I genuinely had TEARS in my eyes when he said "Pharmacists" because I swear nobody ever acknowledges us at all! But we do what we do for contributing in saving and improving lives, so it's all good 💛🤍
I feel you! Without pharmacist and pharmacy techs/assistants no one would ever get better. The doctors could write the scripts but its just a random piece of paper till it gets to us! I appreciate you Maaham keep being awesome
The lady who played the piano is a dementia patient, the thing is that she said she didn't know how to play that piece, but she played it almost perfectly, even though she couldn't remember it.
The dementia one got me. My grandfather always said he didn't remember how to speak his parents' native language, but then he'd suddenly jump up from sleep and sing fluent songs in that same language. Wild.
I worked in an Assisted Living place. We had a resident who I watched decline due to her dementia. I loved her and she treated me like I was her daughter, she's forget my name, foods she liked, the year, where she was etc (i made a chart for her in case i wasnt working) At the end of every shift she'd be in the lounge area playing the piano and it was THE MOST ELEGANT music I had ever heard.
My grandma has dementia and she always says she doesn't know how to play the violin but once she holds the bow and plays she she just flows with emotions
@@nvv2452 I think more along the lines of her mind has lost every part of her being EXCEPT her music remains! It's so ingrained in her soul even Dementia can't take it away once the violin is in her hands!
@@nvv2452 music is shown in many different studies to have actually been helpful or at least show a recognizable difference in the rate some people mentally decline with issues such as dementia.
I think this has to do with the difference between declarative memories and non-declarative memories. Declarative memories are memories of things like events and facts, while non-declarative memories are mostly things like procedural memories, such as remembering how to ride a bike, walk, play a musical instrument, etc. -- also known as "muscle memory." (You may notice that you don't have to put much thought into how to walk when you walk -- like you're not thinking about how much you should lift your foot, extend your knee, put your foot down, shift your weight, etc.) These different types of memories are encoded/stored in different ways/regions of the brain. I'd guess that dementia mainly affects declarative memories, but doesn't affect non-declarative memories as much -- since that would explain why people with dementia can sometimes not remember the fact that they can do certain things and/or not remember the events in their life in which they learned to play and played a musical instrument, but they still can still play the instrument.
I asked my dog if she wanted a kitty friend and she barked at me and got down and layed in the floor with her back turned.🤣🤣🤣🤣 I think that's a no. 🤣🤣🤣. I love my over dramatic pomeranian. She could be Bears chew toy.
I have a similar spider story! I was driving when a wolf spider launched itself from the visor onto my face. There was screaming, flailing, an angry bite on a foot (mine, not his) and then a tree. Car was totaled. Not sure if he survived or not. I remember warning the EMTs about the hairy assassin as I gasped for air (full-blown asthma attack). Family and friends bring it up just like this lol Glad you survived the accident, your dad and all the laughter!
I am curious. If she sings about something can she sing and speak clearly? Similar to how people with a stutter can sing words instead and be clearly spoken? W/could that work?
Lizz Alkula My grandfather has Alzheimer's and by now most of his ability to make coherent sentences is completely gone. His ability to hum and sing along to songs were one of the last things to go. For some fun reason he will still swear and giggle after. Lol
@@prestagraber1145 thank you for replying. But I was meaning more conversational. For example would she be able to ask/answer better if the conversation was in a sing-y tone of voice?
My mother was a respiratory therapist, and she said it was one of the most under-appreciated and disrespected professions she's seen. Almost everywhere she worked, the RT department got treated poorly, so I appreciate the shout out, not only to RTs but to nurses and techs as well.
I love your spider story. It reminds me of one time my husband thought a spider was crawling on him as he was waking from a dream in the middle of the night. He jumped so fast out if bed that he smacking his head on the wall. He ended up with a mild concussion and we had to tell everyone it was because of the dream spider that tried to kill him . 😅
I could imagine this happening to myself haha... Once woke up really panicked because i thought a spidser was crawling on my arm but i just breathed on my arm in my sleep...
@Jelly0rd1naryP3rs0n noo did you survive that? I have an intense fear of swallowing a spidser in my sleep eacth time i sleep with my mouth open (often when im sick with a stuffed nose) i get nightmares either about hundred of spiders crawling out of my mouth or im drowning in really thick slime that i cant spit out hahaha my brain love when im asleep apparently
I had a spider in my car. I pulled into a Walmart Parking lot, threw the car in park and jumped out, right in front of a cop. The cop stopped what he was doing and asked if I was ok. All I said was spider. He thanked me for putting the car in park first and went back to what he was doing laughing.
We were in a car and my friend was driving. My brother and I were in the backseat, and another friend in the passenger seat. Suddenly the car makes like 2 to 3 turns, zig zag style, and then goes diagonally nort h west and stops with the wheels just above the curb of the sidewalk. My friend gets out of the car and runs away leaving us all in there motion sick, dizzy and wondering what just happened. I thought we got into an accident but it was just a bee
My uncle knows a man who knows literally nothing about himself or anyone in his life- he just has a very short memory or something. But when they bring him to a piano he plays amazingly.
Could be wrong, but I believe that’s called Retrograde Amnesia, where there’s a problem with processing memories into long term storage so they can only last a little bit in short term memory
my mom works at a retirement home and has some people with dementia really bad but i once went in to visit with a lady who did ceramic painting and she told me her entire life story about how she started, why, what she did when she wasn’t painting or working, things my mom couldn’t believe she could ever recall again. it was really sweet being able to listen to her talk for a long time. according to my mom she’s very quiet and doesn’t say a lot but she went on and on and on, it was beautiful.
I just wanted to say that Dr. Mike hit home with the musical dementia patient. My mom has Alzheimer's (dementia) she doesn't know who I am now. But throughout her horrible decline she has always and I mean ALWAYS remembered her songs. It's a 70/30 gospel and oldies with a lil mix of 80s and 90s r&b. I love my mom so much. She is still living but I miss her.
I used to work with a guy who was forgetting how to speak and walk. The way I’d get him to go from room to room was I’d play “the girl from Ipanema” on my phone. He would sing along and sway and eventually pick up his feet and dance to the music. Then I could just guide him where he needed to go. Music is absolutely vital for anyone working in memory care.
I know the feeling of losing my mom to Alzheimers and dementia, before losing her to death. It hurts, it's frightening, and I sincerely hope it gets better for you soon.
@@vesnakutricki832 Yeah I researched that, very unfortunate. There's no cure or treatment for it yet, if you have dementia. Your basically left in the dark..
Is like when you back home and cook you husband a reeeaaaly good diner to make him comfortable before telling him you made a tiny scratch on HIS car xD
I took care of a lady that had Alzheimer's and back in her prime, she was an organist and they had this huge pipe organ in their house and most days it was just decoration but some days she'd play it, like she never stopped and it always amazed me how she could play a whole hymn but didn't know what a fork was
Okay... Basically there's two kinds of memory, and thus two ways the brain stores it... 1... Episodic Memory... It's how you remember a particular place you went and what you did there... Like that one time your school took you on a field trip to the museum and you got to see a really rare exhibit that doesn't go on tour anymore... AND you can still remember some of the most interesting and fun details the guide lady told you about it... That's an example of Episodic Memory... Basically a snap-shot or short experience clip from your life... 2. Procedural Memory... This is how you develop skills and habits, both for better and for worse. It's created through actions and study and reinforced by repetitions... Learning to tie your shoes, how to walk (because it's not just ingrained instinct or programming), read or write, and other skills you pick up throughout your life all fall into procedural memory. The more you repeat those skills, task by task and step by step, properly, the less effort it takes to think about them and repeat them, because the neural pathways get "reinforced" with more such pathways over time and repetitions... This is also where the neuro-scientists agree that NOT all practice is necessarily created equal and only GOOD practice will actually build your skills. If you slack off on the procedures, excusing poor quality practice with "Well, that's good enough, because I'm trying."... You can unintentionally create the pathways and then reinforce them for slop and bad habits in the skill... Just like you don't think very much about walking (for instance) because you've done so much of it in your life, it's still in procedural memory in your brain... It's just so often used that you've got such an information freeway for it that there's almost no conscious effort at all... Likewise, when someone really religiously practices an instrument or some other skill until they've truly mastered it, they don't really have to consciously think about it either... Frequently, someone with dimentia can sign their own name (if you can read their handwriting, of course) even if they've deteriorated to a degree that they can't even verbally tell you their actual name... In the case of the vid' and O.P.'s story, such practice was the case. Both people had practiced so much as to create the kind of skill that requires no actual thought, but they simply act on instinct and feel of their instrument... It's a bit of a misconception that it's "muscle memory" because muscles don't have the neural capacity to have any memories. All memories are still stored and accessed in the brain... BUT Alzheimers most directly attacks the Episodic Memory center... It still destroys the Procedural, but not nearly at the rate that it diminishes the Episodic... ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 there is also the semantic memory which is memoring facts such as the capital of France or England or the date of the Battle of Hastings.
@@nomichaelnothatwassonotrig5380 That's still debatable... Arguably it fits with "Episodic" such as remembering reading about the Capital of France or the Battle of Hastings... a snapshot of your life... It could also fit into "Procedural" involving studies and repeating the act of looking at or reciting the facts around the Capital of France or the Battle of Hastings to reinforce those information paths... There's admittedly still a lot we don't all together "get" about memory... SO I'm not discounting or dismissive of "Semantic" memory... Smarter and more studied people than me are still arguing about where and how it all "fits together"... AND such is why the current thinking from Neuroscientists suggests that the best forms of study involve not just reading and re-reading notes... but re-arranging the words of questions to force independent "recall" of details so you build upon and reinforce the information paths in your brain and literally "learn to think" more efficiently about a subject, rather than just imprint flimsy, single indexes to any given "factoid" you've managed to gather... In any case, appreciate the addendum, too... It's a debate we can share in this thread just as well. ;o)
Thanks for sharing your car accident story. I got into an accident that was my fault, thankfully no one was injured and damage was minor, but hearing that even a professional can make a mistake and get in a car accident helps me with the guilt I feel over my accident.
I’m fairly sure bear is a Newfoundland dog. They are close to 150lb and close to the size of a small grizzly bear, same with St.bernards, except there 300lb. There massive dogs since I have 2.
As a lab tech, who literally no one ever remembers or knows what I do, you have no idea how thrilled I am that you gave us a shout-out first on that nurse appreciation tiktok 🤣🤣
Aaaaayyyy! Thank you! Not only do you take all of my bodily fluids away from me, but you do it to make sure I'm healthy and to help the other medical staff figure out what's going on. And you get to deal with all of the lovely stuff in the ED too! 😣 You're all awesome humans!
My grandma has dementia and she used to play the piano awhile ago. She remembers names but forgets who the name belongs to. My name is madison and my mom is Andrea, she’ll call us both Andrea. But one day, she sat down at the piano. And started playing amazingly. She forgets everything but remembers the piano. It’s amazing 🤩
@@LilyBlooms0912 yep, she also remembers her husband Bill but now she’s getting worse, she will barely talk, she won’t eat somethings, and it will be tot he point where she won’t even remember to breathe and she’ll basically hold her breath till she dies
@@PrechtGaebolgHades I’m not a little thing to her, she still gets super happy to see us, just because we’re grandchildren doesn’t mean we’re little things compared to our parents
Thank you for the comment on underappreciated workers in the medical field, there are so many working cogs behind the scenes besides Drs and nurses that most people don't know about. I know I didn't until my sister became an RT, and I've seen the times her and her coworkers have been ignored due to not many people knowing the importance of RT
I have a hypothesis as to why medical dramas never do chest compressions. It seems like faking chest compressions while making them look realistic would be very difficult, and doing real chest compressions to someone who doesn't need them can cause significant harm.
It’s so hard!!! I’m a theatre director and we had to do it for a show and it was super tricky. Luckily, it was only live streamed due to covid restrictions so we could make it look realistic toward the camera and not have to worry about audience members on the sides!
Two things 1) THANK YOU FOR MENTIONING THE PHARMACY. I worked in a hospital inpatient pharmacy for a while and honestly it was kind of disheartening how we were treated. 2) in response to that spider story, my aunt found a spider in her car while she was driving (she has arachnophobia) and she flipped her car. Three times. Miraculously she was basically unharmed. First thing my dad asked, “well did you kill the spider at least?”
Spiders in cars are certainly no joke. Some people I knew in high school were killed because they rolled the car when the passengers in the back were panicking over a spider. Really glad your aunt survived. (Also kudos to your dad, 10/10 dark humour dad joke).
I'm just imagining bein' a spider, cruisin' along, mindin my own business, when suddenly the car I've made my home turns into a laundry spin cycle. "WHOOoooOOOOAaaaaaAAHHH!"
I'm not a doctor, I'm a medical social worker who mostly works with senior adults and adults with disabilities. I had this one client with mod-severe dementia and he couldn't remember people's names, but he could play tons of song on the piano from memory! The brain and its physiology are so amazing and interesting!
My grandfather was a dentist and my mom worked in the front office. If you go in you’ll notice all of them have really nice, white teeth. It’s part of advertising the business. If the people working there have nice teeth, you’ll surely have nice teeth in the end too! My mom (and probably everyone else there) was required to bleach their teeth constantly to make sure they were prestigiously white
@@confused_shark2537 pretty sure it’s just straight up bleach. It’s applied for a limited time using a mouth retainer and then removed as far as I remember. Idk, I haven’t used them myself
As a human biologist, it's always been fascinating how different parts of the brain have these unique functions. The pituary gland influences our growth through growth hormones and in the hippocampus we find cells which tells us where we are positioned. Then very close we can find the suprachiasmatic nucleus which controls our sleep and appetite and if we lose that then we cannot sleep properly anymore (I just made a video about this). It's so cool how different brain regions got their unique abilities!
I would like to say thank you to all CNAs (Certified Nursing Assistant) too. I feel like they need to get notice too to all of their hard work in the hospitals or in a Nursing Homes. They’re also part of a medical team everywhere together with the RNs. So again thank you CNAs for your hard work.
Yeah my daughter has a tumour on her pituitary gland, she’s had it removed once, but it grew back after surgery. It’s caused Cushings which causes gigantism. It breaks my heart. But she had a miracle baby last year after being told she probably won’t. ❤️
My sister and I got into a similar car accident once right next to our house. Car was totaled but we were so scared of my Armenian Soviet dad that we didn’t call him and instead called our mom who was an hour away 😂 I’m still traumatized I feel you Dr. Mike
there is another common acronym we use a lot in emergencies/OTs: SOB: Shortness of Breath but it can be mistaken for a slang in outer environment as Son Of B**ch
I’m a memory care nurse and I have so many patients who are so talented at playing piano. Even some who can no longer communicate verbally still remember how to play the piano. It’s so fun to see a glimpse of who they were before dementia❤️
My grandmother had dementia and was in her 90’s she played the organ and even though she couldn’t remember what she did 10 minutes ago, she could still play all the hymns she played in church by memory.
@@ravza1382 no,its not muscle memory. For pianists, muscle memory only helps to find the keys. Remembering the pattern in which the keys should be played in a song and with which rhythm and at what time with what chords is all mental memory(i'm talking from experience) Ps. Its great that your grandma could do that I can't remember what my piano teacher taught me last week LOL.
@@vijayarani2562 actually it is muscle memory i hadnt played fur elise in like 2 years and i suddenly got reminded of it and played it and it was all in the correct order!
@@prachiprallubdhakar Yeah, but that's the memory in your brain. He even explained it in the video that there are different brain parts for conscious memory and for musical memory.
I love when people tell their embarrassing stories, doesn't make me laugh it makes me feel better about myself and being human and mistakes and stupid things happen to EVERYONE!
5:14 the lady had dementia and was still able to play the third movement of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, which while not being the most technically difficult piece on piano is still a feat when you have dementia. The piece is rather fast and has a lot going on all at once.
Doctor Mike, I just wanted to say that I really appreciate your videos, I like listening to them when I’m drawing or working. Thanks for doing what you do and not giving up.
@@weball7899 "Does this blood look red to you?" "Steve that's a glass of milk again" But Lab techs would do the testing of bloods and all that stuff I'm guessing, could even refer to people that fix equipment and keep it running, but my main bet is it's a catch all term for doctor's who work on treating people but don't actually meet or interact with the people they treat.
Dear dr.mike,I was able to save my dad from a heart attack because of you I watch your videos and learn about medical stuff and I was doing CPR until emergency services arrived
I had a 102 year old dementia/Alzheimer’s resident who could barely even feed herself anymore, BUT she was able to play the piano during the holidays!! It was amazing to see!
Dr. Mike: "Hey, i'm gonna translate this real fast." *throws a bunch of disease-names, diagnoses, medical words around Me, a german with like 2% of medical vocabulary: "I could google all of those... bit it's 2am and I'm tired."
That girl with the blue lips is pretty much every little kid at the pool in the summer. Mom: come out and warm up! Your lips are blue! Kid: B-b-b-but I'm n-n-not c-c-c-coooooldddd * shivers violently *
Unless you live somewhere in the mid or northern parts of the world (northern hemisphere) or opposite (southern hemisphere)... then you're wrong. As a southerner from the US, pools are literally NEVER cold in the summer here. In my area, summers get as hot as 110 Fahrenheit and pools will feel about 30-35 degrees cooler AT MOST (unless it is in deep shade). Also, side note, I go up on commercial building roofs a lot and summer makes those white, reflective roofs feel like 150-165 degrees. -- (by reflective, I mean light colors reflecting hwaf like how darks colors do the opposite and absorb heat).
part of the reason I watch doctor mike is because he is a funny guy but also because I learn new stuff every video.I never knew that for chest compressions you needed to go 2 inches deep with a rhythm to effectively restart the heart.Thanks doctor mike!
It always amazes me when I ever hear a doctor use medical terms because the terms mostly come from Greek (and my first language is Greek). That way I can know exactly what a medical term means in English, while to English people it sounds like gibberish. And then someone asks me “Are you a medical student?” “No, I’m Greek.” 😂👍
Similarly, once in class my teacher asked how to spell something and I said "It sounds Latin" and spelled it for him. He looked it up and I spelled it correctly so he asked if I knew Latin and I was just like "No, but knowing where words come from helps you spell them"
Σκέφτομαι το ίδιο πράγμα κάθε φορά που βλέπω τα βίντεο του. Το ωραίο είναι να μπορείς να μαντεύεις ονόματα για παθήσεις, αρρώστιες και φοβίες χωρίς να το έχεις ακούσει πρώτα, στους αγγλόφωνους φαίνεται εντυπωσιακό
3:21 Feel free to add cleaning workers to that list. I honestly do not understand why nobody mentions them. Imagine anything without cleaning, let alone hospitals. Cheers.
He did thank them also! Environmental staff within the hospital system and medical field encompass sanitation and cleaning staff. I completely agree that they can be under appreciated. They are absolutely crucial, not only in patient experience, but infection control as well, and they have been working incredibly hard during COVID.
When I was working at an aged care home, It had 3 floors with a piano at the bottom, this man had some form of dementia, and all the time he would walk around with his shoe box filled with piano music, and would very often want to go down but would keep forgetting. I had to keep taking him down the elevator and to the piano, but once he got there he played the most amazing music, and it was really something.
You did a good thing for someone who needed a little help to find a little happiness. Take this with you all your life. I hope everyone who needs kindness when they are lost has someone like you to help guir them those last few steps.
The spider story got me. 😂 It was so funny and he's so cute. I wish I was there that time so I could see what would his expression look like. That poor spider made many people laugh even after getting hit by a wallet and even until now. RIP. 😅
@@Camille-rb4ge bwhahahhaha thats truee😂 me and my mom have a chronic illness, which basically means we are in pain all the time. My mucles and joint are bad and i also have very bad astma. So all those things combined and the illness ib itself cause for chronic tiredness. So i basically need atleast 9 a 10 hours sleep to function, but i can sleep up to 12 hours if no one wakes ne up😅. When im really sick (my illness causes for a really low immune system) or when i have an astma attack i can spontaniously get very tired any moment of the day. And my boyfriend does power naps in the afternoon sometimes after work so that he has enough energy to get through the day. So he askes me to stay in bed with him so that he can fall asleep while i cuddle him xP🥰 which is indeed very cutee🥰 When i am tired too i will sleep with him too. But sometimes i cant fall asleep but make myself even more tired and thats really bad for my brain haha. And the other day i woke up and i thought it was the next morning. Forgetting i already had started the day but just took a power nap and it being the afternoon. I was reallyyy confused. (My illness also causes a very very bad memory😅 and im really young so no one believes me. I forget very inportant meetings, stuff from school, even promises i make to friends family and my boyfriend. It often makes me sad. Its really difficult.)
My bipolar disorder is acting up again and I've had an aweful week full of depression... The way you said "but there was a spider" made me laugh so hard that I almost peed my pants.
Did anyone else notice how when he says "chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions" e says it at a 100 bpm pace, which if you remember it at that speed can save somebody's life by just repeating the phrase over and over.
I'm a massage therapist & definitely find face massage is super important for anyone who suffers from headaches & migraines. Often, people clench 😬 or grind their teeth, making the neck into shoulders tight, which causes headache & migraine. Sometimes I can get through a whole massage & the face is the most relieving area for clients 😬 I'll ask in beginning do you clench or grind & it's usually something they aren't aware of. Wanted to see you in Philadelphia on the 20th it says sold out. Hope your tour goes amazing & stay safe always ❣️
I genuinely had TEARS in my eyes when he said "Pharmacists" because I swear nobody ever acknowledges us at all! But we do what we do for contributing in saving and improving lives, so it's all good 💛🤍
I feel you! Without pharmacist and pharmacy techs/assistants no one would ever get better. The doctors could write the scripts but its just a random piece of paper till it gets to us! I appreciate you Maaham keep being awesome
WE APPRECIATE YOU!! Thank you!
thank you pharmacists 🥰
Thank you, Pharmacists! Without you, I wouldn’t be alive!
Thank you for giving me the right doses and medication. ✌
The lady who played the piano is a dementia patient, the thing is that she said she didn't know how to play that piece, but she played it almost perfectly, even though she couldn't remember it.
This is why stuff like music therapy is so fascinating to me
muscle memory
Like muscle memory?
@@m.c0015 yes
@Leafy Kingdom Yes, I believe she was a pianist. There are news articles about her if you want to look into her story further.
The dementia one got me. My grandfather always said he didn't remember how to speak his parents' native language, but then he'd suddenly jump up from sleep and sing fluent songs in that same language. Wild.
I worked in an Assisted Living place. We had a resident who I watched decline due to her dementia. I loved her and she treated me like I was her daughter, she's forget my name, foods she liked, the year, where she was etc (i made a chart for her in case i wasnt working) At the end of every shift she'd be in the lounge area playing the piano and it was THE MOST ELEGANT music I had ever heard.
My grandma has dementia and she always says she doesn't know how to play the violin but once she holds the bow and plays she she just flows with emotions
@Sunday Girl why cus his grandma has dementia but when she holds the violin she can play it?
@@nvv2452 I think more along the lines of her mind has lost every part of her being EXCEPT her music remains! It's so ingrained in her soul even Dementia can't take it away once the violin is in her hands!
@@nvv2452 music is shown in many different studies to have actually been helpful or at least show a recognizable difference in the rate some people mentally decline with issues such as dementia.
I think this has to do with the difference between declarative memories and non-declarative memories. Declarative memories are memories of things like events and facts, while non-declarative memories are mostly things like procedural memories, such as remembering how to ride a bike, walk, play a musical instrument, etc. -- also known as "muscle memory." (You may notice that you don't have to put much thought into how to walk when you walk -- like you're not thinking about how much you should lift your foot, extend your knee, put your foot down, shift your weight, etc.) These different types of memories are encoded/stored in different ways/regions of the brain.
I'd guess that dementia mainly affects declarative memories, but doesn't affect non-declarative memories as much -- since that would explain why people with dementia can sometimes not remember the fact that they can do certain things and/or not remember the events in their life in which they learned to play and played a musical instrument, but they still can still play the instrument.
aw, i love her already
Mike talking to bear about getting a kitty is literally the highlight of my year 😂😂😂
I asked my dog if she wanted a kitty friend and she barked at me and got down and layed in the floor with her back turned.🤣🤣🤣🤣 I think that's a no. 🤣🤣🤣. I love my over dramatic pomeranian. She could be Bears chew toy.
That's just sad
@@gidget_ awww 😂
@@kartiksharma2818 probably is 😂😂
I just adopted a kitten today and he is the sweetest boy! You need one!!
That old lady: "I don't know it.."
*proceeds to amaze me*
I said the same thing in my head
Exactlyyy
I have a similar spider story! I was driving when a wolf spider launched itself from the visor onto my face. There was screaming, flailing, an angry bite on a foot (mine, not his) and then a tree. Car was totaled. Not sure if he survived or not. I remember warning the EMTs about the hairy assassin as I gasped for air (full-blown asthma attack). Family and friends bring it up just like this lol Glad you survived the accident, your dad and all the laughter!
You got my like for the "mine, not his" clarification,it made me chuckle😅
as someone actually kind of likes spiders, I'm not confident saying I would've reacted much different if one just sprang onto my face
Dr Mike reacting to stuff is getting me through these "unprecedented times"
Why does this have no replies
@@ultratacoman956 I have no idea 😂
Yee
For sure. Need more!
Totally agree with you I would love ❤️ to see him react to more grey anatomy, good 😌 doctor or maybe house md he haven’t done that in while
I have a client with Alzheimer’s, she was diagnosed over 10 years ago. Most of the time she makes little sense, but she has a beautiful singing voice.
I am curious. If she sings about something can she sing and speak clearly? Similar to how people with a stutter can sing words instead and be clearly spoken? W/could that work?
Lizz Alkula My grandfather has Alzheimer's and by now most of his ability to make coherent sentences is completely gone. His ability to hum and sing along to songs were one of the last things to go. For some fun reason he will still swear and giggle after. Lol
My Dad has Alzheimer's, he talks a lot of nonsense and has trouble getting started if he thinks about it, but he can still play guitar.
@@lizzalkula376 yes, she sings real songs. Mostly Hymns. Very clearly!
@@prestagraber1145 thank you for replying. But I was meaning more conversational. For example would she be able to ask/answer better if the conversation was in a sing-y tone of voice?
Bear looked so serious when Dr.Mike was talking to him, I was actually half expecting him start speaking 🤣🤣🤣
3:38 was so cute. The way he just sat there and listened like a little human is so cute 🐶🐶
My mother was a respiratory therapist, and she said it was one of the most under-appreciated and disrespected professions she's seen. Almost everywhere she worked, the RT department got treated poorly, so I appreciate the shout out, not only to RTs but to nurses and techs as well.
My mother tells the same stories! Being raised by her, I personally think RTs are the coolest. But then again, that may just be strong bias XD
A good therapist is when you know a hospital is really good
My mom is a medical laboratory scientist and no one appreciates them either. She gets to stay isolated in the basement unrecognized for her work.
יע
Ff
I love your spider story. It reminds me of one time my husband thought a spider was crawling on him as he was waking from a dream in the middle of the night. He jumped so fast out if bed that he smacking his head on the wall. He ended up with a mild concussion and we had to tell everyone it was because of the dream spider that tried to kill him . 😅
omg this comment deserves more attention 😂😂
I could imagine this happening to myself haha... Once woke up really panicked because i thought a spidser was crawling on my arm but i just breathed on my arm in my sleep...
@Jelly0rd1naryP3rs0n noo did you survive that? I have an intense fear of swallowing a spidser in my sleep eacth time i sleep with my mouth open (often when im sick with a stuffed nose) i get nightmares either about hundred of spiders crawling out of my mouth or im drowning in really thick slime that i cant spit out hahaha my brain love when im asleep apparently
I had a spider in my car. I pulled into a Walmart Parking lot, threw the car in park and jumped out, right in front of a cop. The cop stopped what he was doing and asked if I was ok. All I said was spider. He thanked me for putting the car in park first and went back to what he was doing laughing.
We were in a car and my friend was driving. My brother and I were in the backseat, and another friend in the passenger seat. Suddenly the car makes like 2 to 3 turns, zig zag style, and then goes diagonally nort h west and stops with the wheels just above the curb of the sidewalk. My friend gets out of the car and runs away leaving us all in there motion sick, dizzy and wondering what just happened. I thought we got into an accident but it was just a bee
My uncle knows a man who knows literally nothing about himself or anyone in his life- he just has a very short memory or something. But when they bring him to a piano he plays amazingly.
Memento
Wow
@Dazed Loc Momento Mori
@Dazed Loc Momento Mori
Could be wrong, but I believe that’s called Retrograde Amnesia, where there’s a problem with processing memories into long term storage so they can only last a little bit in short term memory
my mom works at a retirement home and has some people with dementia really bad but i once went in to visit with a lady who did ceramic painting and she told me her entire life story about how she started, why, what she did when she wasn’t painting or working, things my mom couldn’t believe she could ever recall again. it was really sweet being able to listen to her talk for a long time. according to my mom she’s very quiet and doesn’t say a lot but she went on and on and on, it was beautiful.
Enemies of Dr. Mike:
- Essential oils
- Weird round plant
- Spiders
TV shows lacking Chest Compressions...
Bizzaro ECGs in medical dramas
Bad sleeping habits
What about a spider fused with the weird round plant that secretes essential oils as it’s venom?
And anti-vacs
I just wanted to say that Dr. Mike hit home with the musical dementia patient. My mom has Alzheimer's (dementia) she doesn't know who I am now. But throughout her horrible decline she has always and I mean ALWAYS remembered her songs. It's a 70/30 gospel and oldies with a lil mix of 80s and 90s r&b. I love my mom so much. She is still living but I miss her.
I used to work with a guy who was forgetting how to speak and walk. The way I’d get him to go from room to room was I’d play “the girl from Ipanema” on my phone. He would sing along and sway and eventually pick up his feet and dance to the music. Then I could just guide him where he needed to go. Music is absolutely vital for anyone working in memory care.
I know the feeling of losing my mom to Alzheimers and dementia, before losing her to death. It hurts, it's frightening, and I sincerely hope it gets better for you soon.
Dementia is really tragic. Everyone with it ends up passing away eventually, I pray for your mother.
@@vesnakutricki832 Yeah I researched that, very unfortunate. There's no cure or treatment for it yet, if you have dementia. Your basically left in the dark..
“Here’s the worst part of the story, calling my Russian angry soviet father to tell him that this happened.” 😂😂
Is like when you back home and cook you husband a reeeaaaly good diner to make him comfortable before telling him you made a tiny scratch on HIS car xD
BAHAHAHA i felt that on a personal level 🤣🤣
I nearly died 😂😭
I definitely know how Soviet parents can be ...scary! (I’m Ukrainian)
I can't blame him, I'd be the same with my angry Chinese Dad 😜
I took care of a lady that had Alzheimer's and back in her prime, she was an organist and they had this huge pipe organ in their house and most days it was just decoration but some days she'd play it, like she never stopped and it always amazed me how she could play a whole hymn but didn't know what a fork was
Ok so can you please make more since out of that please
Okay... Basically there's two kinds of memory, and thus two ways the brain stores it...
1... Episodic Memory... It's how you remember a particular place you went and what you did there... Like that one time your school took you on a field trip to the museum and you got to see a really rare exhibit that doesn't go on tour anymore... AND you can still remember some of the most interesting and fun details the guide lady told you about it... That's an example of Episodic Memory... Basically a snap-shot or short experience clip from your life...
2. Procedural Memory... This is how you develop skills and habits, both for better and for worse. It's created through actions and study and reinforced by repetitions... Learning to tie your shoes, how to walk (because it's not just ingrained instinct or programming), read or write, and other skills you pick up throughout your life all fall into procedural memory. The more you repeat those skills, task by task and step by step, properly, the less effort it takes to think about them and repeat them, because the neural pathways get "reinforced" with more such pathways over time and repetitions... This is also where the neuro-scientists agree that NOT all practice is necessarily created equal and only GOOD practice will actually build your skills. If you slack off on the procedures, excusing poor quality practice with "Well, that's good enough, because I'm trying."... You can unintentionally create the pathways and then reinforce them for slop and bad habits in the skill...
Just like you don't think very much about walking (for instance) because you've done so much of it in your life, it's still in procedural memory in your brain... It's just so often used that you've got such an information freeway for it that there's almost no conscious effort at all... Likewise, when someone really religiously practices an instrument or some other skill until they've truly mastered it, they don't really have to consciously think about it either... Frequently, someone with dimentia can sign their own name (if you can read their handwriting, of course) even if they've deteriorated to a degree that they can't even verbally tell you their actual name...
In the case of the vid' and O.P.'s story, such practice was the case. Both people had practiced so much as to create the kind of skill that requires no actual thought, but they simply act on instinct and feel of their instrument...
It's a bit of a misconception that it's "muscle memory" because muscles don't have the neural capacity to have any memories. All memories are still stored and accessed in the brain... BUT Alzheimers most directly attacks the Episodic Memory center... It still destroys the Procedural, but not nearly at the rate that it diminishes the Episodic... ;o)
@@kayleighkelley5129 can you try to spell “sense” instead of “since”, because you’re not really making any “ sense” right now.
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 there is also the semantic memory which is memoring facts such as the capital of France or England or the date of the Battle of Hastings.
@@nomichaelnothatwassonotrig5380 That's still debatable... Arguably it fits with "Episodic" such as remembering reading about the Capital of France or the Battle of Hastings... a snapshot of your life...
It could also fit into "Procedural" involving studies and repeating the act of looking at or reciting the facts around the Capital of France or the Battle of Hastings to reinforce those information paths...
There's admittedly still a lot we don't all together "get" about memory... SO I'm not discounting or dismissive of "Semantic" memory... Smarter and more studied people than me are still arguing about where and how it all "fits together"...
AND such is why the current thinking from Neuroscientists suggests that the best forms of study involve not just reading and re-reading notes... but re-arranging the words of questions to force independent "recall" of details so you build upon and reinforce the information paths in your brain and literally "learn to think" more efficiently about a subject, rather than just imprint flimsy, single indexes to any given "factoid" you've managed to gather...
In any case, appreciate the addendum, too... It's a debate we can share in this thread just as well. ;o)
Thanks for sharing your car accident story. I got into an accident that was my fault, thankfully no one was injured and damage was minor, but hearing that even a professional can make a mistake and get in a car accident helps me with the guilt I feel over my accident.
I mean... he's not a professional car driver. He's a doctor. He's also human.
I never realized how big bear was until he gave mike a high five for a kitty
That’s by his dogs name is bear 😂
That reminds me, my kitten didn't want to watch what I was originally watching so he literally tapped on this video with his paw, I'm not joking lmao
@@cloudymew cute
@@glitchythefox3617 do you mean bc?
I’m fairly sure bear is a Newfoundland dog. They are close to 150lb and close to the size of a small grizzly bear, same with St.bernards, except there 300lb. There massive dogs since I have 2.
That woman playing the piano with dementia was the coolest thing I've ever seen
it's thanks to muscle memory :D
Ikr
Ikr
Ikr
The power of music. My brother was playing guitar and died of brain cancer a couple of weeks later.
The fact he described his dad as an “angry Russian Soviet dad” made me laugh way to hard
The fact your name is communist fish makes this joke 100x better
@@1_Trident it’s not a joke
@@aUbReYyYyYyYy88 true
And the reason is SPIDER 😭😭😭🤬HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHA
He give a 50k European car to his son, he couldn’t be a bad guy, but rightfully angry.
Brooooo when you started speaking out all the initials that was impresive as heck!! Sooooo much information in that brain
As a lab tech, who literally no one ever remembers or knows what I do, you have no idea how thrilled I am that you gave us a shout-out first on that nurse appreciation tiktok 🤣🤣
I appreciate you!
Ayyye med lab over here 🙌
Bro I felt the same way I felt happy
My moms an RT if i tell people that they go
WhAaAaT iS tHaT
Aaaaayyyy! Thank you!
Not only do you take all of my bodily fluids away from me, but you do it to make sure I'm healthy and to help the other medical staff figure out what's going on.
And you get to deal with all of the lovely stuff in the ED too! 😣
You're all awesome humans!
My grandma has dementia and she used to play the piano awhile ago. She remembers names but forgets who the name belongs to. My name is madison and my mom is Andrea, she’ll call us both Andrea. But one day, she sat down at the piano. And started playing amazingly. She forgets everything but remembers the piano. It’s amazing 🤩
The fact that she remembers her daughter name out of everyone is wonderful. Mom's love
@@LilyBlooms0912 yep, she also remembers her husband Bill but now she’s getting worse, she will barely talk, she won’t eat somethings, and it will be tot he point where she won’t even remember to breathe and she’ll basically hold her breath till she dies
It’s sad tho and there’s nothing you can really do about it
I guess she just remembers the stuff she experienced a lot. Like her daughter, husband and other children but not grandchildren or other little stuff.
@@PrechtGaebolgHades I’m not a little thing to her, she still gets super happy to see us, just because we’re grandchildren doesn’t mean we’re little things compared to our parents
I never see any of these crazy things on my TikTok feed! Guess I need to try harder lol
Lol. Man TH-camr Doctors are the best. Since quarantine started, my TH-cam Recommended section has been all medical videos. Keep it up Docs!
@@thatguy720 same!!!
Nor do I
You kinda look like Dr. Mike in your pfp
Jesus Saves Love God✝️
Thank you for the comment on underappreciated workers in the medical field, there are so many working cogs behind the scenes besides Drs and nurses that most people don't know about. I know I didn't until my sister became an RT, and I've seen the times her and her coworkers have been ignored due to not many people knowing the importance of RT
“The worst part was calling my angry soviet father to tell him”
I’ve literally been in the same situation of having to xall an angry soviet father because of an accident. It’s not fun
also russion
I have that only with my Russian mother. I swear every time I get a phone call I near have a heart attack haha. But I love her.
I have a hypothesis as to why medical dramas never do chest compressions. It seems like faking chest compressions while making them look realistic would be very difficult, and doing real chest compressions to someone who doesn't need them can cause significant harm.
Use a dummie and CGI it lol
@@ChakraDragons It might not be that easy, i don't know because I don't do stuff like that, but It might not be as easy as it seems.
@@ChakraDragons Good CGI costs money. Money that most of these productions don’t have.
It’s so hard!!! I’m a theatre director and we had to do it for a show and it was super tricky. Luckily, it was only live streamed due to covid restrictions so we could make it look realistic toward the camera and not have to worry about audience members on the sides!
Two things
1) THANK YOU FOR MENTIONING THE PHARMACY. I worked in a hospital inpatient pharmacy for a while and honestly it was kind of disheartening how we were treated.
2) in response to that spider story, my aunt found a spider in her car while she was driving (she has arachnophobia) and she flipped her car. Three times. Miraculously she was basically unharmed. First thing my dad asked, “well did you kill the spider at least?”
Spiders in cars are certainly no joke. Some people I knew in high school were killed because they rolled the car when the passengers in the back were panicking over a spider. Really glad your aunt survived. (Also kudos to your dad, 10/10 dark humour dad joke).
God I hope the spider is dead and in the video i would do the same thing I don't do spiders not matter how big or small
I'm just imagining bein' a spider, cruisin' along, mindin my own business, when suddenly the car I've made my home turns into a laundry spin cycle. "WHOOoooOOOOAaaaaaAAHHH!"
Legend has it, the spider is still out there...somewhere...
I know! I'm a technician in a retail pharmacy, and no one ever remembers us!
I'm not a doctor, I'm a medical social worker who mostly works with senior adults and adults with disabilities. I had this one client with mod-severe dementia and he couldn't remember people's names, but he could play tons of song on the piano from memory! The brain and its physiology are so amazing and interesting!
He was really excited about Bear being a Pokémon card 🥺😂
Is he a POK-E-MON 😍
666? Your likes don't worry I'll make it 667😄
I’m gonna go and make him a pokemon card now
☺ Bear is so cute
That dentist explainer literally had the most perfect teeth I’ve ever seen.
They were a little creepy, reminded me of Ross
My grandfather was a dentist and my mom worked in the front office. If you go in you’ll notice all of them have really nice, white teeth. It’s part of advertising the business. If the people working there have nice teeth, you’ll surely have nice teeth in the end too! My mom (and probably everyone else there) was required to bleach their teeth constantly to make sure they were prestigiously white
@ً You could become specialist after that that Like OMFS which has very high demand ❤️
@@vjapple3083 like with real bleach? or is there like a special bleach
@@confused_shark2537 pretty sure it’s just straight up bleach. It’s applied for a limited time using a mouth retainer and then removed as far as I remember. Idk, I haven’t used them myself
As a human biologist, it's always been fascinating how different parts of the brain have these unique functions. The pituary gland influences our growth through growth hormones and in the hippocampus we find cells which tells us where we are positioned. Then very close we can find the suprachiasmatic nucleus which controls our sleep and appetite and if we lose that then we cannot sleep properly anymore (I just made a video about this). It's so cool how different brain regions got their unique abilities!
As a human, I agree
I do too
And atheists still say that we dont have a creator. Like how can such a complex system can just be formed over the course of millions of years.
@@abdullraheemmahmood6237 Just because you can't imagine it, that doesn't mean you are right
@@akoto6351 you do realize this answer of yours can very well fit in existence of God.
I would like to say thank you to all CNAs (Certified Nursing Assistant) too. I feel like they need to get notice too to all of their hard work in the hospitals or in a Nursing Homes. They’re also part of a medical team everywhere together with the RNs. So again thank you CNAs for your hard work.
Yeah my daughter has a tumour on her pituitary gland, she’s had it removed once, but it grew back after surgery. It’s caused Cushings which causes gigantism. It breaks my heart. But she had a miracle baby last year after being told she probably won’t. ❤️
congratulations!!! 🥺 Must have been hard on all of you. It was crushing for my mom when she tried to have a baby before having me.
The way Doctor Mike talks to Bear is the cutest thing ever
I know right omg ❤
“Here’s the worst part of the story, having to call my Russian angry Soviet father”
-mike 2021
Best Quote Ever
My sister and I got into a similar car accident once right next to our house. Car was totaled but we were so scared of my Armenian Soviet dad that we didn’t call him and instead called our mom who was an hour away 😂 I’m still traumatized I feel you Dr. Mike
My father was just training me and my brothers tbh he was never scary to call since we didn't even jave the guts to say hi on the phone with him
I read it as
Having to call my angry Russian father
Soviet father
Must be watching Bald and Bankrupt
3:07
my aunt is actually a nurse in the ICU and it's true:
nurses are very underappreciated and deserve more acknowledgement.
Go nurses! 👍
"I'm never telling that story anymore," he says as he tells us this story for the second or third time on this channel
I'm happy about it.. I had already forgotten again. Makes me feel better about being terrified of spiders
Omgg ikrr
Lol first time hearing it 😄
1. Love how excited Mr. Mike gets over Bear Possibly being a Pokémon!! 2. Bear needs a tiny kitty!
there is another common acronym we use a lot in emergencies/OTs:
SOB: Shortness of Breath
but it can be mistaken for a slang in outer environment as Son Of B**ch
In my hospital shortness of great his know as SOB1 and Son of a b℅℅ch as SOB2
"Is the patient experiencing SOB?"
"Well, I mean, they cursed at me, but I don't think they're that bad..."
im in emt school and i read it as both simultaneously, and giggle every time XD
@@skyeageddes700 I had a stroke
sea of barbers
Mike’s excitement when he thought they were making bear a Pokémon card 🤣 2:02
I’m a memory care nurse and I have so many patients who are so talented at playing piano. Even some who can no longer communicate verbally still remember how to play the piano. It’s so fun to see a glimpse of who they were before dementia❤️
What a nicely positive way of framing stuff 😀
I have work with dementia patients and i've studied music and i am so interested in music therapy for this reason.
My grandmother had dementia and was in her 90’s she played the organ and even though she couldn’t remember what she did 10 minutes ago, she could still play all the hymns she played in church by memory.
It is called muscle memory
@@ravza1382 no,its not muscle memory. For pianists, muscle memory only helps to find the keys.
Remembering the pattern in which the keys should be played in a song and with which rhythm and at what time with what chords is all mental memory(i'm talking from experience)
Ps. Its great that your grandma could do that I can't remember what my piano teacher taught me last week LOL.
@@vijayarani2562 actually it is muscle memory i hadnt played fur elise in like 2 years and i suddenly got reminded of it and played it and it was all in the correct order!
@@prachiprallubdhakar Yeah, but that's the memory in your brain. He even explained it in the video that there are different brain parts for conscious memory and for musical memory.
These people are really creative
First reply hii I see u everywhere
you are an alien
You are everywhere
I should call the police 🤣😂
Im here
I love when people tell their embarrassing stories, doesn't make me laugh it makes me feel better about myself and being human and mistakes and stupid things happen to EVERYONE!
"There was a spider" is a perfectly valid reason for crashing a car in my book.
Especially in the us where several Very lethal ones lives. Here in Sweden a different story But I still Don’t like them.
That's me driving off the cliff when there's a spider
Especially when you're in Utah and it's the big annual migration
i would literally die if that happened to me. Not even from a crush just instantly
Yes it is! Especially that huge! Looks like it's from freakin Australia lol could not imagine having a spider in your car there!
5:14 the lady had dementia and was still able to play the third movement of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, which while not being the most technically difficult piece on piano is still a feat when you have dementia. The piece is rather fast and has a lot going on all at once.
"DID THEY MAKE HIM A POKÉMON CARD?!?!?!?!?"
the pure joy i love it
And then the disappointment when he realized it wasn't 😔
SOMEBODY PLS MAKE HIM A POKEMON CARDDDDDDD
Yeah that was kinda cute 🥰
Do you possibly know the name of the song that's played there ?
You have actually helped me because I actually want to be a nurse when I grow up thank you for your service
“...yeah I’m not going to tell that story anymore”
-Dr. Mike, after exposing himself wrecking his car over a spider
That is probably how i would reck a car😂😭
@@katmable1839 no fr i would rather die by driving off a cliff because a really big spider appeared in my car than letting it get close to me
If Dr. Mike doesn't get Bear a kitten I will be heart broken. BEAR DESERVES A KITTY FRIEND
Yeah, I agree with you. Petition to Dr. Mike for getting a kitty cat for Bear
@@gamercatswonderland9322 all in favor say I. I
@@juniperbliss4815 I.
@@gamercatswonderland9322 Id be scared he'd eat the kitten. He seems well trained, but you never know with animals.
@@ellybean7354 But if Bear doesn’t know what a kitty is it is likely that he will be soft and curious about it more than harsh to the tiny being
"While you're masticating"
Yeah, I totally heard that right the first time
I'm sure we all did
Doctor Mike, I just wanted to say that I really appreciate your videos, I like listening to them when I’m drawing or working. Thanks for doing what you do and not giving up.
I’m a medical laboratory scientist and I just wanted to thank you for giving lab employees a shoutout!! ☺️
what do you guys do
@@graceybeingracey That's the job for chemists
👏 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@@weball7899 "Does this blood look red to you?"
"Steve that's a glass of milk again"
But Lab techs would do the testing of bloods and all that stuff I'm guessing, could even refer to people that fix equipment and keep it running, but my main bet is it's a catch all term for doctor's who work on treating people but don't actually meet or interact with the people they treat.
Dear dr.mike,I was able to save my dad from a heart attack because of you I watch your videos and learn about medical stuff and I was doing CPR until emergency services arrived
I'm so happy for you. I hope he is okay 😊💕
💜🥰✨
Thanks he is doing better
He has been a full recovery
@@carterbutler1797 thats good
Did he survive?
You can't ruin medical dramas for me. My parents did that when I was a child. Now I just laugh at them.
Me too. My father is a pharmacist with lots of doctor Friends so he would just explain everytime lol
Yup me too!
Your videos are so educational and inspire me to learn more about the human body☑️
Tik Tok shows a lot of very strange videos 👀
Yeah, but i think people still watch it
oh hi samira
100%
LMAO YESS
Yeah
I have a newfie and she's OBSESSED with cats, it's the cutest thing ever. I do recommend you get a cat sibling for Bear!
I had a 102 year old dementia/Alzheimer’s resident who could barely even feed herself anymore, BUT she was able to play the piano during the holidays!! It was amazing to see!
I also work with residents with dementia/alzhimers and have seen things like that. The brain is so frkn fascinating!!!
Aw
"I started screaming and crying" oh you precious precious man 😭💕
Dr. Mike: "Hey, i'm gonna translate this real fast."
*throws a bunch of disease-names, diagnoses, medical words around
Me, a german with like 2% of medical vocabulary: "I could google all of those... bit it's 2am and I'm tired."
hey from what part are you? Greats from Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
@@judithmohring855 Greetings from South Hessen :D
greetings from NRW
greetings from South Bavaria
@@azarath886
Greetings from Greece
That girl with the blue lips is pretty much every little kid at the pool in the summer.
Mom: come out and warm up! Your lips are blue!
Kid: B-b-b-but I'm n-n-not c-c-c-coooooldddd * shivers violently *
Unless you live somewhere in the mid or northern parts of the world (northern hemisphere) or opposite (southern hemisphere)... then you're wrong. As a southerner from the US, pools are literally NEVER cold in the summer here. In my area, summers get as hot as 110 Fahrenheit and pools will feel about 30-35 degrees cooler AT MOST (unless it is in deep shade).
Also, side note, I go up on commercial building roofs a lot and summer makes those white, reflective roofs feel like 150-165 degrees. -- (by reflective, I mean light colors reflecting hwaf like how darks colors do the opposite and absorb heat).
I just commented that-
But true-
Yeah, I live in the Northeast of the US, and I will admit that I was that kind of kid.
Lol
There is one thing to be feared more than death itself:
A Russian angry Soviet father.
An Italian one is pretty scary too 😅
@@erikajoyal765 You-a make-a me sick
(Like that? :3)
@@justinbrown6233 I had a hard time pronouncing what you said
@@msducc Which part?
@TRAN CAO Uh oh- I won't even ask XD
my brother was a nurse on the covid floor. he left nursing because it was stressful but im still proud of him.
My aunt was the first known person to be born without a thyroid. She has a whole medical paper written about her
interesting fact
Wow
How long did it take the doctors to realize she didn’t have one?
Also could you link the papers please? That would be a very interesting read.
@@comfort1569 yess
Everyone laughed at his story "I'm not telling that story anymore" still proceeds to tell everyone the story haha
I'm just gonna wait here till bear gets a friend cat...
Same!! Waiting for that to happen!
Also love your username😂😂 relatable
@@a_dsr4467 I love your name too LOL. Hope you find yourself 😄😘
We all need bear to have a cat and I love both of yalls names!!
Bear needs a little Siamese kitten!
Good, now we won't be alone while we wait
part of the reason I watch doctor mike is because he is a funny guy but also because I learn new stuff every video.I never knew that for chest compressions you needed to go 2 inches deep with a rhythm to effectively restart the heart.Thanks doctor mike!
I was in hospital a week ago due to an undiagnosed pain in my hip/leg and the nurses were so helpful and caring. Thank you nurses.
Wait same
Dr Mike translating medical abbreviation "CABG"
Me: lol ᶜᵃᵇᵇᵃᵍᵉ
MY CABBAGES
Hey!
How do you make those small letters?
That's cool
Me too bwahaha, I've just finished studying Horticulture😂
@@oddeda it's an app called "fonts" :P
ⁿ⁰
“Why did you hit our car”
*there was a spider*
**understandable have a great day**
Reading this after he told the story and that everyone loved at him made my laugh last so much longer thank you
But I love spiders ;-;
@@mx.lilith666 not me lol
I did this to a mail box when I was a teen. My dad did not believe this was why I hit a mail box.
Bruh no cap that would be me
Not Bear listening SO INTENTLY. I CAN'T. Someone do chest compressions, I'm dying of cuteness. 💀😍
It always amazes me when I ever hear a doctor use medical terms because the terms mostly come from Greek (and my first language is Greek). That way I can know exactly what a medical term means in English, while to English people it sounds like gibberish. And then someone asks me “Are you a medical student?” “No, I’m Greek.” 😂👍
oh right, hence why the corona virus variations are all Greek letters, for example
@@NickRoman and physics units!
Similarly, once in class my teacher asked how to spell something and I said "It sounds Latin" and spelled it for him. He looked it up and I spelled it correctly so he asked if I knew Latin and I was just like "No, but knowing where words come from helps you spell them"
@@jennastewart7290 basic tips for spellers.
Σκέφτομαι το ίδιο πράγμα κάθε φορά που βλέπω τα βίντεο του. Το ωραίο είναι να μπορείς να μαντεύεις ονόματα για παθήσεις, αρρώστιες και φοβίες χωρίς να το έχεις ακούσει πρώτα, στους αγγλόφωνους φαίνεται εντυπωσιακό
Dr. Mike’s dog “bear” proves his Russian roots 😂
Omg yesss👁👄👁❤️
Yaaaaaaaaassss
Nah then he would name him “Mishka” which in Russian, translates to “bear” I know bc my cat is named mishka
The way bear listens intently like he understand wth so cute
H e d o u n d e r s t a n d
Sometimes I forget how ridiculously large Bear is and then Mike will call him over and Bear is just bigger than he is.
Imagine having the entire hospital laugh at your story of having your knee dislocate. Painful, but at least it helped them destress that day.
okay but the way she said "I don't know it" and then IMMEDIATELY started playing so beautifully made me cry
"A spider must be exterminated by any means necessary!"
-Dr. Mike
3:25 just imagine if the cat scratched their arm.
He would be dead
It will be like:👁👄👁
💧
Oh lord, the pain
My arms feel weird know. Thank u
@@peanutbutterman411 the PAINNNN🥴🥴🥴🥴
health care assistants deserve some love, not just nurses. They work so hard!
3:21 Feel free to add cleaning workers to that list. I honestly do not understand why nobody mentions them. Imagine anything without cleaning, let alone hospitals. Cheers.
He did thank them also! Environmental staff within the hospital system and medical field encompass sanitation and cleaning staff. I completely agree that they can be under appreciated. They are absolutely crucial, not only in patient experience, but infection control as well, and they have been working incredibly hard during COVID.
@@lmfao1987 So they fall under environmental staff? didnt know that. tnx :D
“try massaging your masseter while you’re masticating”
- Dr Mike
Well, okay, but I think that might be frowned upon in public...
I did it. It was nice. I'm glad I don't live with anyone though.
i read that reaaaally wrong
@@IceMetalPunk 0-0 XD
@@kaazledazzle6891 -cough- -cough-
*masticating*
When I was working at an aged care home, It had 3 floors with a piano at the bottom, this man had some form of dementia, and all the time he would walk around with his shoe box filled with piano music, and would very often want to go down but would keep forgetting. I had to keep taking him down the elevator and to the piano, but once he got there he played the most amazing music, and it was really something.
😁
You did a good thing for someone who needed a little help to find a little happiness. Take this with you all your life. I hope everyone who needs kindness when they are lost has someone like you to help guir them those last few steps.
These make my day, can’t wait for you to reach 10 million!! Love ya keep up the good work!! ❤️
The spider story got me. 😂 It was so funny and he's so cute. I wish I was there that time so I could see what would his expression look like. That poor spider made many people laugh even after getting hit by a wallet and even until now. RIP. 😅
me who gets 9+ hours of sleep a night, still feels tired and has to take a 2 hour nap every day just to function 😃
You are not alone😅 me my boyfriend an my mom have the same thing😂
@@xkatjejonise5735 that’s so cute.. that’s like more free cuddle time 😂
Same man ;-; expect I don’t take names Q-Q
@@Camille-rb4ge bwhahahhaha thats truee😂 me and my mom have a chronic illness, which basically means we are in pain all the time. My mucles and joint are bad and i also have very bad astma. So all those things combined and the illness ib itself cause for chronic tiredness. So i basically need atleast 9 a 10 hours sleep to function, but i can sleep up to 12 hours if no one wakes ne up😅.
When im really sick (my illness causes for a really low immune system) or when i have an astma attack i can spontaniously get very tired any moment of the day. And my boyfriend does power naps in the afternoon sometimes after work so that he has enough energy to get through the day. So he askes me to stay in bed with him so that he can fall asleep while i cuddle him xP🥰 which is indeed very cutee🥰
When i am tired too i will sleep with him too. But sometimes i cant fall asleep but make myself even more tired and thats really bad for my brain haha. And the other day i woke up and i thought it was the next morning. Forgetting i already had started the day but just took a power nap and it being the afternoon. I was reallyyy confused.
(My illness also causes a very very bad memory😅 and im really young so no one believes me. I forget very inportant meetings, stuff from school, even promises i make to friends family and my boyfriend. It often makes me sad. Its really difficult.)
Same
If I were sick and the doctors start speaking medical parables in my presence like that
I would just faint.
For the braces elastics, it could be that the client got jaw surgery recently and these elastics help hold everything in place to heal properly..
"DID THEY MAKE HIM A POKEMON CARD..??"
His face while seeing BEAR's Instagram just added 20yrs to my life...
My bipolar disorder is acting up again and I've had an aweful week full of depression... The way you said "but there was a spider" made me laugh so hard that I almost peed my pants.
your pfp is awesome and i hope your having a good day
Hope your are having a good day ❤♥️
Am i the only other one here who has the same level of fear
@@reason4ace don't worry. My best friend would have probably jumped out of the moving car in his situation ^^'
@@prismmioouu thanks
Did anyone else notice how when he says "chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions" e says it at a 100 bpm pace, which if you remember it at that speed can save somebody's life by just repeating the phrase over and over.
ooooh, good listen! I still go by the "Stayin' Alive" beat thing...
That’s the point :)
Those "paintings" on the wall are perfection! Brilliant!
I’m just really excited that he has actual captions, not the auto generated ones-
Bear would have "pee-woof" as a pokemon attack
Yas
Yoooo that’s so cute!
Bear would have “ Slobber attack, Floof blow” and comfy cuddle ( he wants to cuddle his opponent to death )
Bear use Bear hug.
@Caleigh Lindhorn yes
@@WorldofWarcraftfan02 lol
My dog just uses headbutt
bears so cute! also SLOBBER ATTACK XD anyways anybody know what breed bear is? owo? im curious-
I'm a massage therapist & definitely find face massage is super important for anyone who suffers from headaches & migraines.
Often, people clench 😬 or grind their teeth, making the neck into shoulders tight, which causes headache & migraine. Sometimes I can get through a whole massage & the face is the most relieving area for clients 😬 I'll ask in beginning do you clench or grind & it's usually something they aren't aware of. Wanted to see you in Philadelphia on the 20th it says sold out. Hope your tour goes amazing & stay safe always ❣️