I love comparing this to the scene where Carter takes charge of the Benzine spill chaos. From complete uncertainty to "this is MY emergency room and we're doing it MY way"
Yes I love that episode and you’re 100% correct, after turning away from Surgery he has a lot of training but is an intern. As much as his knowledge, it’s his leadership skills too, which define him. Still has selfishness in him, but far more mature than he used to be.
@@juliefox9158that's because most do know more. Nurses catch doctors prescribing errors, we'll make suggestions that the doctors hadn't even considered, add extra tests that we know will be needed but the doctor didn't think to request, and so on. But we're a team (at least where I work) working towards a common goal - to get our patients better. And doctors try to reciprocate, too, I've had one clean and make a bed for me when I was rushed off my feet. Bless him, I had to make it again, he didn't have a clue what he was doing and I don't think he'd ever heard of hospital corners, but it meant a lot that he tried to help me out, he'd decontaminated it very well and it was acceptably made up for the patient to be examined on, I just had to re-do it for the patient to sleep in. It gave all of us in the unit a smile.
That's why ER is my favourite (and it doesn't have all the stupid errors other shows like Chicago Med has). Unlike Grey's Anatomy, where the doctor's do everything and the nurses are more receptionists (at best, non-exostent at worst) ER shows how it really is. Nurses do the bloods, start IVs, give drugs, assess and examine patients. Grey's even had Yang shave a patient below the belt in preparation for surgery which would be done by healthcare/nursing assistants, if not the patients themselves. In fact, ER is partly why I went into healthcare, and I'm definitely not the only one. It's a shame all the youngun's coming into the profession haven't seen ER, they all expect it to be like the aforementioned shows, and it most certainly is not.
What most people watching won't realize is that the hardest part of a surgical cric is deciding to pick up the scalpel. It's a relatively simple procedure with relatively small risk and huge reward, but the thought of cutting someones neck open scares the shit out of people...
I like this clip, Carter knew he had to do something but knew if he waited the boy could of died from lack of oxygen and Carter Knew and will eventually realize you sometimes gotta step up and risk doing something to save a life when another doctor could be like 5mins away and the patient have 1 min to get a Air way and he is the only one around who could do the procedure. This is one reason Carter was right to becoming a doctor cause he steps up when times is right to save the patients he was assigned to.
It sometimes happens, we only human. According to my friend grandma, the doctor said oh Jesus Christ and a nurse gasped when they rushed my friend into a+e and that because her blood sugar levels was 54.6
LYDIA: Versed? Norcuron? [both anesthetic drugs] CARTER: No, no, no, if I paralyze him and I don't get the crike then he dies. [A "crike" is short for cricothyrotomy which is making a cut in the neck to create an airway for the patient] Essentially, Carter doesn't want those drugs given to the patient because if he fails the procedure then the patient will be paralyzed and won't be able to breathe and will die.
Carter is ready to move on to the next step in his training, and out of the ER portion. He is still learning and is not qualified to perform a tracheostomy, where a patient can breathe through their windpipe instead of the mouth/nose. His head was full of blood and that prevented him from breathing normally. The "trache" bypasses the face in this case. A similar scene was used in MASH if you can remember when Hawkeye had to talk to Father Mulcahy through the procedure over a military phone in the field. They used a hollow pen as a tube.
It's all on Hulu if you're in the US, or All 4 if you're in the UK. And it's all available to rent/buy on Google Play, iTunes and Amazon. Some links in the descriptions of most of the clips.
Carter is not qualified to attempt a cric. He should have kept bagging the patient and maybe attempt intubation again. Attempting a cric is malpractice for someone who has never done one before.
"Attempting a cric is malpractice for someone who has never done one before." That statement doesn't make sense. From your perspective, nobody would ever be able to do their first cricothyrotomy because that would be malpractice. Would you like to try rethinking that?
I love comparing this to the scene where Carter takes charge of the Benzine spill chaos. From complete uncertainty to "this is MY emergency room and we're doing it MY way"
What season & episode is that in?
@@loonylaura85 Season 4, Episode 15. It's my absolute favourite Carter episode. It totally defines his character.
@@ArtemisScribe Thanks. 👍
@Thomas Bernard Oh snap! Just realized. Good looks TB.
Yes I love that episode and you’re 100% correct, after turning away from Surgery he has a lot of training but is an intern. As much as his knowledge, it’s his leadership skills too, which define him. Still has selfishness in him, but far more mature than he used to be.
Absolutely love how much respect this shows to the Nursing staff
They knew more than the doctors
@@juliefox9158that's because most do know more. Nurses catch doctors prescribing errors, we'll make suggestions that the doctors hadn't even considered, add extra tests that we know will be needed but the doctor didn't think to request, and so on. But we're a team (at least where I work) working towards a common goal - to get our patients better. And doctors try to reciprocate, too, I've had one clean and make a bed for me when I was rushed off my feet. Bless him, I had to make it again, he didn't have a clue what he was doing and I don't think he'd ever heard of hospital corners, but it meant a lot that he tried to help me out, he'd decontaminated it very well and it was acceptably made up for the patient to be examined on, I just had to re-do it for the patient to sleep in. It gave all of us in the unit a smile.
That's why ER is my favourite (and it doesn't have all the stupid errors other shows like Chicago Med has). Unlike Grey's Anatomy, where the doctor's do everything and the nurses are more receptionists (at best, non-exostent at worst) ER shows how it really is. Nurses do the bloods, start IVs, give drugs, assess and examine patients. Grey's even had Yang shave a patient below the belt in preparation for surgery which would be done by healthcare/nursing assistants, if not the patients themselves. In fact, ER is partly why I went into healthcare, and I'm definitely not the only one. It's a shame all the youngun's coming into the profession haven't seen ER, they all expect it to be like the aforementioned shows, and it most certainly is not.
Classic Carter-Benton. One second praises him, the other dismisses him.
ER 100,000 likes the series is coming back this year on USA 100,000 likes on TH-camPG 101 and 102 episodes on TH-camPG
The series has BEEN back on Hulu and has been on cable for some time.
What most people watching won't realize is that the hardest part of a surgical cric is deciding to pick up the scalpel. It's a relatively simple procedure with relatively small risk and huge reward, but the thought of cutting someones neck open scares the shit out of people...
Carter was my favorite
“Good boy good boy.” ❤️❤️
Thank you for having this channel, I love getting to see all my old friends from the ER again without watching the entire series.
I like this clip, Carter knew he had to do something but knew if he waited the boy could of died from lack of oxygen and Carter Knew and will eventually realize you sometimes gotta step up and risk doing something to save a life when another doctor could be like 5mins away and the patient have 1 min to get a Air way and he is the only one around who could do the procedure. This is one reason Carter was right to becoming a doctor cause he steps up when times is right to save the patients he was assigned to.
My mother worked in Cook County, mostly in the Blood Lab, but there were days in the ER that she said were just like this.
I went to Cook County Hosp for five years. Yeesh! Too many stories to tell!
желаю вашей маме здоровья 🙏🙏🙏🤗
💓👍👏👏👏💰💰🌿🌿👑👑💓💓💓💓💓🌹🌹🌹
Carter leading and badassering are my favourites clips.
The paramedic's look when carter made that malpractice comment lol
Classic Benton-Carter scene, thanks for posting.
One of my favored scenes in the whole show
We like Noah and his acting ability
Is that really a good idea to have doctors working to the point of exhaustion? Would you want someone operating on you who was just woke up?
I agree. Pilots get generous holidays to make sure they are well-rested. I understand why doctors don't get that luxury but all the same.
There's no other choice man.
Doctors are not cheap to train and there's not a lot of training slots available either. There's not enough staff.
Studies show that the pass off of patients between doctors causes more accidents and problems than a tired doctor
You sound like Elizabeth Corday.
@@dentatusdentatus1592 who is that?
There was an episode of M.A.S.H. where Father Mulcahy had to do the same procedure on a patient with Hawkeye guiding him via radio.
I remember that one! Good ol Padre.
th-cam.com/video/FYBE_c4Lgv8/w-d-xo.html
I have Hawkeyes instructions burned into my memory. Hey, you never know, right?
@@Zoomer30_ Right.
Crikey! I really should try to watch that show. (I want to see what all the fuss is about.) I think I saw some of it, but that was years ago.
Happens all the time in major city trauma centers, that run 24/7 trauma Emergency Rooms
1:29 such an inappropriate comment by the medic in front of the family member. If he made that comment in real life, pretty sure he'd get chewed out.
one of the many small things that made this series feel so real - and you're absolutely correct btw
It sometimes happens, we only human. According to my friend grandma, the doctor said oh Jesus Christ and a nurse gasped when they rushed my friend into a+e and that because her blood sugar levels was 54.6
Carter!!!! What?! Cracks me up every time 😂
Soooo, he says “ I hope medical malpractice covers all this” and mom is standing next to her injured son??? LOL
She had already left the room when he said that.
R.I.P. Deezer D.
Today is 28 years the episode everything old is new again airing on nbc thursday 18th may 1995
an emergency room: always something abrupt in dismay! I do not think most people can handle it well...
"hey we need a doctor in here" sir- is that not what everyone in that room is-
Nope. Nurses, paramedics and an intern.
@@lauraelliott6909 No, intern. Carter is an MS-3. Benton is a PGY-2 here.
Another foreshadowing of Carter being the torch holder.
Same opening as Greene.
Who is that woman in Doug's car at 0:26?
A woman that he dated at some point in the second season
I meant to say 1st season my bad
what are they saying at 2:28-2:33?
LYDIA: Versed? Norcuron? [both anesthetic drugs]
CARTER: No, no, no, if I paralyze him and I don't get the crike then he dies. [A "crike" is short for cricothyrotomy which is making a cut in the neck to create an airway for the patient]
Essentially, Carter doesn't want those drugs given to the patient because if he fails the procedure then the patient will be paralyzed and won't be able to breathe and will die.
hey we need a doctor in here
They need to pass the hat around the ER to buy Benton a personality!
What did Carter say at 3:49?
He asks if it was the wrong choice to proceed with the crike
He said do I have a choice?
When I was six years old I named my plush t trex from Lost World Jurassic Park Carter.
C'mon Carter, follow Failed Airway Algorithm. You had another attempt at laryngoscopy...
What happened? I’m having a hard time following the story.
Carter is ready to move on to the next step in his training, and out of the ER portion. He is still learning and is not qualified to perform a tracheostomy, where a patient can breathe through their windpipe instead of the mouth/nose. His head was full of blood and that prevented him from breathing normally. The "trache" bypasses the face in this case. A similar scene was used in MASH if you can remember when Hawkeye had to talk to Father Mulcahy through the procedure over a military phone in the field. They used a hollow pen as a tube.
th-cam.com/video/FYBE_c4Lgv8/w-d-xo.html
@@jgarrison1309 You are the best. Thank you so much.
Where can I stream ER?
It's all on Hulu if you're in the US, or All 4 if you're in the UK. And it's all available to rent/buy on Google Play, iTunes and Amazon. Some links in the descriptions of most of the clips.
@@er-emergencyroom434 Thank you so much!
Carter is not qualified to attempt a cric. He should have kept bagging the patient and maybe attempt intubation again. Attempting a cric is malpractice for someone who has never done one before.
"Attempting a cric is malpractice for someone who has never done one before." That statement doesn't make sense. From your perspective, nobody would ever be able to do their first cricothyrotomy because that would be malpractice. Would you like to try rethinking that?
🇺🇸
sugery ,hospital ,operation, dakter,
I like this show, but once Without a Trace started, this show disappeared off my radar and never came back, lol
And???
@@crisvanfan I was pretty clear, stupid
@@celeryg66 good thing you came to an ER video to express your views on it
@@DevinZA wow, good thing you came to comment on nothing, lol
@@celeryg66 exactly :D