- OH FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE! also, gla dyou're still making these! the youtube machine brought you onto my dash and I took a chance a few months back. you're hilarious.

    • @SeekingElegance
      @SeekingElegance Год назад +14

      But the module on the antiquated intraweb says mine is still 'In Process'!

    • @etherair
      @etherair Год назад +23

      do i, a non-staff get one too? i was being operated on but i was still awake listening

    • @scotb7352
      @scotb7352 Год назад +4

      What a cheeky way of doing that!

  • @SeekingElegance
    @SeekingElegance Год назад +5106

    "I just keep taking the test until I get the right answers", I'M DYING. No one EVER remembers these acronyms.

    • @hannahlistento100EAT
      @hannahlistento100EAT Год назад +91

      HLA, Hospitals Love Acronyms

    • @vlastimilhopjan1058
      @vlastimilhopjan1058 Год назад +10

      and nobody every done fire safety training this way!

    • @entercreativename
      @entercreativename Год назад +33

      As a nurse, that's how I was taught to go through the OSHA test each year.

    • @conqueringthelabyrinth
      @conqueringthelabyrinth Год назад +17

      Our hospital quizzes us randomly like the managers come up to you in the hallway and ask...this month it's the 5ps, too many P's for me.🥴

    • @marvelcraver
      @marvelcraver Год назад +22

      I remember RACE no clue what it stood for. Also isn't there an ABC of fire safety. Don't know what that stood for either

  • @Bob-nc5hz
    @Bob-nc5hz Год назад +5038

    Ortho remembers that it takes 700C (1300F) to burn bone. That is a very high temperature for an open flame. The bones are fine, ortho's not worried. If anything, it makes the bones easier since it removes all the internal medecine stuff the bones are saddled with.

  • @angelwithpaperwings02
    @angelwithpaperwings02 Год назад +6499

    “GAS BRO” 😂😂 Nice to see a surgeon that actually respects anesthesia

    • @joemccarthy5508
      @joemccarthy5508 Год назад +236

      It's ortho.

    • @superkometa6683
      @superkometa6683 Год назад +154

      @@joemccarthy5508 yeah, an orthopedic surgeon

    • @xemirahobbyless
      @xemirahobbyless Год назад +314

      Ortho respects everyone. He's great.

    • @Brineytoes
      @Brineytoes Год назад +81

      Oh, the gas passers I have known and loved far more than the surgeons! A really good gas passer is my best friend in the OR!

    • @yuki97kira
      @yuki97kira Год назад +59

      @@xemirahobbyless ortho is everyones's bro

  • @thejudgmentalcat
    @thejudgmentalcat Год назад +3898

    I worked in a courthouse, not a medical facility, but I learned this: all the smokers know where the exits are...follow them

    • @ShugoAWay
      @ShugoAWay Год назад +208

      Just don't follow them too close or you'll likely gag from the smell

    • @AmandaMcCarterWrites
      @AmandaMcCarterWrites Год назад +190

      @@ShugoAWay how else are you going to know who to follow?

    • @ShugoAWay
      @ShugoAWay Год назад +186

      @@AmandaMcCarterWrites by there sickly yellowed fingers, by the fact that they were out of breath after 5 steps, by the almost visible stink lines coming off them

    • @lagomoof
      @lagomoof Год назад +217

      Caution: Follow smokers who remain at or are heading to street level only. The roof and underground parking garage are nice places to smoke, but less so to catch fire.

    • @TheTravisTube
      @TheTravisTube Год назад +116

      Instructions unclear....ended up on the roof

  • @zachsielaff8296
    @zachsielaff8296 Год назад +1499

    "Nurse bro" is a phenomenal line.

    • @Mortolich
      @Mortolich Год назад +61

      As a nurse I'm just awaiting the day that an ortho calls me that 😂

    • @ADKEMT
      @ADKEMT Год назад +112

      Just the other day I held traction for an orthopedic surgery fellow as he splinted my patient’s leg. After we left the room he said “thanks man”. I just said “no problem Ortho Bro” and he busted out laughing.

    • @brianwilson8088
      @brianwilson8088 Год назад +8

      @@ADKEMT Kind of a real life Scrubs moment. The dream.

    • @eliljeho
      @eliljeho Год назад +19

      I will accept nurse bro over male nurse every day.

    • @elfbear8303
      @elfbear8303 Год назад +3

      I've already heard it IRL.

  • @jjOnceAgain
    @jjOnceAgain Год назад +85

    "There's a fire you need yo get out!"
    The patients ribs are split apart, I'm 35ccs of bloodloss in, and Anesthesia is halfway through their sodoku. Nobody's moving

    • @TheOReport1994
      @TheOReport1994 7 месяцев назад +5

      By the amount of Sudoku I've played, I think I can say I am a fully certified anesthesiologist!

  • @briancondron694
    @briancondron694 Год назад +2309

    A surgeon stopping a surgery for a non-medical reason? It has never happened

    • @KyleRayner12
      @KyleRayner12 Год назад +154

      Hell, I've watched IM doctors hear a fire alarm, confirm it wasn't on their floor, and go back to work.

    • @DrEsky914
      @DrEsky914 Год назад +45

      @@KyleRayner12 yep, that's what we all pretty much do.

    • @IW3527
      @IW3527 Год назад +102

      When my obnoxiously long abdominal surgery had to stop temporarily my general surgeon stuck my guts back in then closed me up with saran wrap and tape! 🤣 I'm guessing saran wrap, tape, and gtfo would be "R" in this scenario?

    • @rambo8863
      @rambo8863 Год назад +19

      @@IW3527 Did the surgeon tell you to not sneeze at the moment?

    • @IW3527
      @IW3527 Год назад +67

      @@rambo8863 nope lol though he did panic a bit and gently push me back down by my shoulders when I tried to sit up and sign the consent to remove some intestine! It didn't quite click that I was plastic wrapped together 😅 my surgeon was super chill and that was the only time I saw his eyes go wide

  • @52flyingbicycles
    @52flyingbicycles Год назад +989

    “The fire is in OR 3”
    “These rooms are designed to contain the fire to one room”
    Boom. No problem. There is a fire in the room designed to contain fire.

    • @jong3122
      @jong3122 Год назад +80

      Fire can't go through doors, it's not a ghost!

    • @gwynwheeler1160
      @gwynwheeler1160 Год назад +143

      From an Architect who has designed OR's - the 'fire containment' is still rated in minutes...

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles Год назад +59

      @@gwynwheeler1160 🤫 🤫 🤫 that’s not how surgeon logic works

    • @gwynwheeler1160
      @gwynwheeler1160 Год назад +19

      @@52flyingbicycles ...and as a sometimes patient, I'm not really sorry to hear it!

    • @brothersandsistersofvalhalla
      @brothersandsistersofvalhalla Год назад +5

      @@gwynwheeler1160 Would depend on a lot of factors such as what's fueling the fire and how easily it can be slowed with nearby extinguishers or other things nearby.

  • @Punz18
    @Punz18 Год назад +360

    Only one letter for fire safety protocol: J for Jonathan already put the fire out.

    • @diomedesosu425
      @diomedesosu425 Год назад +22

      Jonathan wasn't there. He was too busy with seeing clinic patients and re-roofing the ophthalmologist's house.

    • @karenk2409
      @karenk2409 10 дней назад

      Yay! Everyone's hero!

  • @palaksinghai1781
    @palaksinghai1781 Год назад +1316

    We had an OR fire once. Two tables were running at the time ( surgery and ENT) and one was just over( OBGY). All procedures were left at whatever stage they were in, directly skin was quickly closed for transit and they were rushed to another OT complex in the hospital. High drama situation with smoke everywhere but no patient was abandoned or harmed. One of my surgery colleagues had to run back in to evacuate the newborn from the OBGY table, who got left behind in the chaos as his mother was shifted out. The fire remained contained to the one OR where it started and was controlled in half an hour with no lives lost.

    • @tessat338
      @tessat338 Год назад +407

      "OK, we've secured the mother and she's safe!" "Good work, everyone!"..... "Wait? Who has the baby?"

    • @ktburger659
      @ktburger659 Год назад +108

      Holy sh!t, that’s nuts!! Glad everyone was ok. I was wondering during this video what’s done with the patient who is cut open!

    • @maurmi
      @maurmi Год назад +54

      Oh my God, wasn't Neonatology there?

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +169

      Of all patients to leave behind it had to be the baby 😂

    • @4funonlee
      @4funonlee Год назад +282

      The baby was not included in the headcount when they entered the OR, that’s why they didn’t realise it as the headcount was correct at the meeting point

  • @friggasring
    @friggasring Год назад +1375

    As one of the people in my hospital responsible for making sure people take their annual training, this hits reeeeeally close to home.

    • @MBMCincy63
      @MBMCincy63 Год назад +15

      I don't know if we have had a fire safety course at Meijer ( grocery & department store), but they do make us take " active shooter, which extinguishers to use on which fires, compactor &bailer safety" and if you are in the food clerk spot: how to safely handle foods, storing them, workspace cleaning "

    • @DanoMano1987
      @DanoMano1987 Год назад +12

      As one who took modules for these types of things, I tried to memorize them, but there were too many.
      And, sometimes, I would just try to get the right answer.

    • @Clovis_Rose
      @Clovis_Rose Год назад +8

      I used to print out read and highlight my blackboard education, but my manager kept getting on my ass about how long they would take me but wouldn't let me come in on my day off to do them. So now I would fit right in with these characters.

    • @Shahrezad1
      @Shahrezad1 Год назад +9

      I work at a school and have been incrementally doing my training. Every time I mention it to coworkers they sheepishly say they haven't started it yet. 🤦 GUYS. At least do the Bloodborn Pathogens, Lockdown Procedures, Abuse, and Bullying/Harassment ones! Geeze, Louise! *Shakes them*

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +21

      It’s because we have to do like 30 of them, half of which aren’t relevant to our role, and given no time to do them in, you’re just expected to “squeeze it in”. And then they wonder why you havent absorbed a single thing

  • @Sam-nf5gy
    @Sam-nf5gy Год назад +1094

    I learned more about fire safety watching this video than I did my fire safety modules.

  • @Doudoujack64
    @Doudoujack64 Год назад +993

    I am ortho and i approve this message.

    • @jamie6506
      @jamie6506 Год назад +43

      Bone bro!

    • @Doudoujack64
      @Doudoujack64 Год назад +30

      @@jamie6506 bone brooo

    • @jamie6506
      @jamie6506 Год назад +39

      @@Doudoujack64 Hi bone bro, I'm feelings bro.

    • @Andre8521
      @Andre8521 Год назад +6

      “I don’t know….”

    • @Doudoujack64
      @Doudoujack64 Год назад +3

      @@jamie6506 not cool bro... Not cool

  • @paulatreides4647
    @paulatreides4647 Год назад +571

    I work in the lab, it's so hilarious watching nobody leave the station even though the building is literally on fire. Lab never stops, we've definitely had an analyzer start smoking but I'll be damned if we didn't get as many samples through it as we could before it had to go down

    • @93midnightsunrise
      @93midnightsunrise Год назад +98

      SAME! Also, we had a pipe burst and part of the ceiling fell in. We called EVS for a giant trash bin and covered the computers with biohazard bags, but those doctors need their STAT troponins and fuck if we weren't gonna get it to them 🧪

    • @TerLoki
      @TerLoki Год назад +35

      I work in retail, it's somewhere between "as hilarious" and "significantly less hilarious" that nobody cares if the alarm is going off because nobody called "Department 100!" over the intercom. Doubly so because the shoppers care even less.

    • @MBMCincy63
      @MBMCincy63 Год назад +16

      @@TerLoki yes! We have people trying to leave thru the closed garden section ( also gated, and locked), then are pissed because the door alarms went off. Mostly it's a thief but on occasion it's an irritated customer who wants to avoid walking back to the front of the store to go out.

    • @amandamiller6995
      @amandamiller6995 Год назад +26

      @@MBMCincy63 I had to go to traffic court one time. It was extremely crowded and because of this I accidentally leaned up against the wall and set off the door alarm for the emergency exit! ALL of a sudden it brought the Baliffs on THAT floor and other Security people just running over to me.. SOOOOOO Embarrassing! False alarm! Lucky for me they didn't get mad because they saw how MANY people there were just standing around! Totally unintentional! Anyway.... MORE excitement than I wanted for THAT morning 🌄🌅🌄!

    • @opalfishsparklequasar8663
      @opalfishsparklequasar8663 Год назад +21

      You can be
      lying bleeding
      on broken glass
      on a smoking analyzer....
      And they'll just
      quadruple
      the specimens,
      & throw them
      on top
      of you.
      WHILE THE PHONE RINGS. 🙃

  • @Justanotherpersonontheinternet
    @Justanotherpersonontheinternet Год назад +290

    I love how Ortho is so respectful to everyone, even anesthesia

    • @kmorgida
      @kmorgida Год назад +53

      Gas bro helps make sure the internal medicine doesn't interfere with the bones.

    • @4002372
      @4002372 Год назад +41

      Just do perfectly innocent.
      “Why would gas bro lie to me?”

  • @jamesscott2894
    @jamesscott2894 Год назад +292

    As a Firefighter I would probably be more surprised if they actually stopped surgery (unless it was their OR on fire) than if we put out the fire in OR3 and found them next door in OR2 still operating...

    • @Laecy
      @Laecy Год назад +59

      I work in the basement lab. We’ve learned to tune out the fire alarms. They distract from the centrifuges, tracks, and freezer alerts.
      Heat goes up anyway, right?

    • @DieuDeMort
      @DieuDeMort Год назад +17

      @@Laecy ​ lmfao, having worked in a hospital (I was just a screener, front desk sorta guy, to be fair) fire alarms are a PITA. We had to keep everyone in the lobby until the alarm was cleared, and then deal with everyone at once. Not a fun time.

    • @brynnlackey9559
      @brynnlackey9559 Год назад +27

      As a surgical assistant, the odds of us stopping surgery for anything outside of our room is pretty low. We just ignore the fire alarms 🤣

  • @duo315
    @duo315 Год назад +285

    In my first nursing job, we had to do these e-learning modules. I got bored right away and was blowing up and shrinking the font size just to pass the time. Turns out all the controls that allowed you to skip to the last slide were visible if you zoomed out all the way so I printed out all my certificates after maybe 5 minutes. Charge nurse goes "hey that was supposed to take you all night....can I log in and let you skip me to the end too??"

    • @juneledell6983
      @juneledell6983 Год назад +13

      wish I had known that!!!

    • @monkiram
      @monkiram Год назад +1

      Wow why didn't I see this 4 months ago

    • @The_Rising_Dragon
      @The_Rising_Dragon Год назад +7

      As a software engineer, Imma make sure not to make that mistake in my applications!

    • @duo315
      @duo315 Год назад +4

      @@The_Rising_Dragon or put it in as an homage to me

    • @hometownmedic7355
      @hometownmedic7355 Год назад +8

      @@The_Rising_Dragon If you build a ten foot wall, I'm going to build an eleven foot ladder.

  • @juliaappleton17
    @juliaappleton17 Год назад +167

    As a nurse bro and witness to 2! Open flame fires in a level 3 trauma ICU can confirm this is a truthful dramatization.

    • @anna-fleurfarnsworth104
      @anna-fleurfarnsworth104 Год назад

      how does a fire there even get started?

    • @sapphireblue4031
      @sapphireblue4031 Год назад +26

      @@anna-fleurfarnsworth104 Dunno about Julia Appleton but here it was a dumbass smoking next to the oxygen outlet while it was running and blew the whole room up. He survived somehow. Reasoning: He needed to smoke but he wasn't allowed to get up and go outside because of his surgery that morning. Whole ward had to be evacuated.
      Another time some visitor smuggled in a small gas barbeque and burnt one wall down and also the bed. Idk why. Just order food wtf

    • @juliaappleton17
      @juliaappleton17 Год назад +10

      @@anna-fleurfarnsworth104 computer caught fire for one...big flames snd oxygen running on 4 ventilated patients and the second was a toaster that caught fire but the nearest room was really busy with a youmgg unstable trauma. Nobody noticed until the adjacent rooms smelled smoke. Trauma team never saw the firefighters in the next room but the young man survived.

    • @anna-fleurfarnsworth104
      @anna-fleurfarnsworth104 Год назад +9

      @@sapphireblue4031 a whole gas barbecue????? indoors????? in a hospital?????????
      I mean the lack of common sense fire safety in these peoples' irresponsible actions is one thing but oh my god the amount of stupidity here is still kind of mind-blowing?!
      I'm glad everyone survived, thanks for sharing your stories!

    • @anna-fleurfarnsworth104
      @anna-fleurfarnsworth104 Год назад

      @@juliaappleton17 wow, now that's dedication. did things turn out alright?

  • @OrUptotheStars
    @OrUptotheStars Год назад +57

    Love that anesthesia never stopped playing Bejeweled.

  • @sophiathore3538
    @sophiathore3538 Год назад +132

    Once at my work a coffee maker caught fire and actual fire-men came by and it was the most exciting day in radiology
    Meanwhile I stayed in the reading room and hoped it was a drill

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +5

      We’re wayy too nosy at mine lol, any excuse to stop work for a bit of drama (oops haha)

    • @ElliLavender
      @ElliLavender Год назад

      ​@@katierasburn9571 oh same haha

    • @watsonwrote
      @watsonwrote Год назад

      That happened at the hospital where I worked. Wonder if this is a common occurrence lol

  • @notagiraffe8228
    @notagiraffe8228 Год назад +366

    This was WAY more entertaining than our training modules
    Also, fun fact: "I paid a med student to do it for me" was how Johnathans were invented!

    • @jodishapiro9257
      @jodishapiro9257 Год назад +5

      I thought paying premeds to do things for you was how Jonathan‘s were invented?

    • @emiliabolsas
      @emiliabolsas Год назад +5

      Yessss, Jonathan’s origin story. Love it. But how did he then end up with Ophthalmology? Ortho is so much stronger and Emergency Medicine so much faster. This is the real mystery.

    • @notagiraffe8228
      @notagiraffe8228 Год назад +13

      @@jodishapiro9257 The very first Johnathans were med students but at some point it switched to premeds

    • @2horse167
      @2horse167 Год назад +1

      @@notagiraffe8228 makes sense. premeds are more desperate

  • @jcl2275
    @jcl2275 Год назад +499

    The timing and pace of this sketch is beyond amazing.

  • @Threadsinger
    @Threadsinger Год назад +24

    I work in environmental engineering, not a hospital, but can confirm it's like this there too. As the safety officer, I remain in flustered awe how such smart people can't figure out 'deafening alarm' and 'evacuation orders' means 'proceed to muster point', not 'rally to the coffee machine for a to-go cup, conversation, and bathroom break'.

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +1

      We are just silly little mammals i suppose

    • @krullachief669
      @krullachief669 Год назад +1

      Except the smokers. We will always think "Ooh, time for a non mandated smoke break"

  • @Miss_Dis
    @Miss_Dis Год назад +726

    This is the best ever, as a student we were made to study the fire safety stuff, definitely could have taken it for anyone 😂😂

    • @MorningMeasure
      @MorningMeasure Год назад +6

      I definitely took fire safety modules, definitely less than 6 months ago, and definitely didnt remember any of this 😔 its ok though, i remember PASS, so when i inevitably get trapped in a room because i couldnt remember safety protocols i have a chance of putting it out 🙃

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 Год назад +1

      I took both and remembered neither, but I will now!!

  • @ThatGirlWithTheCoffee
    @ThatGirlWithTheCoffee Год назад +15

    "Ortho, if you burn to death, you can never operate again."
    "EVERYONE RUN!"

  • @ba5774
    @ba5774 Год назад +248

    Anesthesia here. His method for taking required on line modules is quite standard. However, my fire safety module should go quickly this year.
    I bet you could make a nice side hustle by sneaking modules into your videos.

    • @jodishapiro9257
      @jodishapiro9257 Год назад +15

      Seriously, if modules were snuck into these kind of videos people might actually do them (instead of simply paying premeds and med students to do it for them).

  • @urksho5609
    @urksho5609 Год назад +53

    If you've never contemplated if you wanted to burn to death in that situation, you probably haven't worked healthcare or worked it enough

  • @dee-annegordon5959
    @dee-annegordon5959 Год назад +89

    I once won a small pocket sized tape measure for knowing what one of the letters in RACE stood for. The tape measure has been surprisingly helpful over the years. Didn't remember what any of the letters stood for though.

    • @kaine2416
      @kaine2416 Год назад +6

      I got to push the button on a detonator and blow a 2 liter bottle of soda once for remembering a letter in an acronym that I've long since forgotten lol! It was suspicious package/bomb threat training that was put on by the local bomb team. That was a VERY exciting day.

  • @kumar01234
    @kumar01234 Год назад +68

    On the one hand it's good to know that Ortho cares about his patients
    On the other hand, othro needs an intervention for surgery addiction

  • @silversleeper1193
    @silversleeper1193 Год назад +342

    We had to “memorise” these for jcaho (THERE’S a topic you need to do!) and everyone forgot the second they left. My favourite part was we can’t hang pieces of paper on the wall because it’s a fire hazard, but we can do so if it’s on a cork board or in a plastic sleeve, because suddenly it magically becomes fireproof I guess

    • @toldt
      @toldt Год назад

      All of JACHO's rules are stupid. I've seen them make a hospital remove tape markings from the floor because they harbor bacteria.

    • @BrianParente
      @BrianParente Год назад +91

      So there’s a defined percentage of how much flammable material can be present on a wall, depending on the type of occupancy (and the wall material I believe). The cork board is already taking up some of that percentage, so that’s why you hang it there. The plastic sleeve, that doesn’t sound right to me, probably shouldn’t have been doing that.
      Why is this a rule? All walls have a fire rating. Usually 30, 60, or 120 minutes, meaning we don’t expect the wall to completely burn up for that amount of time. Putting combustibles on a wall decreases the duration of time until the wall loses structural integrity, and that’s why there’s a limit on how much you can put on them.
      Remember, fire codes are written in blood. Usually the only reason a particular one exists is because people died when it didn’t.

    • @ShuRugal
      @ShuRugal Год назад +8

      @@BrianParente the sleeve is PTFE, it's totally fireproof.

    • @silversleeper1193
      @silversleeper1193 Год назад +50

      @@BrianParente We were genuinely curious as to the ins and outs of this, so thanks for taking the time to explain. :) It’s always easier to follow a rule that you understand rather than one that seems like rule for rule’s sake

    • @cheryldueck318
      @cheryldueck318 Год назад +24

      @@silversleeper1193 That’s very true across all domains! I work in an elementary school, and always try to provide the why whenever I am able.

  • @ConstantlyDamaged
    @ConstantlyDamaged Год назад +455

    Out there, somewhere, is an enterprising med student who is doing the RACE modules for all the surgeons and, with all the money they make from doing it, almost pay off half of a percent of their student loans!

    • @eneveasi
      @eneveasi Год назад +18

      That’s good pay!

    • @ConstantlyDamaged
      @ConstantlyDamaged Год назад +17

      @@eneveasi Perhaps, but it'd still be nice if our doctors-to-be didn't have to worry about earning pay before they become doctors. Hell, it'd be good if they didn't have to worry about it after, too.

    • @gavincregan7892
      @gavincregan7892 Год назад +29

      Actually the ones I have talked to lately seem to be using all their spare cash for luxuries like food. (And a big increase in resident consumption of saltine crackers and apple juice🙁)

    • @ConstantlyDamaged
      @ConstantlyDamaged Год назад +6

      @@gavincregan7892 My sarcasm meter just exploded... 🙃

    • @eneveasi
      @eneveasi Год назад +2

      @@ConstantlyDamaged I mean.. obviously that's ideal ahaha but that's not how it is so Im just saying paying off that much of med school is still appreciable - cuz that shit is PRICEY to the point of being indentured slavery almost ahahahah

  • @PhrontDoor
    @PhrontDoor Год назад +19

    Worked in North Shore back WAY back in the 1980s. Had some workers doing checks to see that we did/didn't have asbestos (we didnt have any).. BUT they disconnected the fire-alarm on most of the floor with the ORs a month before this happened.
    Was running blood sample to get blood-gas from sample taken IN the OR.. went from hearing NO alarms in OR to hearing LOADS of alarms to the lab (where, OBVIOUSLY, they'd evacuated).
    Ran back to let the room know : BTW, I'm not scrubbing back in cause there's an alarm and I'm already in trouble for coming back for you all.
    Got written up for going back to the OR. Got award from hospital for going back too.

  • @omglykmybffjill
    @omglykmybffjill Год назад +103

    There was a fire on the floor right above our lab when I was doing my clinical rotations and we all just kept doing what we were doing while sticking our heads up like meerkats to see if anyone was leaving or if management would tell us to leave. Management did walk through and said yes the fire is real, follow us out. Everyone just moseyed on over to the exit.

    • @TheQuark6789
      @TheQuark6789 Год назад +15

      Tbh, much faster and more orderly than everyone panicking

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +18

      That’s what happened when the fire alarm went off at a summer camp I was at. The kids knew the drill from school, we just shepherded them out the door, told our supervisors, and waited for the fire trucks (which never came or they went to the back of the building and we never saw them). We had an impromptu demonstration of Diet Coke and mentos. Then a disheveled homeless man came up and told the kids not to do drugs. We spent an hour outside for it to be a false alarm.

    • @brothersandsistersofvalhalla
      @brothersandsistersofvalhalla Год назад +4

      That's proper procedure. Panic during an emergency is a chaos starter.

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +5

      The meerkats thing is reallll lmao in xray we’re not used to alarms so whenever one goes off we just stand there looking around like “what is that? Wheres it coming from? does anybody know what’s happening???”

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 Год назад +1

      See, that's the problem with having surprise fire drills. Instead of assuming every fire alarm is real & reacting appropriately, everyone assumes the alarm is false & decides it's not worth moving

  • @KyberRay
    @KyberRay Год назад +17

    that "I don't know" was very clear about his decision

  • @ForeverLearningAnaes
    @ForeverLearningAnaes Год назад +28

    I’m a gas bro and I confirm that many of our gases do support combustion. That’s why fire safety modules are so important. Even our best preventive measures fail at some point. Thank you for this educational video 😊

  • @someonesomeone529
    @someonesomeone529 Год назад +39

    i choked and was about to die when he said "i kept retaking the test until i got the answers right".

    • @beckyt2707
      @beckyt2707 Год назад +6

      As a nurse I can confirm I do this with all mandatory training 🤣

  • @jennifersykes6824
    @jennifersykes6824 Год назад +52

    Okay, true story- fire alarm is going off-not a drill- and I’m trying to get the Chief of Ortho to leave. “We have to go” “But I have charts to finish”. I proceed to clear out the rest of the rooms, I’m looking outside- “Where is Junglas”!? I go back into the office and find him tucked away hidden in a corner charting. 🙄

    • @TheTravisTube
      @TheTravisTube Год назад

      At least he died doing what he loved

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +10

      I don’t blame him. Hospital admin and legal will rip you a new one for not charting properly. Then insurance doesn’t cover it. You might as well be dead from the malpractice you’d have to pay.

    • @Nirrrina
      @Nirrrina Год назад +1

      Next time just grab the charts & run.
      It's like herding cats with an open can of tuna. They WILL follow you.

  • @Fallassa
    @Fallassa Год назад +55

    “You can stop operating, or you can *burn* to death.”
    NGL, I’d probably be right where Ortho was. Tough decision. Also, it does depend on how critically important the completion of the surgery is.

    • @leelooweewoo
      @leelooweewoo Год назад

      Wouldn't both you and your patient die tho

  • @aussieitv
    @aussieitv Год назад +13

    This had me at the look Ortho gave at the "you can either stop operating or burn to death" Dr. G did great at the look of sincere contimplation like as though it's actually the hardest choice to make

  • @theravengrim
    @theravengrim Год назад +34

    I only work in health records for a hospital but I feel real called out about retaking my test until it was 'good enough'

  • @urielgrey
    @urielgrey Год назад +7

    And ortho long pause at the end is the reason why we need a head nurse. Saves everyone and actually did the module and remembers it!

  • @BleachDispenser
    @BleachDispenser Год назад +40

    Don't worry ortho, you can operate outside.

  • @dispnin
    @dispnin Год назад +95

    I mean it's not like he can just stop what he's doing, he has his hands inside of an open human being.

    • @alejandromartindejesus15
      @alejandromartindejesus15 Год назад +32

      I remember we had an earthquake during a kidney transplant. They just got the kidney out of the donor when the quake hit. Anesthesia wanted to evacuate everyone then and there.

    • @corgiw7281
      @corgiw7281 Год назад +13

      @@alejandromartindejesus15 - but what happened next?!

    • @eddiegreif2715
      @eddiegreif2715 Год назад +11

      You Wouldn't Believe What Happens Next (Not Clickbait)

    • @radial268
      @radial268 Год назад +12

      At one of the hospitals I worked at, active shooter policy for OR staff was to abandon the patient and hope for the best. I mean, no one crazy enough to shoot up a hospital would put a bullet in a defenseless, sedated, intubated patient, right? Right?!?!?

    • @michelle_ajema
      @michelle_ajema Год назад +2

      @@radial268 For real? 😂😂😂😂😅

  • @beatlesfran
    @beatlesfran Год назад +9

    I'm a teacher. The retaking the test until you get the answers right is a total mood. We have our own training modules to get through every year too and they're almost always the same.

  • @CliffSturgeon
    @CliffSturgeon Год назад +50

    This was more effective fire safety training than our halfhearted drills and computer modules. I might actually remember what C means now. The others I'm not so sure about.

  • @dustyjack6309
    @dustyjack6309 Год назад +70

    This was a PHENOMENALLY executed sketch. So much dialogue and so many cuts and the result is so SHARP and hilarious. That's hard work!! Great job, I was rolling.

  • @tombirney7276
    @tombirney7276 Год назад +52

    I once trained as a "Pink Lady" volunteer at a N. California community hospital. They took all the fire extinguishers that had timed out and saved them for an actual practice event (imaginary flame in a corner). All had the chance to pull the pin and spray, it was fun. They made learning fun. Laughing Orchestrates Learning. Wonder if some surgeon brain will use THAT model and hopefully come up with an acronym..... ; P

    • @KD-vf6yq
      @KD-vf6yq Год назад +8

      Remember! P.A.S.S. ….Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep….to work the extinguisher…we just did our modules at my hospital and that was another one they wanted us to remember….like the medical field doesn’t have enough acronyms to remember…

    • @tombirney7276
      @tombirney7276 Год назад +3

      @@KD-vf6yq P rivate I nsurance S urpasses S ocialism My de facto experience with MDs and DOs who schedule my Medicaid paid sessions 6 months hence and then re-schedule them a week before to another 6 month hence appt.....

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 Год назад

      Okay, see, that would be much easier to remember! Not to mention more fun to do!

  • @jesanne
    @jesanne Год назад +51

    Ortho is so relatable. Our university used to hold these fire drills and one time it happened during an exam and our prof just told us to sit down and do the test

  • @SovietReunionYT
    @SovietReunionYT Год назад +6

    I love how zooming in for the close-ups shifts the automatic color balance towards red, as if there's a fire spreading in the room, lol!

  • @amyhouck7247
    @amyhouck7247 Год назад +64

    I just had to do these for annual compliance and this is spot on. Oh the tortured acronyms. 😂😂😂

    • @blablup1214
      @blablup1214 Год назад +1

      I also have those as bank employee :/ I just skip to the end and anwer those test question. Most of the times it is multiply choice and fairly easy.

  • @onyxtay7246
    @onyxtay7246 Год назад +36

    I don't think I ever saw people actually respond to fire alarms when I worked in the hospital.
    I'm sure people on the floors did things, but in the ER everyone was basically like "we'll move when we see smoke."

    • @KyleRayner12
      @KyleRayner12 Год назад

      Having been on the floors, probably not.

    • @jenniferd9043
      @jenniferd9043 Год назад +2

      As kitchen staff we just made sure the doors closed properly when they demagnetized and kept working. Technically, we were supposed to return to the kitchen in the even of a fire in another part of the hospital, but we didn't do that either. So many fire alarms all the time...you just tune them out.

    • @CaseyWatchin
      @CaseyWatchin Год назад +1

      I'm in float pool. I can confirm that the other floors do absolutely nothing.

  • @flowerboi4715
    @flowerboi4715 Год назад +15

    The conversation between the three is top comedy with perfect expressions and timings! U never disappoint! 🤣🤣

  • @Crashburn1313
    @Crashburn1313 Год назад +25

    "Nurse Bro" had me laugh water up my nose not gonna lie. 😂

  • @surgerystudio7654
    @surgerystudio7654 Год назад +12

    Hilarious!!! And so true!!! No one remembers that crap and if you just keep taking the test eventually you’ll get it right. Or you have awesome coworkers who leave the answers to the test on the desk for everyone else to use 👏🏽🤣👍🏽

  • @v20574
    @v20574 Год назад +15

    This is my favorite video, it's incredible! The timing, the dialog, the editing - this is the peak of Glaucomflekenverse!

  • @benny_lemon5123
    @benny_lemon5123 Год назад +4

    This whole skit was pure gold, but the end had me in *stitches* 🤣 The difference in characterization through subtle facial expressions is AMAZING

  • @eotero85
    @eotero85 Год назад +10

    Not ashamed to say, I am in Compliance/risk management and died with this - thank you for much needed laugh today!

  • @jeremybosse5088
    @jeremybosse5088 Год назад +7

    The absolute relaxed state of ortho and anesthesia makes this so much more hilarious

  • @anitamfischer5
    @anitamfischer5 Год назад +11

    Every hospital and clinic should have this video as their fire safety module! 😂

  • @draconiusultamius
    @draconiusultamius Год назад +8

    "That's one loud and annoying alarm"
    "Yeah, I wonder where the fire is"
    "Idk, not here, so not my problem"
    "Oh, apparently it's in the room next to ours"
    "Ah, so definitely not here, got it"

  • @Xenuos
    @Xenuos Год назад +27

    lmfao "why would gas bro lie to us"
    aren't operating rooms made to be super fire safe though for these situations?

  • @TheOriginalAeolwind
    @TheOriginalAeolwind Год назад +153

    I'm not in the medical field any longer, still love your content! and how you illustrate why I'm no longer in the medical field hahahaha

    • @divyanshgupta5376
      @divyanshgupta5376 Год назад +1

      Were you responsible for the fire safety training of the hospital?

    • @TheOriginalAeolwind
      @TheOriginalAeolwind Год назад +16

      @@divyanshgupta5376 No, I was with Anesthesia guessing till I passed

    • @laurenkirby97
      @laurenkirby97 Год назад +1

      Good luck with your future pursuits. I hope you find a better job (or a better country to work at)

  • @nullnullsjo
    @nullnullsjo Год назад +45

    We had a fire in our department a couple of years ago. One of our professors refused to leave because he was writing. I has to push him through the fire escape-window. Too bad it was on the ground floor.

  • @KansaSCaymanS
    @KansaSCaymanS Год назад +49

    My favorite part of our fire safety training was aiming a fake extinguisher at a fake fire on a big TV screen. “No, you have to aim at the base of the fire, not the flames!” 😂

    • @graceb1949
      @graceb1949 Год назад +11

      Fire safety at my last hospital involved an actual fire extinguisher and a fire. That one was much more fun!

    • @moga-hunter2410
      @moga-hunter2410 Год назад +5

      You mean you don’t put the fire extinguisher directly at your own face so you’re immune to fire?
      Relias or however it’s spelled is so stupid

  • @Avyncentia
    @Avyncentia 4 месяца назад +1

    This is one of the funniest skits on the channel. Literally laughing. Anesthesia's nonchalant tone, the zoom ins, Ortho's comeback about the med student remembering the protocol...all excellent.

  • @hannahlistento100EAT
    @hannahlistento100EAT Год назад +9

    "this is fine"- orthbro

  • @whynotjustmyusername
    @whynotjustmyusername Год назад +2

    Reminds me of one of my ICU rotations. Suddenly something starts beeping. We turn around and find that it's the fire alarm control panel... which is acknowledged without any consequence being taken. Now since this had been one of the most boring rotations I'd ever been on, I had had the time to read the fire evacuation plans. So while just about everyone around me either ignored the alarm entirely or just looked very worried, I started making notes how many people we had on ventilators, I started asking whether the ventilators on the ward needed grid power or could run on battery at least for a few minutes until we got to another part of the building. Eventually I had motivated people to start triaging patients on whether they needed a proper transport ventilator or whether an ambu bag would do for the transfer. Fortunately it was just some dust from construction works in an adjacent area that had triggered a smoke detector.

  • @ginger_puff
    @ginger_puff Год назад +4

    The eyebrow acting is top shelf.

  • @Saknika
    @Saknika Год назад +3

    I need a follow-up to this where Jason from Fire Department Chronicles joins in on the fun. 🤣

  • @okeydokey1233
    @okeydokey1233 Год назад +49

    OR NURSE for the win! ❤ much love, Dr. G! Wonderful content. I’m due to complete my annual competencies. 😅

  • @jendubay3782
    @jendubay3782 Год назад +2

    Ortho's like ".... Someone hand me a number three scalpel. The show must go on."

  • @Crashburn1313
    @Crashburn1313 Год назад +13

    Turned up so early it didn't have a thumbnail. Genuinely thought you were trolling, Glauc!
    Also hospitals are so flammable oh my lord.

    • @intrepidtomato
      @intrepidtomato Год назад +1

      Heard of several fires during Covid in patient rooms full of oxygen tanks. Not in western Europe or the US I think, but it did happen

  • @EmInMI80
    @EmInMI80 Год назад +21

    Please cover PASS next! I bet Jonathan knows how to PASS.

    • @dianaurbauer2509
      @dianaurbauer2509 Год назад

      Yes! That is the other fire acronym I need to know.

  • @redpilledbachelor7776
    @redpilledbachelor7776 Год назад +10

    I want to get mad at ortho, but he is so innocent it is hard to get mad at him 😄😄😄

  • @theedwardianwriter
    @theedwardianwriter Год назад +10

    Took a sip of water before the last joke hit and nearly choked in front of my purring cat
    10/10 worth it, thanks for your humor

  • @miniciominiciominicio
    @miniciominiciominicio Год назад +9

    Our fire safety acronym is REACT so I was a bit confused haha
    R - remove persons from immediate danger if possible
    E - ensure door(s) are closed to confine fire and smoke
    A - activate fire alarm
    C - call the fire dept
    T - try to extinguish fire or evacuate

    • @trailrider7046
      @trailrider7046 Год назад +2

      Yours acronym is better. But still hard to remember what all the letters stand for.

    • @miniciominiciominicio
      @miniciominiciominicio Год назад +2

      @@trailrider7046 After you’ve reviewed it every year it comes naturally. Plus we all have it on our ID badges with the CODE colours.
      (Never been in actual situation where I’ve had to use it so hopefully it truly is ingrained by now after 10 years.)

  • @patmacisgreat
    @patmacisgreat Год назад +1

    This video was the intro for the fire safety training modules I JUST took for the healthcare system I work for. What's amazing is that it probably was more effective than the info I scrolled past immediately after. Excellent work on these videos!

  • @Sylaise
    @Sylaise Год назад +103

    We have A.D.D. in the instance of an armed threat (which stands for Avoid, Deny, Defend). It took me two years to be able to remember it. Cherry on top?
    We had an armed person active through our facility and we didn't hear any alarms, no one spoke over the intercom to give us any color warnings, and absolutely no one followed the A.D.D. protocol. Why? We didn't have security, the people that noticed the armed person just booked it, a good portion of the people didn't know what was going on and found out (and evacuated) because of text messages through coworkers, and by the time most of us had evacuated the authorities hadn't arrived yet.
    No one was injured, greatly in part because they sat down after destroying what they wanted, but yeah if people didn't pay attention to those so-called "helpful" acronyms, it's definitely not happening now lolol

    • @kaideng2571
      @kaideng2571 Год назад +10

      Interesting acronym. Ours is Run, Hide, Fight which doesn't really add up to a word lol

    • @Sylaise
      @Sylaise Год назад +8

      @@kaideng2571 Hahaha no worries, our means the same thing just in a fancy way that (regardless) no one remembers.
      Avoid - Pay attention to your surroundings to prevent or act upon a situation. Avoid conflict/injury
      Deny - Hide and barricade yourselves. Deny entry (of the assailant).
      Defend - Use whatever that can be used as weapon to defend yourself (keyboard, probably 10+hr shift stinky shoe, probably overpowering perfume, chemicals). Defend yourself.

    • @northernsnowberry
      @northernsnowberry Год назад +6

      The best/worst thing about working in a hospital is the grapevine is somehow more efficient than the official announcement system 99% of the time

    • @brothersandsistersofvalhalla
      @brothersandsistersofvalhalla Год назад +2

      Imagine living somewhere where guns are just so normal to see that no one really cares if an armed guy walks in.

    • @Sylaise
      @Sylaise Год назад +1

      @@northernsnowberry Oh, love, the fact that this is true. It probably is true for the majority of workplaces.

  • @LenaPatsa
    @LenaPatsa Год назад +4

    Ortho is so dedicated. Love him!

  • @Kogworks
    @Kogworks Год назад +6

    Somebody call Fire Department Chronicles to drag Ortho out of there.

    • @katherineg9396
      @katherineg9396 Год назад +1

      Jason's gonna give Ortho "the look". 😄

  • @carlatuipulotu7208
    @carlatuipulotu7208 Год назад +2

    This is my favourite video! I work in retail and no one remembers the acronyms for anything. We just know the fire exit is the front door.

  • @masterimbecile
    @masterimbecile Год назад +6

    Gas bro and nurse bro! The BCU (Bro Cinematic Universe) grows!

  • @gemstorm16
    @gemstorm16 Год назад

    The pause before, "...I don't know..." was just perfect. PERFECT!

  • @diamondidisart5566
    @diamondidisart5566 Год назад +10

    This would be a nightmare😭🤣

  • @kinglazy9941
    @kinglazy9941 Год назад +2

    Ortho reminding us that he is a surgeon first and foremost.

  • @sonalikachru8603
    @sonalikachru8603 Год назад +4

    The end had me wheezing, the nurse being incredulous that this was a serious choice he was contemplating and ortho bro like 'IDK' hahah

  • @rjm4031
    @rjm4031 Год назад +1

    I genuinely feel his indecisiveness when faced with the options of burn to death or stop operating!

  • @orangew3988
    @orangew3988 Год назад +4

    The one time there was a real fire at my hospital, the alarm didn't go off. I think that was planned, because it was in the building next door, so those fire alarm systems aren't linked. But I was on the ward like, errr I smell smoke guys. 5 minutes later, oh the maternity building is on fire.
    I think what really gets normalised is the intermittent fire alarm. It's like, yes there is a fire in your building but it's not on your floor, so just ignore it for now. No one pays even a blind bit of notice.
    The emergency buzzer on the other hand, it goes off for a fraction of a second and 5 people are running towards you like, IS EVERYONE OKAY

  • @wyominglife3202
    @wyominglife3202 Год назад +1

    That's the best part of working in the OR. When the fire alarm goes off, you can just disappear behind the red line and ignore all the drama.

  • @gavincregan7892
    @gavincregan7892 Год назад +24

    We are all very uncomfortable that most disaster plans involve leaving a patient on the table. (Just did active shooter training this week)

  • @mckennamorris577
    @mckennamorris577 Год назад +2

    All I know is when I hear the fire alarm, I close patients' room doors

  • @abby_unhinged
    @abby_unhinged Год назад +4

    Ah yes, the dastardly acronym posted around the hospital and taught to us that I can never remember. Rules: Fire alarms go off, listen to what floor it's on, if it's not ours, we shut the fire and patient doors, and carry on as usual. If it's on ours, I copy what my coworker does, because 🤷. 😆

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад

      If its on your floor start wheeling the patients outside probably. Wheres our nearest evacuation point again? The end of the carpark will do right?

  • @cenni1887
    @cenni1887 Год назад +2

    really outdid yourself with this sketch, the comedic timing is perfect

  • @8523wsxc
    @8523wsxc Год назад +7

    That was a masterpiece.

  • @Suicune-oz4ou
    @Suicune-oz4ou Год назад +2

    This is literally how we do all our online training modules at work! Skip all the training slides to get to the quiz at the end and then guess until you get enough right to pass. At least, the two of us that have KPI's to actually "do" the training do that. Nobody else bothers.
    One year they said that we would only get our staff bonuses if everyone was up to date on their training modules before end of financial year - in the end on the last day of the financial year, since nobody had done any despite a lot of nagging, we got the temp to memorise the answers and complete the quizes for everyone.

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад

      They did that to us lol, but then they reversed the decision “following staff feedback” which basically means someone asked “when tf am i supposed to have time for this??” and they refused to make time for it

    • @dianaurbauer2509
      @dianaurbauer2509 Год назад

      Wow! I did not know this was an option. However, in my department, they will nag you to death until you complete the training, so it gets done.

  • @JudithLyonz1977
    @JudithLyonz1977 Год назад +7

    When I worked at a hospital I heard RACE all the time and I still couldn't tell you what it stood for😂

  • @PixelBlue11913
    @PixelBlue11913 Год назад +2

    As someone who was awoken by a fire alarm in my apartment building this morning, this hits different today.

  • @growurown207
    @growurown207 Год назад +3

    Designed to contain the fire yet evacuation is needed because each operating room is full of flammables, nice

  • @tristasayers1516
    @tristasayers1516 Год назад

    “I just kept retaking mine until I got all the answers right” Damn, I’ve never felt so called out. This has been my method on training vids for years