These types of videos introduced me into unintentional ASMR, but they also showed me how much I truly do want to become a doctor. Thank you for the video!
I came here for the ASMR and stayed for the medical knowledge so I can try to keep up with my partner who is a nurse. They'll always be the professional but now when he tells me how his day went I understand more than I did before! :)
Your video could be the best explanation video I've seen so far. It doesn't just discuss the steps but the indications too.. I also now understand why we get each finding.. This was so helpful thank you from the bottom of my heart ♥️
Great video! People get skeptical that unintentional ASMR has to stay unintentional or it loses its magic. Untrue in your case, since all of your videos so far on your channel are great. Nothing seems too forced or unnatural. Maybe you really are the Bob Ross of the medical field. I would even wager some of the content on your channel offers better ASMR than your unintentional videos. The content is also fascinating and very thorough. Good show, Dr. Gill, especially for a beginner. I see really good things for your channel. I’m also not surprised to see that your subs have almost doubled since my last comment. Keep it up. I’ll definitely have to drop you a line if I run across any particularly interesting topics you could cover.
That was the most detailed video i’ve ever watched on clinical examination Thank you for your time and effort for putting this great content out for medical students all over the world You deserve much more recognition than that.
@@DrJamesGill Its new years eve! Your commitment is an inspiration. I cannot wait to see it. First OSCE in the new year, followed by secondary Care Placement. So this content is just what the doctor ordered
La verdad doctor,Me encantan sus vídeos...aprendo muchísimo con sus prácticas.. pero me gustaría si puede ser tan amable de poder hacer traducción al español ya que soy de Argentina y no entiendo el inglés muchas gracias
Hi Dr. Gill, at 13:48 you said that if Schamroth's Sign is ABSENT, a patient has been determined to have clubbing, do you mean by it as Schamroth's Sign or the absence of the Schamroth's Window? I am confused because other references say "A POSITIVE Schamroth's Sign occurs when the Lovibond angle is obliterated and finger clubbing is present whereas a NEGATIVE or NORMAL Schamroth's Sign is when the diamond-shaped space formed by the dorsal surface of the nails is present." I hope to hear from you. Thanks Doctor Gill :)
Sorry about that To clarify, if you can see Schamroth’s window, there is no clubbing present “if Schamroth’s Window is present, pass on through to the next step of the examination, if there is no window, stop to consider clubbing and causes”
What 3 words do you ask your patients to remember? I have typically heard the sequence of "Chevrolet, Zebra, Honesty" is the most common, but in New York, "Chair, Hat, Chicago" is the most common sequence.
The problem some of those words is that technically the words should be: - objects - familiar or easily recognised to the patient - not connected As a result I will frequently ask them to remember, Ball, Table and Pencil Honesty is a concept, not an object, those with little knowledge of cars might not recognise Chevrolet, and theoretically might not know a zebra (but then where do you draw the line), Chair and hat are however brilliant, as they are simple, objects, easily recognised, and should also be easily translated across languages (it’s best if you learn one approach which works in all situations and with all demographics of patients)
Hi ,could you do it in a power point form or a teams lecture, where those who are interested notify you and you send an invite going over thalassemia, Iron def anaemia, sickle cell etc. Then possibly the leukaemia’s what to look for in the blood results.To be honest I could listen to your lectures for hours, Your teaching method is great. Many thanks .
These types of videos introduced me into unintentional ASMR, but they also showed me how much I truly do want to become a doctor. Thank you for the video!
I came here for the ASMR and stayed for the medical knowledge so I can try to keep up with my partner who is a nurse. They'll always be the professional but now when he tells me how his day went I understand more than I did before! :)
That’s great to hear
He's the Bob Ross of the Medical field
I agree with you
Your video could be the best explanation video I've seen so far. It doesn't just discuss the steps but the indications too.. I also now understand why we get each finding.. This was so helpful thank you from the bottom of my heart ♥️
Awesome, thank you!
I could listen to you talk medical science all day. Such a gentle voice 💖
Thank you so much for the time spent on this, you are a superstar!
It’s getting a few views, as long as people benefit from it, that’s what I care about 😊
Great video! People get skeptical that unintentional ASMR has to stay unintentional or it loses its magic. Untrue in your case, since all of your videos so far on your channel are great. Nothing seems too forced or unnatural. Maybe you really are the Bob Ross of the medical field. I would even wager some of the content on your channel offers better ASMR than your unintentional videos. The content is also fascinating and very thorough. Good show, Dr. Gill, especially for a beginner. I see really good things for your channel. I’m also not surprised to see that your subs have almost doubled since my last comment. Keep it up. I’ll definitely have to drop you a line if I run across any particularly interesting topics you could cover.
Believe it or not, but this is all really useful to me, as it is reinforcing my learning 😊
That was the most detailed video i’ve ever watched on clinical examination
Thank you for your time and effort for putting this great content out for medical students all over the world
You deserve much more recognition than that.
That voice, i love it
best revision channel out there. I would love for you to do more of these for the other systems! Thank you, Doctor Gill.
Thanks Alex, I’m literally sat at the computer working up the abdo exam deep dive - it’s 46mins in total - I just hope you think it’s worth it!!
@@DrJamesGill Its new years eve! Your commitment is an inspiration. I cannot wait to see it. First OSCE in the new year, followed by secondary Care Placement. So this content is just what the doctor ordered
It’s just the calendar Turning over. Just a normal say this year
This video must’ve taken you ages to edit - great work!
more time than it should have though, need to work faster!!
The clip at 9:50 is both fascinating and hilarious! He's pretty much
describing the speed at which my brain operates normally though :/
his brain is a special... and frightening place. But I known him for 13years, so guess I've become sensitised!
Amazing work Dr, this is really useful !. Keep them coming.
Will try
The dudes an AMSR Jedi
This is not the examination you are looking for
very nice, always like the vids yall did this one is waay better due to the full explanations and the no rush atmosphere
I really like your voice ..It result relaxing to me...even when english is not my language.. even when I do not understand nothing about medicine..
Fabulous,exactly what I needed.Please can you make others, when you get chance.
Dunno why but the voiceover makes me smile. Also a bit tingly 😹
I enjoy the talking. It's calm me and make me fall asleep.
Interesting, we have always done least invasive to most invasive: inspection, auscultation, palpation b then percussion if needed
I understand the thought process there. But percussion before auscultation does help in terms of confirming what you expect.
I love learning medical facts.
What I learned today:
I've been pronouncing "trachea" wrong my entire life.
La verdad doctor,Me encantan sus vídeos...aprendo muchísimo con sus prácticas.. pero me gustaría si puede ser tan amable de poder hacer traducción al español ya que soy de Argentina y no entiendo el inglés muchas gracias
O al menos subtítulos...gracias
@@frantrisko3091 eso quise decir...gracias por la corrección!!
What an explanation .m so glad to see this video .
Thank you Dr.Gill for Ur work
I always found reap a challenge. Glad this helped
Fantastic! So well explained and engaging. Thank you
Hi Dr. Gill, at 13:48 you said that if Schamroth's Sign is ABSENT, a patient has been determined to have clubbing, do you mean by it as Schamroth's Sign or the absence of the Schamroth's Window? I am confused because other references say "A POSITIVE Schamroth's Sign occurs when the Lovibond angle is obliterated and finger clubbing is present whereas a NEGATIVE or NORMAL Schamroth's Sign is when the diamond-shaped space formed by the dorsal surface of the nails is present." I hope to hear from you. Thanks Doctor Gill :)
Sorry about that
To clarify, if you can see Schamroth’s window, there is no clubbing present
“if Schamroth’s Window is present, pass on through to the next step of the examination, if there is no window, stop to consider clubbing and causes”
@@DrJamesGill Thanks for clarifying. Your videos are soothing and calming. 👍
Thank you for the chance to clarify
If you can think of any other areas we can help with, please shout and we’ll look into it 😊
I don't understand the medicine and your British English is a little difficult for me to understand, but i love your voice. Keep recording 👍
Amazing! :) like a real ASMR video :) It's Sooo relaxing 😊😴 and at the same time we can learn some things also 🙂
Thanks. Please make it for other systems as well .💜
We’ve got the abdo examination deep dive coming this week - with a give away as well, so you’ll want to keep an eye out for the premier
Sure😇
really good
Saw E and had to click it!
The best
What 3 words do you ask your patients to remember? I have typically heard the sequence of "Chevrolet, Zebra, Honesty" is the most common, but in New York, "Chair, Hat, Chicago" is the most common sequence.
The problem some of those words is that technically the words should be:
- objects
- familiar or easily recognised to the patient
- not connected
As a result I will frequently ask them to remember, Ball, Table and Pencil
Honesty is a concept, not an object, those with little knowledge of cars might not recognise Chevrolet, and theoretically might not know a zebra (but then where do you draw the line),
Chair and hat are however brilliant, as they are simple, objects, easily recognised, and should also be easily translated across languages (it’s best if you learn one approach which works in all situations and with all demographics of patients)
Big daddy Gill putting me to sleep like Mike Tyson
🤛💥😴😴😴
Please could you add haematology and haemolitical malignancies to your ever ending list.
Many thanks
Yes. You said that correctly. Never ending list!
Ok I’ll ask a favour in return, how could these less - visual recording be improved?
Hi ,could you do it in a power point form or a teams lecture, where those who are interested notify you and you send an invite going over thalassemia,
Iron def anaemia, sickle cell etc. Then possibly the leukaemia’s what to look for in the blood results.To be honest I could listen to your lectures for hours, Your teaching method is great.
Many thanks .
I'm a law student but I can't help but watch haha
As long as you don't go into malpractice law, we're good 😜
somebody named their child Eastland ?
Oh noooo my brain is crazy and cant stand the litlle clicking sound he makes whe hr talkes like that.