Weird that they don't test right away for " antique vendor's disease." You get it if you use a lot of petroleum or other based waxes, varnishes or paints or working in certain chemical plants if your liver makes ethanol out of sugars because digestive tubes and organs are failing. Commonly also called" auto brewery" because the yeastproduction makes you feel drunk. A senior doctor found immediately my friend who had never ever drunk a drop of alcohol suffered from this when she said she restored old furniture.
Shaun really needed a lesson here. It's common for people with autism to have trouble assessing how their knowledge compares to others. Shaun basically treated her as insubordinate due to her having a different frame of reference
@@winoo7963the right way relative by The doctor who performed the operation. The nurse has done the correct way. Only shawn has his own reference about it. It's just that Shawn didn't tell me his reference
I saw the episode on Netflix months ago. Dr Resnick actually found out there was ethanol in his body because of food accumulation, thus explaining the constant positive alcohol readings.
3-5 THOUSAND years ago. I am an American who has the use of formerly crippled hands that PTs gave up on, only because of Ayurveda. Our allopathic science could benefit greatly from studying Ayurveda. I know that this is hard to do because Ayurveda accepts the unknowns. It addresses the physical body, the foods & spices, the mind, and our connections to the unknown things that are beyond us. As a person of Science, I completely get the rift between religion and Science when looking at how eligious authorities imprisoned and executed some of Humanity's greatest minds. But Skepticism becomes it's own unfounded, destructive belief system, when unusual things are instantly dismissed rather than tested. Any idiot can dismiss. True genius asks the right question. The Unknown is out there. And it matters. For example: After a meteor explosion, and with permission from Town Leaders, I collected samples of rocks from pristine surfaces. On a playground area equipped with a brand-new rubbery mat surface, I noticed some odd damage - a trail leading to a rock the size of my hand, shaped like a chunk of lasagna. It wasn't magnetic, or the right color, the right density, & it didn't smell right for one of the atypical variety. The crust was delicate-looking, pale beige and speckled. Unimpressed, but thorough, I collected the rock, took a ton of photos & stuck it on papertowel on a windowsill as it was too big for any of the containers I had. Probably nothing, anyway, right? Along came that massive solar flare. I hear a sudden wobbling of the rock on the window sill and on investigation, find the rock has warped. It was straight and flat, but now it's tilted up on one end - the sudden noise aparently happened after it bent up enough that the rock was no longer stable. I don't know about you, but my mind has never encountered a rock that freaking bends. Not one scientist was willing to examine it. Three days later? It shattered while I was away - sending shards accross the room. I contacted everybody I could think of. No response. Yesterday, I found out that a massive meteorite that was on display in a public place? Also just "broke." I'm told nobody dropped it or moved it. But there you are. When we are so skeptical we don't bother to even acknowledge the unknown someone else encounters, we leave our own selves vulnerable. So yes, a healthy respect for the unknown. Science needs this. Medicine, also, as a science, needs this. Ayurveda could help bridge that gap.
So how would they explain that the test is coming up constant while the man is having multiple procedures and is unconscious? Hes drinking while unconscious...hes so good at hiding it that they dont even notice him swilling booze while they attend to him? Come on the tests would be reducing in time if you ran 3
He was just being a dick, if you want her to do it a different way you have to tell her, not just say she's wrong and your way is better without explaining your way.
for clarification, dr. shaun has autism, so it's much more difficult for him to pick up on social cues, talk to people in a way that they might understand, and understand what to do in certain situations.
@@icantswim8657so he's supposed to show and explain to a professional OR nurse who just hand the clump casually how the clump is supposed to be handed to a surgeon while the patient is having a bleed?
@@winoo7963 its not how it's "supposed to be" just how he prefers it, he could easily just say "can you give it to me at a 45⁰ angle" and explain after the surgery _if needed_ or he could just take the damn thing because the patient is literally having a bleed
You don't hand a surgeon his tool over a pacient, if it falls inside the pacient it can cause serious damage, if you don't know basic OR condut you don't participate you OBSERVE
@@justianowskiShawn was humble enough to explain her the correct way and why he was anger at her bt she kept saying "leave now"not even listening tats really annoying
Shaun was not humble, lol. Humility is accepting that we were wrong or made mistakes. "If I explain to you the history of these clamps, you'll see why I wasn't wrong and an apology is not necessary," is the opposite of humble. Humility would be "I'm sorry I didn't explain to you how I wanted the clamps handed to me in the OR. And I'm sorry I then got frustrated and kicked you out. Next time I'll be more patient and more communicative if I see ways for us as a team to improve our procedures. You're a good nurse and I appreciate having you on the team." (And I understand that he's not socially adept enough to understand this and construct such an apology. I'm just sharing what someone who's actually humble might've said.)
No. Shaun is wrong. It’s his PREFERENCE. Not “the correct way”. She did nothing wrong and HE as a boss should have explained his position AFTER the surgery not expect her to know and then act like a child when she did t know.
@@pokeflare2111 no… you mean “You’re” as in “you are” which is still wrong because, just because Shaun likes things done a certain way does not mean “She is wrong”. And he NEEDS to explain or he is not teaching. He’s assuming she knows and pissed when she doesn’t. HE. is. WRONG.
my dad was showing yellow skin and all that genesis (Ohio), he must be drunk. guess what my dad had pancreatic cancer, survived that and warble surgery only to die in the same hospital originally wrongly diagnosed but closest. different location. because of incompetence. f you.
Real surgeons react more violently in the or. A surgeon would never apologize in this situation. When anything goes wrong, blame is shifted around. It was HIS OR. Everyone has to do it his way, no arguments. She deserved to be kicked out. She cannot argue back lack that. She ought to be warned or fired if she tried that again. She was rejecting his instruction of his preferences. He took the time to calmly show and why. No apology needed. Just talk to a surgeon or listen to their stories. Surgery is high stress, to the extreme. It's not an autism thing, not a disability thing. She needs to shut up and learn her place before she gets someone killed. There's no space to get butthurt and demand people to be gentle to you when you're a subordinate.
Weird that they don't test right away for " antique vendor's disease." You get it if you use a lot of petroleum or other based waxes, varnishes or paints or working in certain chemical plants if your liver makes ethanol out of sugars because digestive tubes and organs are failing. Commonly also called" auto brewery" because the yeastproduction makes you feel drunk. A senior doctor found immediately my friend who had never ever drunk a drop of alcohol suffered from this when she said she restored old furniture.
O.M.G...Thank you!🙏
Thanks 😊
Shaun really needed a lesson here.
It's common for people with autism to have trouble assessing how their knowledge compares to others. Shaun basically treated her as insubordinate due to her having a different frame of reference
OR nurses are supposed to know the right way. They are professional.
@@winoo7963the right way relative by The doctor who performed the operation. The nurse has done the correct way. Only shawn has his own reference about it. It's just that Shawn didn't tell me his reference
She is subordinate to the operating doctor. Know her place
11:58 BOOOO, you cut off the reason he was testing positive for alcohol when he wasn't drinking.
I saw the episode on Netflix months ago. Dr Resnick actually found out there was ethanol in his body because of food accumulation, thus explaining the constant positive alcohol readings.
@@AntoineLeBon-zj5wpTY
Where is Freddie's Emmy???!!!
Correction: The father of surgery is Sage Sushruta from India dating way back into history.
3-5 THOUSAND years ago. I am an American who has the use of formerly crippled hands that PTs gave up on, only because of Ayurveda. Our allopathic science could benefit greatly from studying Ayurveda. I know that this is hard to do because Ayurveda accepts the unknowns. It addresses the physical body, the foods & spices, the mind, and our connections to the unknown things that are beyond us.
As a person of Science, I completely get the rift between religion and Science when looking at how eligious authorities imprisoned and executed some of Humanity's greatest minds.
But Skepticism becomes it's own unfounded, destructive belief system, when unusual things are instantly dismissed rather than tested. Any idiot can dismiss. True genius asks the right question. The Unknown is out there. And it matters. For example:
After a meteor explosion, and with permission from Town Leaders, I collected samples of rocks from pristine surfaces. On a playground area equipped with a brand-new rubbery mat surface, I noticed some odd damage - a trail leading to a rock the size of my hand, shaped like a chunk of lasagna.
It wasn't magnetic, or the right color, the right density, & it didn't smell right for one of the atypical variety. The crust was delicate-looking, pale beige and speckled. Unimpressed, but thorough, I collected the rock, took a ton of photos & stuck it on papertowel on a windowsill as it was too big for any of the containers I had. Probably nothing, anyway, right?
Along came that massive solar flare. I hear a sudden wobbling of the rock on the window sill and on investigation, find the rock has warped. It was straight and flat, but now it's tilted up on one end - the sudden noise aparently happened after it bent up enough that the rock was no longer stable.
I don't know about you, but my mind has never encountered a rock that freaking bends.
Not one scientist was willing to examine it.
Three days later? It shattered while I was away - sending shards accross the room.
I contacted everybody I could think of. No response.
Yesterday, I found out that a massive meteorite that was on display in a public place? Also just "broke." I'm told nobody dropped it or moved it. But there you are.
When we are so skeptical we don't bother to even acknowledge the unknown someone else encounters, we leave our own selves vulnerable.
So yes, a healthy respect for the unknown. Science needs this. Medicine, also, as a science, needs this. Ayurveda could help bridge that gap.
@@sillysausage4549 I don't know what are you implying by that but when you study history of surgery the above comment is a fact
Albucasis is the father of Modern Surgery. Shushruta is seen as the founding father of surgery
So how would they explain that the test is coming up constant while the man is having multiple procedures and is unconscious? Hes drinking while unconscious...hes so good at hiding it that they dont even notice him swilling booze while they attend to him? Come on the tests would be reducing in time if you ran 3
How in the world do these writers come up with these nonsensical scenarios?
They genuinely think autism is a superpower
He was just being a dick, if you want her to do it a different way you have to tell her, not just say she's wrong and your way is better without explaining your way.
for clarification, dr. shaun has autism, so it's much more difficult for him to pick up on social cues, talk to people in a way that they might understand, and understand what to do in certain situations.
@@ZombaiSlingar I'm well aware he's autistic, I've got family and friends with autism, not an excuse for being a dick
@@ZombaiSlingar womp womp, thats no excuse and he should've just explained it, its not a social cue just logic
@@icantswim8657so he's supposed to show and explain to a professional OR nurse who just hand the clump casually how the clump is supposed to be handed to a surgeon while the patient is having a bleed?
@@winoo7963 its not how it's "supposed to be" just how he prefers it, he could easily just say "can you give it to me at a 45⁰ angle" and explain after the surgery _if needed_ or he could just take the damn thing because the patient is literally having a bleed
Where can we watch Season 7????
Hulu, Disney+, or ABC
Ruined her 2nd lunch for the day
show more clips of dr. murphy
Shawn was wrong people And there's no excuse for his disabilities, especially at the operating table talk about this after
You don't hand a surgeon his tool over a pacient, if it falls inside the pacient it can cause serious damage, if you don't know basic OR condut you don't participate you OBSERVE
@@joaorathis8157it’s not as if she handed it to him sideways you over-observant loser
Yes,why would u argue at the essence of someone's life, that's unprofessional
Nurse hawks was annoying when she refused to listen to shawn😤
really?!?! I was *proud* of her! screw his disability a person is on the operating table!
@@justianowskigirl shut up
@@justianowskiShawn was humble enough to explain her the correct way and why he was anger at her bt she kept saying "leave now"not even listening tats really annoying
Shaun was not humble, lol. Humility is accepting that we were wrong or made mistakes. "If I explain to you the history of these clamps, you'll see why I wasn't wrong and an apology is not necessary," is the opposite of humble.
Humility would be "I'm sorry I didn't explain to you how I wanted the clamps handed to me in the OR. And I'm sorry I then got frustrated and kicked you out. Next time I'll be more patient and more communicative if I see ways for us as a team to improve our procedures. You're a good nurse and I appreciate having you on the team."
(And I understand that he's not socially adept enough to understand this and construct such an apology. I'm just sharing what someone who's actually humble might've said.)
@@sisterlazy8036 2:00
Chapter?
What episode
'45-Degree Angle,' season 3, episode 6.
Again, Shaun was RIGHT..he shouldn't apologize!
If you think Shaun was right you’re probably also autistic
Ehh Shaun was dumb. He should come with a manual on how to do this and that for him lol it’s pretty funny
@@JundamRX782 he asks the way that every surgery book say it how you should do it
Hawks needs to be fired. She doesn’t understand the concept of authority
No. Shaun is wrong. It’s his PREFERENCE. Not “the correct way”. She did nothing wrong and HE as a boss should have explained his position AFTER the surgery not expect her to know and then act like a child when she did t know.
Ify_pk1926 your crazy mate
@@pokeflare2111 no… you mean “You’re” as in “you are” which is still wrong because, just because Shaun likes things done a certain way does not mean “She is wrong”. And he NEEDS to explain or he is not teaching. He’s assuming she knows and pissed when she doesn’t. HE. is. WRONG.
@@shadowpsykienope she is wrong
@@shadowpsykie dude that guy was replying to the original comment who said that the nurse should've been fired. Persecution complex much?
my dad was showing yellow skin and all that genesis (Ohio), he must be drunk. guess what my dad had pancreatic cancer, survived that and warble surgery only to die in the same hospital originally wrongly diagnosed but closest. different location. because of incompetence. f you.
God this dr. Shaun guy is annoying.
@jared1804 I have nothing at all against autistic people but Shaun shouldn't be a Dr/surgeon
Real surgeons react more violently in the or. A surgeon would never apologize in this situation. When anything goes wrong, blame is shifted around. It was HIS OR. Everyone has to do it his way, no arguments. She deserved to be kicked out. She cannot argue back lack that. She ought to be warned or fired if she tried that again.
She was rejecting his instruction of his preferences.
He took the time to calmly show and why. No apology needed.
Just talk to a surgeon or listen to their stories. Surgery is high stress, to the extreme. It's not an autism thing, not a disability thing. She needs to shut up and learn her place before she gets someone killed. There's no space to get butthurt and demand people to be gentle to you when you're a subordinate.
f hawkes, bad writing.
Go shaun