this is insane. why aren’t there more doctors coming in to assist the patient and injured victim? why is this extreme procedure going on in an ER? what is going on?
its not an extreme procedure...resuscitating patients is an everyday thing in most ERs. But usually there are more staff around even in small and rural ERs....even the janitor can help with CPR
When I was in school for respiratory therapy we had a cardiac arrest on one of the floors and since my preceptor was on the rapid response/code team we went to the code. I was the one who was to shock the patient (also I had been a paramedic for several years by this point and I’ve shocked patients in cardiac arrest before so I knew what to do). At some point the patient went into v-fib or v-tach and was shocked. Here was the issue…I never yelled “I’m clear, you are clear, we are all clear” and look around before shocking and the nurse who was doing CPR freaked because he was still touching the patient and doing CPR until I’m ready to shock so he rightfully jumped down my throat right? The problem was….i never hit the shock button. How did that happen then if I never hit the shock button and I was about to yell and make sure all was clear before pushing shock when the patient appeared to have shocked. He had an internal pacemaker with a defibrillator so when his internal defibrillator went off it made the patient jump similar to when we shock them. When that happens the person doing CPR or touching the patient won’t get shocked at all.
Everyone knows to yell “I’m clear, you’re clear, we’re all clear” by the person shocking the patient and that person looks at everyone to make sure they heard you. This should never happen!
If they were able to transfer these two cardiac arrests upstairs then that means there has to be other doctors in that hospital. Page the hospitalist, intensivists and anesthesiologists. They would be the best ones to lead a cardiac arrest. Paramedics as well. I was a paramedic and have run many codes while getting the IO or IV in, worked the monitor and shocked if necessary, push IV meds, and intubated and all of that while being in charge of the code. Thankfully I’ve never had two at the same time. In this case in the video they should have been able to get doctors from the floors or ICU to go to the ER
@@Matt-pj1zl I worked in the hospital as a respiratory therapist so I do know what I’m talking about and I’ve also been on the rapid response teams and cardiac arrest response teams. When a code blue gets called in the hospital on the floors there are usually either ER doctors or ICU that will respond to run the codes. They don’t call code blues in the ER because there are doctors that are already down there and in the ICU they may call code blue there and definitely on the floors since there may not be any doctors on that floor at that time. You have to have someone run the codes and I’ve run codes when I was a paramedic as well as performing the IO or IV, give meds, intubate and so on. In many cases I was the only medic there with EMT-B. So yes I do know what I’m talking about when I’ve been to a lot of cardiac arrests. Maybe you don’t know
@@debrakleid5752I think you have a point, but what this video doesn't show is the full timeframe that this happened in and when they were transferred to the cardiac floor.
YES the nurse shd have called CLEAR before shocking the patient BUT the doc also shd have instantly BACKED OFF when he saw the nurse place both paddles on the patients chest, i know I wd have backed off, regardless....
That’s not how it works though because they put the pads on the chest before it’s full charged, so they have to continue CPR manually until the person yells clear.
I’m sorry I had to stop watching the second I saw those chest compressions. I understand you can’t give actual chest compressions to a conscious person without them obviously being hurt and fighting back, but these are *so bad*. At least get some camera angles in to make it LOOK like you’re giving actual chest compressions 😭
It’s ridiculous, you have two cardiac arrests going on but only four staff available with only one doctor doing CPR and three stand by? It would be 15 people in room working on this extremely critical situation while overhead announcement announcing to the entire hospital.
@traceyharrison973 It was an accident. This doesn't happen very often, and it's usually a light shock that they feel. She had to fill out an accident report. I hope you have a fantastic day Tracey🙂⚘️.
@janettewebster2151 Yes, he did Janette. Sorry for taking so long to respond, but I was over watching videos from Full Throttle TV2. I hope you have a wonderful day 🙂⚘️.
The person who push the shock button must yell I’m clear, you are clear? Everybody clear? and see everyone’s hands in the air before push the button, it’s the policy!
Ok, where do I start? They're using two different defibrillators, 3 decades apart. They wouldn't be using a Datascope M/D 3 in the 2000's. Why is the RN delivering the shock to the first patient, when the physician is clearly there? You NEVER put a patient on a vent during a code, you always bag them. Lastly, only ONE physician in the entire facility??? Please.
Why? Is she super human and never makes mistakes? He was just as guilty letting his stethoscope and necklace touch the patient....shouldn't have been wearing a necklace for that reason. If ever nurse who made a mistake was fired, there wouldn't be any nurses. Nurses are humans....they make mistakes every day
Terry Foster is an outstanding nurse. He should be a doctor 😷. I'm happy that both patients recovered. Have a great day ❤️🙂⚘️🏥.
That's Nurse Terry: I LOVE him!! -You rock, Nurse Terry!!
Terry is the best nurse that I have ever seen!!!
Incredible ... keeping calm in the face of a double cardiac events❗
Poor doctor!
My favorite Nurse
this is insane. why aren’t there more doctors coming in to assist the patient and injured victim? why is this extreme procedure going on in an ER? what is going on?
its not an extreme procedure...resuscitating patients is an everyday thing in most ERs. But usually there are more staff around even in small and rural ERs....even the janitor can help with CPR
This is a reenactment, so it may not show the exact number of people in the room at the time it happened in real life.
This is a reconstruction and also includes dramatic music.
That was intense 😮sitting at wedge of my seat. Blessing to that nurse
Where's the rest of the video? If your going to have videos on here at least you can have the whole thing!
I know humans make mistakes, but this is awful.
When I was in school for respiratory therapy we had a cardiac arrest on one of the floors and since my preceptor was on the rapid response/code team we went to the code. I was the one who was to shock the patient (also I had been a paramedic for several years by this point and I’ve shocked patients in cardiac arrest before so I knew what to do). At some point the patient went into v-fib or v-tach and was shocked. Here was the issue…I never yelled “I’m clear, you are clear, we are all clear” and look around before shocking and the nurse who was doing CPR freaked because he was still touching the patient and doing CPR until I’m ready to shock so he rightfully jumped down my throat right? The problem was….i never hit the shock button. How did that happen then if I never hit the shock button and I was about to yell and make sure all was clear before pushing shock when the patient appeared to have shocked. He had an internal pacemaker with a defibrillator so when his internal defibrillator went off it made the patient jump similar to when we shock them. When that happens the person doing CPR or touching the patient won’t get shocked at all.
WOW......what a story, with a miraculous outcome!!! 🙏👍
Everyone knows to yell “I’m clear, you’re clear, we’re all clear” by the person shocking the patient and that person looks at everyone to make sure they heard you. This should never happen!
If they were able to transfer these two cardiac arrests upstairs then that means there has to be other doctors in that hospital. Page the hospitalist, intensivists and anesthesiologists. They would be the best ones to lead a cardiac arrest. Paramedics as well. I was a paramedic and have run many codes while getting the IO or IV in, worked the monitor and shocked if necessary, push IV meds, and intubated and all of that while being in charge of the code. Thankfully I’ve never had two at the same time.
In this case in the video they should have been able to get doctors from the floors or ICU to go to the ER
Yeah the story sounds weird
Or you just don’t know what you’re talking about
There’s no time for that.
@@Matt-pj1zl I worked in the hospital as a respiratory therapist so I do know what I’m talking about and I’ve also been on the rapid response teams and cardiac arrest response teams. When a code blue gets called in the hospital on the floors there are usually either ER doctors or ICU that will respond to run the codes. They don’t call code blues in the ER because there are doctors that are already down there and in the ICU they may call code blue there and definitely on the floors since there may not be any doctors on that floor at that time. You have to have someone run the codes and I’ve run codes when I was a paramedic as well as performing the IO or IV, give meds, intubate and so on. In many cases I was the only medic there with EMT-B. So yes I do know what I’m talking about when I’ve been to a lot of cardiac arrests. Maybe you don’t know
@@debrakleid5752I think you have a point, but what this video doesn't show is the full timeframe that this happened in and when they were transferred to the cardiac floor.
YES the nurse shd have called CLEAR before shocking the patient BUT the doc also shd have instantly BACKED OFF when he saw the nurse place both paddles on the patients chest, i know I wd have backed off, regardless....
That’s not how it works though because they put the pads on the chest before it’s full charged, so they have to continue CPR manually until the person yells clear.
No she didn't. She did not clear the second time. The first time yes, not the second.
@@mellie4174 yes thats what i said.
I would have moved to but 110v from the light socket was enough to get my attention.
I’m sorry I had to stop watching the second I saw those chest compressions. I understand you can’t give actual chest compressions to a conscious person without them obviously being hurt and fighting back, but these are *so bad*. At least get some camera angles in to make it LOOK like you’re giving actual chest compressions 😭
There's a lot more wrong with this scene buddy.
It’s ridiculous, you have two cardiac arrests going on but only four staff available with only one doctor doing CPR and three stand by? It would be 15 people in room working on this extremely critical situation while overhead announcement announcing to the entire hospital.
I wonder if that nurse got into trouble . First time she said all clear so why not say it the second time or some kind of fine or etc .
That wasted right 😢 do something right now people
Should of called another code
Nice
Is this for real 😮
What about the actual patient 🤔
Yes, it's real. Terry Foster the nurse talking is fantastic. He has been a nurse for many years. I hope you have a great day 🙂⚘️.
@donnamitchell7707 Did the patient live?
What happened to the nurse who shocked him
@traceyharrison973 It was an accident. This doesn't happen very often, and it's usually a light shock that they feel. She had to fill out an accident report. I hope you have a fantastic day Tracey🙂⚘️.
@janettewebster2151 Yes, he did Janette. Sorry for taking so long to respond, but I was over watching videos from Full Throttle TV2. I hope you have a wonderful day 🙂⚘️.
I thought the title said he died
The person who push the shock button must yell I’m clear, you are clear? Everybody clear? and see everyone’s hands in the air before push the button, it’s the policy!
The nurse needs to work on his compressions lol
Seems someone could have come sooner to help. Was on Code Team in a Huge hospital & our response time was Fast!!
Too much talking
People think this is real? This place is full of idiots.
And why is she still working on the patient and not removed if this was real life she would so so he removed
Terry needs to be a nurse practitioner
Ok, where do I start? They're using two different defibrillators, 3 decades apart. They wouldn't be using a Datascope M/D 3 in the 2000's. Why is the RN delivering the shock to the first patient, when the physician is clearly there? You NEVER put a patient on a vent during a code, you always bag them. Lastly, only ONE physician in the entire facility??? Please.
Its entertainment you doofus, of course its not 100% accurate.
She should be fired for that
Why? Is she super human and never makes mistakes? He was just as guilty letting his stethoscope and necklace touch the patient....shouldn't have been wearing a necklace for that reason. If ever nurse who made a mistake was fired, there wouldn't be any nurses. Nurses are humans....they make mistakes every day
nurse fired?
Crikey!
Don’t think this is real
They murdered him he died
😮
😂 what in the world
3:10
Thats COOL. FUNNY 😂⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡
Is that a real show?
real situations, but fake reinactments
This is Fake!
These are dramatized for TV...
@@Wolfqueen007 Ive seen way better performances on ER.
@@smorris281again it’s for TV..