after all the episodes of patients being dramatic over being wrong or just being straight up entitled, this was a fresh breath of air for me seeing how the wife, despite being a professional neurologist, didn't let her profession's status get into her head and believed dr charles.
I think that’s often how it goes as long as the doctor who’s on the other side isn’t arrogant. When you have no education in that field it’s harder to comprehend how much doctors actually know
Not to mention she didn't care tgat he went behind their backs to take the MRI. She understands if a doctor has a hunch it is always best to be safe rather than sorry. She was the freshest breath of air
@@gia9551 Actually, Arrogance can have two sides in the medical field. My mother and brother work there, and arrogant doctors often are the most proactive individuals; especially in surgery there total focus and ego's can transition into decisive action and they demand total control once a patient comes in and especially when complications happen is surgery. Some can have personal networks to temper those attitudes, but real world doctors can make beneficial contributions in the medical field due to intense arrogance.
When I read the title, I thought it would be an arrogant doctor who would deny her mistake or a spiteful spouse getting revenge. A loving wife who didn't got all the facts... I did not see coming.
Tbf on her she did have all the facts, as Dr Charles pointed out back 4 years ago that tumour would not be big enough to be picked up so the only diagnosis would of been the one she gave.
Absolutely love how when Dr. Charles apologized for doing an unauthorized scan the wife didn't even blink and went straight to talking about her husband's condition. There was no arrogance, no holding on to her own (and her 2nd and 3rd opinion) diagnosis. It really shows how much she loves her husband. I wish we see more of this in medical dramas.
I agree, most families of patients aren't as dramatic and infuriating as the ones on medical shows. Don't get me wrong you do get the odd overbearing mother or something but never as much thats shows on these shows.
It also shows that she's a medical professional. She immediately tries to understand what she did wrong and looks out for what is actually wrong with her patient.
To add to this the only reason Dr. Charles was able to catch the subtle hints was because so much time has passed and he was a third person party. He legit said it himself there was no way to see the melanoma before it grew to a certain size.
confermation bias, they confermed what she diagnosticated without making their own diagnosis. It's quite common. And also, this is medicine, cardiologists will only see heart problems, neurologists only brain problems, dermatologist only skin problems. Bias is hard to overcome
SL BW No, but what it speaks to is creating a protocol to prevent or flag cases where there are multiple possibilities. This is something that can be assisted by technology built into patient files. Diagnoses should be revisited on a regular schedule. Misdiagnosis is still a major cause of fatality.
Syntheticspring especially that this type is like she said had all the symptoms like a textbook case that by that time no could hav spotted a tumour so I can’t blame the wife
I am a veterinarian. Had to have brain surgery few years ago. We don't perform neurosurgery in VM, but that doesn't mean I don't understand the terminology. You should have seen how happy my neurosurgeon was when I told him I am a vet and I don't need explanations in 'normal language' He was literally beaming 😂 I know how frustrating it can be. Even as a vet-I sometimes find myself in similar situations with animal owners. By no means am I saying these people are bad animal owners-but sometimes owners don't understand the simplest things. Then it's my duty to try and explain things.
We have an HCA in a care home who became a resident there after working for half a century. It really helps because she is with other residents every day and has the insight and knowledge thats useful for us
Mervyn Anip me when my grandpa went to hospital earlier this year, it was so funny cause he was like an Angel and then would be like no including all the medical jargon
The way the wife and the husband were more worried for each other than themselves, the way the husband is pained by him hurting his wife, the way the wife reassures him and calls him my love.....it is so beautiful and sad.
Mad respect for that wife, I expected for the wife to be an arrogant stuck up doctor but she I’m glad that was wrong and also mad respect for that actress
Totally relate to that: I was once admitted to hospital with a ruptured appendix and my surgeon and my dad (who is also a surgeon) started speaking with all their medical jargon and I was just like :)
You really got to feel for this woman. She did everything right and came to a logical conclusion, he was right in that the tumour was so small no scan would have caught it. No tumour, no reason to suspect anything else.
Mad respect for the wife, who understood why dr. charles had to do the scan w/out her consent , to better diagnose and treat her husband. The perfect balance of Wife-- who wants the best for her husband-- and Doctor-- who understands that it is also their duty to do as Dr. Charles did, to better treat the patient. Great character!
I love how open-minded the neurologist is. I mean she made a grave mistake 4 years ago and realized if her husband is not admitted to the hospital. What are the odds?0
She may be old, but she is a good thinker. And when that poor guys pressure raised. She stayed strong, I should say that she used to be a great doctor before retirement
@@squidsquid285 I am just saying that as a fan. And I am not hallucinating that the characters they portray is who they really are. This was supposed to be a funny comment. Not my problem if you can't get the humor in it.
This can happen because, since the actress was already familiar with using the medical jargon from a previous role, they deliver the lines better than anyone else during their auditions.
This is absolutely heartbreaking for both of them. The fact you are losing the function in your mind and can't control your actions and hurting someone you love must be terrifying and so upsetting. And for her the fact that she is losing the man she loves and the fact that she misdiagnosed him must be shattering
i’ve been binge watching so many episodes of Chicago Med and im so in awe at how doctors nurses psychiatrist acquire so much knowledge of the human anatomy and brain
She shouldn't be too hard on herself no one could have seen that it would have been two different things making one giant mess. Even Dr Charles didn't know what he was looking for he just had an idea about what it wasn't not what it was
I met a person who actually had this type of dementia on an internship in a senior home. I was fifteen, so they told me the simple version of what this illness is: it comes with sensory disturbances that makes everyone and everything look like monsters. I was only allowed to approach him from behind, I was made aware that he would hit and kick me otherwise - because from his point of view, that would have been self-defence. Imagine how scary this disease must be! He was quite young as well, died at 58, I believe.
That’s why they say doctors should never treat their own family members as they don’t see out of the box , and may take decisions which may cause harm to the patient,,
The poor woman she thinks its all her fault but she did everything she was meant to do she got a second and third opinion she had the tests done but that kind of guilt doesn't go away easily
@@rubygilmore878 people have been saying "first!" Since at least 2010 RayWilliamJohnson pointed it out on =3 around that time. That's the earliest I know of , but it could be even older. It did not start on Tik Tok 😂
My granddad died of dementia a few weeks ago, and he had Parkinson's too. I don't know if he had LBD, or if it was too separate conditions, but what I DO know is that it took 15 years to finally beat him, and it was only about 5 of those that he started to lose his mind to the point of not being able to do things like cook, house fixing, drive etc. Before that, he was pretty much mostly cognitive. Just like this man. Do not blame the wife at all for misdiagnosing him.
Who else watches this so much that when you get a small ache or pain in ur chest or something u think it’s internal bleeding or something that might kill you? Anyone?
The one thing I still don't get...if it's been four years, shouldn't he have had multiple brain scans while undergoing cognitive therapy in order to judge the progression of his disease?
@@marielamodia1618 No that was to see the small tumor causing hormonal imbalance. By the sounds of it scans should have easily showed that his brain was healthy.
No. Not everyone can afford MRIs all the type. Most of the time neurological disorders are diagnosed by the symptoms. The hormonal imbalance which was the cause of his neurological symptoms were shown later after quetiapine and other medication he might have taken, so they thought it was the side effects, not the cause.its easy to misdiagnose those. Especially if someone isn't able to get full body scans all the time because of time and money issues
The thing is, she did everything right and it’s as Dr Charles said, at the time she diagnosed him she wouldn’t have been able to see the actual problem.
It's sad when the cop said "that's karma"...it shows how little people understand that dementia, illness, paranoia ect can cause violent outbursts...it doesn't always mean abuse.
"There are no tests that can definitively diagnose LBD. Currently, only a brain autopsy after death can confirm a suspected diagnosis. However, researchers are studying ways to diagnose LBD earlier and more accurately during life."
Honestly when I heard that I was like so why hasn't anyone thrown him out of the room or knocked him the f*ck out for speaking to their patient tight when he came in and needs help. If hes gonna trash talk patients do it outside of the room or wing on your bloody break. But hey its tv, if a nurse or doctor did that they'd be in some deep shit
They’re nothing alike and trust me I’ve watched teen wolf over 10 times if it’s because of the facial hair I get what u mean but then it’s just not in the same shape it’s similar and all... sounds sad that I know this
When the husband’s monitors went all off, and they were doing the ultrasound, I saw the expression on the wife’s face and I thought I know how that feels. My husband passed away on our front lawn June 2/21 and to find a neighbour doing CPR on him was such a shock when I had just been watching him, laughing with the other neighbour about a joke. To lose a person that you’ve been married to for years and years, and I deeply in love with, hurts so deep that your heart never does recover. I was never prepared to say goodbye.😔😔💔💔
I never know whether its better to be oblivious to whats happening and whats being said in situations like this, or be like the wife and understand everything going on but not be able to step in and help 😢
after all the episodes of patients being dramatic over being wrong or just being straight up entitled, this was a fresh breath of air for me seeing how the wife, despite being a professional neurologist, didn't let her profession's status get into her head and believed dr charles.
I think that’s often how it goes as long as the doctor who’s on the other side isn’t arrogant. When you have no education in that field it’s harder to comprehend how much doctors actually know
@@gia9551 i suppose i will agree to that, yeah
Not to mention she didn't care tgat he went behind their backs to take the MRI. She understands if a doctor has a hunch it is always best to be safe rather than sorry. She was the freshest breath of air
Took the words right out of my mouth.
@@gia9551 Actually, Arrogance can have two sides in the medical field. My mother and brother work there, and arrogant doctors often are the most proactive individuals; especially in surgery there total focus and ego's can transition into decisive action and they demand total control once a patient comes in and especially when complications happen is surgery. Some can have personal networks to temper those attitudes, but real world doctors can make beneficial contributions in the medical field due to intense arrogance.
When I read the title, I thought it would be an arrogant doctor who would deny her mistake or a spiteful spouse getting revenge. A loving wife who didn't got all the facts... I did not see coming.
Tbf on her she did have all the facts, as Dr Charles pointed out back 4 years ago that tumour would not be big enough to be picked up so the only diagnosis would of been the one she gave.
PlayerNerfed plus she said she had 2 other doctors confirm her diagnosis
😊😊
Absolutely love how when Dr. Charles apologized for doing an unauthorized scan the wife didn't even blink and went straight to talking about her husband's condition. There was no arrogance, no holding on to her own (and her 2nd and 3rd opinion) diagnosis. It really shows how much she loves her husband. I wish we see more of this in medical dramas.
I agree, most families of patients aren't as dramatic and infuriating as the ones on medical shows. Don't get me wrong you do get the odd overbearing mother or something but never as much thats shows on these shows.
How does that work in terms of billing? Will the brain scan be charged to the wife and husband's medical bills still even if it was unauthorized?
It also shows that she's a medical professional. She immediately tries to understand what she did wrong and looks out for what is actually wrong with her patient.
😊
Hey, at least she admitted she was wrong. But I don't blame her, she couldn't have known the real cause. Not really.
Muttface McDerp I had to reply it annoyed me there was 1k likes and no reply’s
It was extremely similar to the disease she diagnosed his husband had. So yeah, I wouldn't know any better either though. Because I'm not a doctor.
To add to this the only reason Dr. Charles was able to catch the subtle hints was because so much time has passed and he was a third person party. He legit said it himself there was no way to see the melanoma before it grew to a certain size.
Plus she got second and third opinions and they all said the same thing
At least she realised she was wrong and that it was a mistake.
1k likes zero comments? Weird.
Pandagames now this will make two!
@@deadpoetssociety8162 Yup haha
Pandagames 3
SHANE!!!!!!!!!!!
It wasn't entirely her fault. She asked for a 2nd and 3rd opinion.
confermation bias, they confermed what she diagnosticated without making their own diagnosis. It's quite common. And also, this is medicine, cardiologists will only see heart problems, neurologists only brain problems, dermatologist only skin problems. Bias is hard to overcome
Syntheticspring the whole paragraph you just wrote doesn’t change the fact that it wasn’t entirely her fault
@@rea4177 yeah, it's not her fault, she misdiagnosed but she didn't do it on purpose, it's because of confermation bias
SL BW No, but what it speaks to is creating a protocol to prevent or flag cases where there are multiple possibilities. This is something that can be assisted by technology built into patient files. Diagnoses should be revisited on a regular schedule. Misdiagnosis is still a major cause of fatality.
Syntheticspring especially that this type is like she said had all the symptoms like a textbook case that by that time no could hav spotted a tumour so I can’t blame the wife
It always excites me when a doctor becomes a patient (or a patient's relative) and then starts talking all medical jargons to the attending physician.
I am a veterinarian. Had to have brain surgery few years ago. We don't perform neurosurgery in VM, but that doesn't mean I don't understand the terminology. You should have seen how happy my neurosurgeon was when I told him I am a vet and I don't need explanations in 'normal language' He was literally beaming 😂 I know how frustrating it can be. Even as a vet-I sometimes find myself in similar situations with animal owners. By no means am I saying these people are bad animal owners-but sometimes owners don't understand the simplest things. Then it's my duty to try and explain things.
7:26
We have an HCA in a care home who became a resident there after working for half a century. It really helps because she is with other residents every day and has the insight and knowledge thats useful for us
@Tyler Toxic I'm pretty sure that's English
Mervyn Anip me when my grandpa went to hospital earlier this year, it was so funny cause he was like an Angel and then would be like no including all the medical jargon
The way the wife and the husband were more worried for each other than themselves, the way the husband is pained by him hurting his wife, the way the wife reassures him and calls him my love.....it is so beautiful and sad.
Mad respect for that wife, I expected for the wife to be an arrogant stuck up doctor but she I’m glad that was wrong and also mad respect for that actress
Your comment is not correct qua sentence could you maybe correct it for me it's hard to understand now
@@femkeroeloffzen2874 uh what
@@Catitalaratoncita "she im gald that was wrong"
This belongs on Netflix people have already said that but I don't really care
Its there on amazon prime
Typical .Oceanxo 666
anyone know any sites you can watch it on for free?
CubeCub I know lol but I still use them oops
You can watch it for free on 123movies
Totally relate to that: I was once admitted to hospital with a ruptured appendix and my surgeon and my dad (who is also a surgeon) started speaking with all their medical jargon and I was just like :)
When you can't tell if they're just speaking smart or your dying .
Lmaooooo
Cookie Craze lmaooo
@@cookiecraze1310 great one🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
this woman is so understanding I like her character like so damn much
You really got to feel for this woman. She did everything right and came to a logical conclusion, he was right in that the tumour was so small no scan would have caught it. No tumour, no reason to suspect anything else.
When she said ‘I’m here my love’ I was like awwww I want that🥺
Yes! That woman is such a keeper
I Want It Too🥺
Really... I found it corny and annoying lol
Imagine having someone care about you. I could never 😅😅😅😭
@@shimmershine6902
Sometimes, phrases used for our beloved partners can sound corny/cringy to others, but not to them. Sooo🙃
Mad respect for the wife, who understood why dr. charles had to do the scan w/out her consent , to better diagnose and treat her husband. The perfect balance of Wife-- who wants the best for her husband-- and Doctor-- who understands that it is also their duty to do as Dr. Charles did, to better treat the patient. Great character!
I have a fear of blood, but somehow i cant look away from this show
Real EatDonuts1 sameee
Real EatDonuts1 SAMEEE
Real EatDonuts1 same
Is it normal to keep watching these after several panic attacks?
Same here Real EatDonuts1
I love that the wife who is also a neurologist accepted her fault professionally.
I love how open-minded the neurologist is. I mean she made a grave mistake 4 years ago and realized if her husband is not admitted to the hospital. What are the odds?0
the point of the episode was that in four years time as well, the way of diagnosing illnesses was also different. She tried her best at the time,
Such a beautiful story. I loved the wife's reaction. I love how the psychiatrist handled her reaction.
It's so refreshing to see a doctor who is a patient accept their mistakes 😊
this shows the sign of an amazing medical professional! someone who can focus on the facts, and not get held back by their own ego
She may be old, but she is a good thinker. And when that poor guys pressure raised. She stayed strong, I should say that she used to be a great doctor before retirement
“I’m not ready to give up are Sundays listening to opera’s” Idk but that’s such a sweet and gentle line to me
It's a breath of fresh air to have a patient's family member also be a doctor and have a conversation like this with the Chicago Med physicians.
Oh. So the former unit chief Strauss of the Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU) of the FBI became a neurologist. Fascinating.
Ref. Criminal Minds.
Multifandom MooMoo why are you acting like it’s real life? Actors play lots of different characters.. wow
@@squidsquid285 I am just saying that as a fan. And I am not hallucinating that the characters they portray is who they really are. This was supposed to be a funny comment. Not my problem if you can't get the humor in it.
There are so many people who take this stuff so crazy seriously, sometimes it’s hard to tell 😂 I apologise, I understand what you mean now
Thank you omg. It annoyed me cos I couldn’t figure out where I had seen her before.
This can happen because, since the actress was already familiar with using the medical jargon from a previous role, they deliver the lines better than anyone else during their auditions.
This is absolutely heartbreaking for both of them. The fact you are losing the function in your mind and can't control your actions and hurting someone you love must be terrifying and so upsetting. And for her the fact that she is losing the man she loves and the fact that she misdiagnosed him must be shattering
i’ve been binge watching so many episodes of Chicago Med and im so in awe at how doctors nurses psychiatrist acquire so much knowledge of the human anatomy and brain
She shouldn't be too hard on herself no one could have seen that it would have been two different things making one giant mess.
Even Dr Charles didn't know what he was looking for he just had an idea about what it wasn't not what it was
I met a person who actually had this type of dementia on an internship in a senior home. I was fifteen, so they told me the simple version of what this illness is: it comes with sensory disturbances that makes everyone and everything look like monsters. I was only allowed to approach him from behind, I was made aware that he would hit and kick me otherwise - because from his point of view, that would have been self-defence.
Imagine how scary this disease must be! He was quite young as well, died at 58, I believe.
I hope this will be on NETFLIX soon!
Same!
Bad news pal
Jami Nel yep not close
She really loves her husband. Beautiful to see.
I cant watch this cause I live in Scotland but I still love watching these clips 🏴💖
Yeeeeeeeeeees!!! :D 🏴🏴🏴🏴🏴🏴🏴🏴
I live in Scotland and I can still watch it
I'm from England so same
I live in Scotland and I can get it on sky
Oh Yeah yeah actually? What channel?????
This was sad but also really wholesome honestly. That convo between the two of them is amazing.
She was very mature on how she took this information. No overacting drama. I like this one.
That’s why they say doctors should never treat their own family members as they don’t see out of the box , and may take decisions which may cause harm to the patient,,
She had a 2nd and 3rd opinion
My grandfather had this type of dementia and it's absolutely heartbreaking.
“Breath sounds clear bilaterally”
Interesting he heard that without stethoscope 🤔
Natsu Dragneel he’s supposed to listen to bilateral lung sounds. Then report his assessment
He was using a stethoscope a few seconds before, he might have just waited to report it with everything else
Just something I noticed
he did use the stethoscope seconds before he mentioned it
he literally used it a few seconds ago
It's so sad that the wife was just giving him puzzles and his heart just goes off
This actress reminds me of Martha Stewart
Yesss
I thought it WAS HER in her first scene, I was shook
I was glad to see her so kind but that ending was heartbreaking
The poor woman she thinks its all her fault but she did everything she was meant to do she got a second and third opinion she had the tests done but that kind of guilt doesn't go away easily
Aha I like how everyone is bothered wether they were the first or not like rly no one cares 😂
Skye Clarey started on tik tok, now it’s here 😂🤷🏼♂️
@@rubygilmore878 people have been saying "first!" Since at least 2010 RayWilliamJohnson pointed it out on =3 around that time. That's the earliest I know of , but it could be even older. It did not start on Tik Tok 😂
No it’s not her fault and I’m addicted to this show
“Tenderness to the left chest and thoracic spine” *palpates intercostal spaces* B*tCh how deep did you palpate to feel his spine 💀
he also can auscultate with hands
*palpates rib cage* "breast sounds clear bilateral"
😂 😂 😂 😂 😂
director erin strauss is a neurologist now
(i know i'm late but i just felt happy seeing her in a show again since i miss her in criminal minds)
My granddad died of dementia a few weeks ago, and he had Parkinson's too. I don't know if he had LBD, or if it was too separate conditions, but what I DO know is that it took 15 years to finally beat him, and it was only about 5 of those that he started to lose his mind to the point of not being able to do things like cook, house fixing, drive etc. Before that, he was pretty much mostly cognitive. Just like this man. Do not blame the wife at all for misdiagnosing him.
The wife is a brilliant actress!
The complexity of diagnosis when symptoms are shared between different tingz
Who else watches this so much that when you get a small ache or pain in ur chest or something u think it’s internal bleeding or something that might kill you? Anyone?
The one thing I still don't get...if it's been four years, shouldn't he have had multiple brain scans while undergoing cognitive therapy in order to judge the progression of his disease?
Yes
Yes he should have
apparently it would have been too small to see
@@marielamodia1618 No that was to see the small tumor causing hormonal imbalance. By the sounds of it scans should have easily showed that his brain was healthy.
No. Not everyone can afford MRIs all the type. Most of the time neurological disorders are diagnosed by the symptoms. The hormonal imbalance which was the cause of his neurological symptoms were shown later after quetiapine and other medication he might have taken, so they thought it was the side effects, not the cause.its easy to misdiagnose those. Especially if someone isn't able to get full body scans all the time because of time and money issues
@@Jkjoannaki wow ok, you know your stuff dude
But ur legally not allowed to be a doctor for ur family
The thing is, she did everything right and it’s as Dr Charles said, at the time she diagnosed him she wouldn’t have been able to see the actual problem.
It's sad when the cop said "that's karma"...it shows how little people understand that dementia, illness, paranoia ect can cause violent outbursts...it doesn't always mean abuse.
Everyone saying how this was a breath of fresh air but I read the comments before it was over
Wahhhhhhhhh I never knew the side effects of medication for louie body dementia is similar to hyperparathyroidism
I think the unnamed beta-blocker from his cardiac surgery was causing the behavioural changes.
*lewy
She would have felt so bad for diagnosing it wrong, even though it was a mistake a lot of experts could have made.
This is the most non toxic ep of chicago med
Cathy Durant became a neurologist?!
See, I had to do a Google search because I didn't get the "Cathy Durant" reference since I never watched House of cards!
She's a woman of many talents🤗
Yeah and the head of the FBI
@@pissedoffpanda9823 🐼 You have a wonderful username
@@TheGhostoftheCosmos thank you❣️
I thought he was rolling his eyes at the crossword lol
"There are no tests that can definitively diagnose LBD. Currently, only a brain autopsy after death can confirm a suspected diagnosis. However, researchers are studying ways to diagnose LBD earlier and more accurately during life."
Btw anyone that hasnt got this on tv it is on now tv and amazon prime tv hoping this helps some people!
I tear a lil bit when she said,"Im here my love",gosh 🤸💕
I love this channel
This show should definitely be on Netflix
I can't believe it...that's the actress who played Erin Strauss on Criminal Minds...
atleast she isnt stuck up and like
I ALREADY DIAGNOSED HIM HOW DARE YOU DO IT AGAIN.
she accepted her mistake.
What happens when you tense your arm to long
"score 1 for karma"
Honestly when I heard that I was like so why hasn't anyone thrown him out of the room or knocked him the f*ck out for speaking to their patient tight when he came in and needs help. If hes gonna trash talk patients do it outside of the room or wing on your bloody break. But hey its tv, if a nurse or doctor did that they'd be in some deep shit
A conversation between two intelligence can't relate 🤣
OMG I just entered TH-cam and TH-cam I search Chicago med and this
A min late!!
what
Omg the likes!
Hahahaa
This is sooo much
STRAUSSSSSSS
ITS BEEN TOO LONG SINCE I SAW HER IN CRIMINAL MINDS
And I thought pornhub was addictive😅😂🤣
...
...
...
...
...
...
Ummm... ok? i guess... the hell do I say to this
Nico Everything lmao then don’t say anything
wtf.......
no, I'm not 18 yet.
please God no I've only just turned 15.
no.
hell no.
@@galaxy-chansgacha7655 i guess ur Christian
Ok i know this is irrelevant but any one else getting Derek Hale vibes from Connor Rhodes
Caoimhe Kelly MEE
More like Tommy Merlin 😏
They’re nothing alike and trust me I’ve watched teen wolf over 10 times if it’s because of the facial hair I get what u mean but then it’s just not in the same shape it’s similar and all... sounds sad that I know this
Teen wolf for life so off topic 😂🥰
Yes. Me. I was shocked when I found out the actor is the same on that played Tommy Merlin. I just can't see it 🙈.
I've watched like all the episodes of med and p.d rn I'm binging the fire department SKSKSK
When the husband’s monitors went all off, and they were doing the ultrasound, I saw the expression on the wife’s face and I thought I know how that feels. My husband passed away on our front lawn June 2/21 and to find a neighbour doing CPR on him was such a shock when I had just been watching him, laughing with the other neighbour about a joke. To lose a person that you’ve been married to for years and years, and I deeply in love with, hurts so deep that your heart never does recover. I was never prepared to say goodbye.😔😔💔💔
Dr.Charles is my new hero !!
Why is this show so addictive am i right
Love this ❤️ poor man 😢
did they really just call her mrs clay instead of dr clay 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
I never know whether its better to be oblivious to whats happening and whats being said in situations like this, or be like the wife and understand everything going on but not be able to step in and help 😢
Not all her fault, she had a 2nd and 3rd opinion on his condition.
My brothers name is nathan and im uncomfortable
Hi my name is nathan and my brothers name is uncomfortable
Omg poor man
IM STILL WAITING FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND MOLEHILLS EPISODE TO COME OUT COZ I JUST LOVE TO SEE #Manstead !!!!
This reminded me a bit of a House-style discovery.
This should be on Netflix. Also, the wife played Cathy Durant on House of Cards!
I love love love this show
I was so primed to believe the wife had some nefarious reasons for giving him a wrong diagnosis, so this clip kind of had a twist ending for me.
I'm only here to ask my one question: what happens next? 😭
He dies
@@metroglode1305 nooo for real?
Noooo ): really?
Love this clip so much
The wife reminds me of Amy Elliot from Gone Girl. Her voice at least, I guess.
I love this show ❤️
TH-cam is drunk it says 48 I counted five times again and again it's 33
Kumpis Kumpelis that’s because it counts reply’s it’s kinda strange
But TH-cam is drunk like every day though so don’t worry
I think this comment is drunk
put this show on NETFLIX
every time they say LBD I think of the Lizzie Bennet Diaries 😂
Me: doesn’t like Hospitals or blood
~continues to watch~
I thought I had to worry about Alzheimer's and Parkinson's own it's own with my family history but a combo? Damn
Loved this ❤️❤️❤️❤️
Lucky, my gramps has lewy bodies dementia parkinsons and he can longer do anything for himself. 15+ years he's had it now. 🙁
Katy G best wishes for your grandpa
My grandpa had dementia ,it was hard look8ng after him
Seeing Roman, feel blessed