I freaking love shauns growth.. from the first episode ever aired too where it’s at now! Great job to all the cast and the writer/director! (Dr. Melendez, you were taken away too soon)
I may not understand what autism feels or that i will ever but I know how it feels of not communicating people effectively because I have a stammer and it does suck
@@michaelmorrison1547 Yes I too can't even think what it would be like to be autistic but the aspect with which I can relate to is having difficulty communicating with people. I'm shy, awkward and can't even maintain good eye contact. And yes it sucks a lot because people rarely are understanding of it or try to see what the person is beyond of what appears outwardly. But my little advise to you is don't worry. People who matter overlook such stuff and everyone is different.
Yeah. I have epilepsy and I slur a lot, which is embarrassing. Its probably the reason why I don't speak loudly. I don't look at ppl for long, and ppl always assume I'm stupid so they enunciate like I can't hear. 😑 I've learned (like Shaun) that with disabilities, your family can either be strengthened by it or fall apart. I'll let you guess which one mine was.
As someone with potential ASD (haven't gotten the official diagnosis yet,) it seriously sucks being unable to communicate properly. Any time I have an issue I trip myself up and prefer to stay silent, because it ends up not worth the trouble trying to speak. My favorite analogy is that there's a massive ball of yarn in my head and I get frustrated when I try to unravel it. I hate being put on the spot because when it comes time to tell someone something, I doubt myself and don't know how to deliver it. A few days ago I went down to the school nurse for a health issue that I wanted to go home for since it was impacting my mobility and work. She walked up to me and waited for me to lead the conversation instead of saying anything, so I just stammered and couldn't express my thoughts properly. Instead of being understanding, she smiled at me like I was an idiot and just said "speak." Lo and behold, that didn't help at all. Honestly most of the time I just feel stuck in my head, because no one is gonna get it if they can't read my thoughts or feel what I feel. If you encounter people like this, try to ask questions to prompt them. It's very hard for us to speak on our own turn-- trying to talk is like trying to remember a word that's on the tip of your tongue but you forgot it. I know Shaun in The Good Doctor hates questions, but a lot of the time they're extremely helpful for people with ASD to communicate without forming the words themselves.
Morgan was very selfish until her poor judgment costed in amputation of a women’s arm and she changed for good also suffering a blow when a guy who liked her died in that Quarantine episode. She’s a really good person now and writers have done a great job in her character transformation
The first couple of seasons this was my favorite show. But though the loss of some key characters and different writing I now end up channel surfing while I am watching it.
Agree. After the couple of seasons i end up noticing same pattern, shaun and lea get along, shaun get upset about something, lea heart broken, shaun asks advice from everyone, finally goes to glassman, shaun and lea get along.. repeat..😐 Cant find any noticable character development for shaun comparing to andrews, morgan and the best, Menlendez. After melendez was gone, the one thing kept me keep watching was clair. And now she also gone i stoped watching with the beautiful final episode of season 4, keeping the final scene of lea proposing shaun in my heart.
He's not dying. He would die if he hadn't caught the probe going in the wrong direction, which can happen with any supervisor supervising a resident. He did make them lose several seconds, just like the resident make them lose time as well - but the patient is stable so there is no rush, so it's a good opportunity for teaching.
My opinion among 4 residents the good doctor is Dr Browne. Shaun may excellent in diagnosis but he can't handle his personal life problem and it's effect him during working time (Dr Han is right).
@@SRP3333 Sooner or later someone has to have their first time. They may be qualified, they may pass all the tests, they may know everything they're supposed to and have practiced on dozens of dummies, simulators and extras. They've still never stabbed somebody in the head or used their actual hands to do it. This is why there's so much oversight and multiple people watching camera's. "I can't see it on the image guidance". An assistant could move the camera closer but it will still translate to an image on a screen that doesn't relate back to your hands. Asking your instructor to assist feels backwards, because typically assistants are subordinates. During training it's your supervisor who has to communicate and assist you, and that is a social dynamic you can't really train for. When he describes the "gliding", that's something you wouldn't necessarily be trained on, but is the application of experience. Gliding is a subjective term, "it should feel like" isn't necessarily super medical terminology, but it does help him guide his movements. These are things you would learn being trained. This is why he has oversight on top of oversight, due to Shaun's ASD having an additional advisor was recommended - this can also happen if say, there's an interpersonal issue with a resident or perhaps a language barrier. This privilege would only be done during surgeries like a brain surgery and THIS is likely why Shaun made it a point to do it. Bigger surgery, more need for redundancy. This is why operating teams are so efficient, because you can train and the redundancy assists can outsource a lot of issues, whilst creating more experienced doctors. "Operating theater" is often exactly that, a lot of residents watching. Sooner or later though residents need to actually do the procedures once they're qualified. It's dramatic when the guy says, "STOP!" as if he's making a mistake, but he's also there for redundancy and imaging. Having someone watching the screens allows for redundancy and even experienced Surgeons will rely on their stuff. This is unlike many disciplines people are aware of, extremely technical multifaceted workloads are conducive to multiple surgeons and physicians operating in tandem and they are trained to do this too. Think of it like having a co-pilot or relief team, you slowly cycle in trainees until you have a great workforce, but you never stop the training. It seems crazy to try it on someone's brain but eventually it's impossible to avoid the fact that residents need to practice on live patients. They have very very very likely done this maneuver many times on cadavers and dummy heads, as well as in preparation for this surgery done many parts of the procedure. The resident required assistance here not for incompetence, but because he had to perform with a group. The residents requests were not due to incompetence but due to features of the brain that would be inoperable on a cadaver. A live brain will have "glide" and smoothness, so likely the live brain felt very different from the cadaver. He also needed a relay by the imaging source to discuss his exact movement. He likely suspected he needed to move in such a way, but he waited because you should always wait for your team to confirm. The trope of, "Do you concur" is an old doctor trope, but much like piloting a plane you often will, aloud, confirm things you already "know" but aren't certain of. None of this suggested the resident was incompetent, but that his trajectory was incorrect. This could be due to a lot of factors such as patient breathing, it could be the way they're suspended or simple the way the table is setup. Having practice on cadavers the body isn't at rest the same way a cadaver is, this slight variation could have changed his trajectory from practice and he is trained to rely on his team to spot the change in direction. The course correction was very subtle, he simply had to go straight down (down 6 o'clock on the y-axis means straight down). This suggests that he simply didn't account for the "living" and rising of the body, and while his positioning on the cadaver was perfect due to muscle memory, the difference in a live and dead body threw him off just slightly enough to need a correction. You can't know you're off course until you're poking around, because the needle doesn't go in straight. It goes in at a curve like a sewing needle - it's a straight needle, but you generally start slightly higher and then curve down, this is to prevent vestibular anomalies while accommodating for gravity. To simplify that idea, imagine a zombie situation. You stab them in the head with a knife hard, the knife plunges in. Now you have to get it out - you have to wiggle it to slightly widen the hole to get it back out. That's more chaotic and catastrophic of course, but the principle is the same. If you have to go in slowly, you have to create some additional trauma due to the fact that the needle won't scrape or be affected by soft tissue, and you glide it in using gravity. He did this too much, and it's likely the live tissue that threw him of. The hole was drilled, but you need some trauma in the soft tissue near the outside of the head to make sure the needle "drops" perfectly as it gets weighted more and more by gravity. Imagine holding a baseball bat out - it drops, so you hold it higher. It's subtle but this is what training would look like, but in real life I'd actually expect less oversight on scene. We just haven't seen this residents preparation was likely more extensive than people imagine, the preparatory steps for medical doctors are absolutely insanity, it takes 10 years of medical training to become a doctor, during which you do thousands of procedures over, and over, and over. These adjustments seem huge, but are really quite minor. You could die from a simple poke into the brain stem, sure, but that's why there's 4 people in the room. Eventually, someday, you get somebody whose never done the surgery. They get redundancy then, and the surgeons make sure it goes ok. Other than small adjustments like we see here, residents don't typically make huge mistakes because their training is SO rigorous and their job SO competitive, if they can't hack it they'd be washed out long before they were ever stabbing needles. There's a reputation among surgeons for ego as well due to this, because by the end they are so righteously qualified they ARE as good as they boast, and confidence makes for steady hands. There's few disciplines that have this level of training, not fighter pilots, not commercial pilots, not concert pianists - the scrutiny is UNREAL when it comes to medical training, so... this scene is pretty accurate, though it highlights every complication in what is likely a much longer surgery with multiple steps that went through with only confirmations.
A lot of procedures wouldn't be used today if doctors didn't try on patients first. Lots of surgical procedures were tried on soldiers in field hospitals during wartime. Lots of surgical instruments were invented by military mechanics.
This show is ok except it's frustratingly inaccurate. There is no way a handful of Drs are specialised in all speciality areas. How can they do brain surgery one minute and heart surgery the next. Plus there is no way junior residents would be like this show portrays. ER was the best ever medical show and accurate
Asher's training as a neurologist I believe he said in his initial appearance. Shaun's General Surgery, but I don't think they ever really went into what most of the residents specialize in. Lim's a Trauma Surgeon and I think Melendez was a heart doctor. Glassman's a neurosurgeon and Andrews is a plastic surgeon I think.
This guy from Bates motel is a good actor an I would like to watch him but this series is too dark for me .. I have anxiety... I want to watch him in something like Bates motel again
What? Too dark? In Bates Motel there's drugs, murder, serious mental illness, trauma and abuse, but in good doctor you have residents training to be doctors, saving lives and the absolute sweetheart that Shaun is. But I agree, we need more Freddie Highmore.
I have anxiety too, but why does a show have anything to do with that?? and this show not dark AT ALL. Bates Motel is very very dark. and some anxiety comes from stress or pasts not from watching a show about doctors
Wait, walking around with something in your mouth like that is what, completely distracting you from your work? To the point where their patients are at risk? Those things didn't even change their ability to speak, and they seem like things you can actually forget about when you get into the rhythm of a task. So sure, send home two doctors who did practically nothing wrong, they only apparently have literal dying patients. Good decision right there. Just throw that work on doctors with their own patients.
They either take their work seriously or they don't. Imagine if a patient or visitor saw what they had in their mouth and filed a complaint. Or what if a patient died on their watch? Try explaining in court or to a medical board that their tomfoolery had nothing to do with the patient's death. The supervising physician was completely correct in sending them home.
Is this even possible for in reality? I mean he does some mid section surgery and now he is supervising Neuro stuff? Any doctors reading my comment? Weigh in please. (Didn't watch the full series just pieces so please be kind)
I totally understand his frustration. Explaining stuff to someone when you have struggles communicating it’s rough as hell
Agreed.
same. Idk how to explain my thoughts
My son is autistic and this show portrays the struggles of a person with autism incredibly well
@@oogaofbooga2624 lakaksalalkakaqllqkwlqlqlqlqlqqllqlqlqqlqlqklqqllqqllqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqqllqlqlqpqqllqlqpqlqlqlqpqlqpqlqpqolwwlqlqllqqllqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlalqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqqllqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqpqqowpqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqllqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlalqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlqlq
Yea
I freaking love shauns growth.. from the first episode ever aired too where it’s at now! Great job to all the cast and the writer/director! (Dr. Melendez, you were taken away too soon)
Shaun can be an excellent, competent surgeon but he constantly has to deal with the failure of not communicating effectively. It sucks. *sigh*
I may not understand what autism feels or that i will ever but I know how it feels of not communicating people effectively because I have a stammer and it does suck
@@michaelmorrison1547 Yes I too can't even think what it would be like to be autistic but the aspect with which I can relate to is having difficulty communicating with people. I'm shy, awkward and can't even maintain good eye contact. And yes it sucks a lot because people rarely are understanding of it or try to see what the person is beyond of what appears outwardly. But my little advise to you is don't worry. People who matter overlook such stuff and everyone is different.
Yeah. I have epilepsy and I slur a lot, which is embarrassing. Its probably the reason why I don't speak loudly. I don't look at ppl for long, and ppl always assume I'm stupid so they enunciate like I can't hear. 😑 I've learned (like Shaun) that with disabilities, your family can either be strengthened by it or fall apart. I'll let you guess which one mine was.
You just summed up the script of the movie.
As someone with potential ASD (haven't gotten the official diagnosis yet,) it seriously sucks being unable to communicate properly. Any time I have an issue I trip myself up and prefer to stay silent, because it ends up not worth the trouble trying to speak. My favorite analogy is that there's a massive ball of yarn in my head and I get frustrated when I try to unravel it. I hate being put on the spot because when it comes time to tell someone something, I doubt myself and don't know how to deliver it. A few days ago I went down to the school nurse for a health issue that I wanted to go home for since it was impacting my mobility and work. She walked up to me and waited for me to lead the conversation instead of saying anything, so I just stammered and couldn't express my thoughts properly. Instead of being understanding, she smiled at me like I was an idiot and just said "speak." Lo and behold, that didn't help at all. Honestly most of the time I just feel stuck in my head, because no one is gonna get it if they can't read my thoughts or feel what I feel. If you encounter people like this, try to ask questions to prompt them. It's very hard for us to speak on our own turn-- trying to talk is like trying to remember a word that's on the tip of your tongue but you forgot it. I know Shaun in The Good Doctor hates questions, but a lot of the time they're extremely helpful for people with ASD to communicate without forming the words themselves.
Morgan was very selfish until her poor judgment costed in amputation of a women’s arm and she changed for good also suffering a blow when a guy who liked her died in that Quarantine episode. She’s a really good person now and writers have done a great job in her character transformation
at first I didn't like Morgan but then I realize her characteristic is pretty interesting.
Yea she is cold outside but she has a good heart deep down.
She's the Amber character from HOUSE. Park is Chase the other one I forgot her name is 13. Shaun is House. Same creator.
Morgan is ass
#coldbitch
Started liking her from her “Call me a bitch” moment.
You got it Shaun take your time brother
Lim literally snapped at Shaun just because he’s focusing for which gift he should give to Lea, like he’s just trying to make her happy
I don't know how he matched with a residency program with no communication skill! good for him
I suppose sometimes you meet a doctor so talented that you accept them even if they lack skills in other places.
Glassman
I hear him communicating.
Doctors Park and Reznick would make a great couple.
@John Bon in real life the age gap isn’t that big.
No chance, they would kill one of the character before that happens...
Andddd it just happened. lol
@John Bon why does age matter so much?
The first couple of seasons this was my favorite show. But though the loss of some key characters and different writing I now end up channel surfing while I am watching it.
I completely agree with you. First seasons were so captivating and now it is boring, lost something, become regular show
Couse the first season is in base a korean show. (A most short one)
Agree. After the couple of seasons i end up noticing same pattern, shaun and lea get along, shaun get upset about something, lea heart broken, shaun asks advice from everyone, finally goes to glassman, shaun and lea get along.. repeat..😐 Cant find any noticable character development for shaun comparing to andrews, morgan and the best, Menlendez. After melendez was gone, the one thing kept me keep watching was clair. And now she also gone i stoped watching with the beautiful final episode of season 4, keeping the final scene of lea proposing shaun in my heart.
Killing melendez was such a shame.
I hope it was the actor having to leave and not by design, because it really downgraded the show.
Most difficult thing is teaching sm1...specially when u need to make them understand smthing which u understand by ur own way
If I remember correctly, Shaun's main issue was that his confidence was shaken when his recent supervision of Asher ended in a patient dying.
I’d like to believe they still didn’t take the tooth thingy off after the scene and is still waiting for the other party to take it off
That one needle wound that was on the wrong projectory:
🥴
While Shaun is teaching......... The patient is dying
He's not dying. He would die if he hadn't caught the probe going in the wrong direction, which can happen with any supervisor supervising a resident. He did make them lose several seconds, just like the resident make them lose time as well - but the patient is stable so there is no rush, so it's a good opportunity for teaching.
“I would like to scrub in on the amygdala ablation surgery.”
Am I just over thinking, or is that side profile of the brain IDENTICAL to the first shot of the House MD opening?
3:19 reminds me of tiktok dances in hospitals
Yes
This maybe a TV show but I'm right there with you Shaun because I also have Autism ❤️
When season 4 will be on amazon? Any guesses?
The new season is still airing live so I suspect it won’t be till summer
@@Achuidian179 where can I watch them for now?
@@jyotiatri7981 there's this YT channel called DRIET 2- th-cam.com/channels/w0Io6dQEzPVAuqXl9XBjPw.html
It is on Hulu. The new episode is added every Tuesday
It is available on sonyliv.
My opinion among 4 residents the good doctor is Dr Browne. Shaun may excellent in diagnosis but he can't handle his personal life problem and it's effect him during working time (Dr Han is right).
Browne can handle her personal life?
@@OphepheVanessa yes. She do.
You must be watching a different show and missed her constant spiral
@@OphepheVanessa what season u watched?
@@rientz90 watch season 3
I'm guessing parks and morgan are going to hook up by end of the season
I AM A SURGEON
Wish I could find the full clip of this but I can’t
i have no idea what's going on here but amygdala ablation sounds like a bad idea, something out of a dystopian nightmare.
Nice clip..
Where can i see the Full episode
Is this the new season ?
Yessirrrr!!!
Yep
Yes continuing after the winter final3
"Open your mouth", "shut your mouth" XD
Omg imagine him metting grey
Tough love
Is there a new season out
Wait are they teaching on a real person? Seem hella dangerous
Yeah it makes no sense.
Welcome to medicine
@@robiaharefin6876 I was about to ask is that real like true lol!? That’s how they teach is on a live person?
@@SRP3333 Sooner or later someone has to have their first time. They may be qualified, they may pass all the tests, they may know everything they're supposed to and have practiced on dozens of dummies, simulators and extras.
They've still never stabbed somebody in the head or used their actual hands to do it. This is why there's so much oversight and multiple people watching camera's.
"I can't see it on the image guidance". An assistant could move the camera closer but it will still translate to an image on a screen that doesn't relate back to your hands. Asking your instructor to assist feels backwards, because typically assistants are subordinates. During training it's your supervisor who has to communicate and assist you, and that is a social dynamic you can't really train for.
When he describes the "gliding", that's something you wouldn't necessarily be trained on, but is the application of experience. Gliding is a subjective term, "it should feel like" isn't necessarily super medical terminology, but it does help him guide his movements.
These are things you would learn being trained.
This is why he has oversight on top of oversight, due to Shaun's ASD having an additional advisor was recommended - this can also happen if say, there's an interpersonal issue with a resident or perhaps a language barrier. This privilege would only be done during surgeries like a brain surgery and THIS is likely why Shaun made it a point to do it. Bigger surgery, more need for redundancy.
This is why operating teams are so efficient, because you can train and the redundancy assists can outsource a lot of issues, whilst creating more experienced doctors. "Operating theater" is often exactly that, a lot of residents watching. Sooner or later though residents need to actually do the procedures once they're qualified.
It's dramatic when the guy says, "STOP!" as if he's making a mistake, but he's also there for redundancy and imaging. Having someone watching the screens allows for redundancy and even experienced Surgeons will rely on their stuff.
This is unlike many disciplines people are aware of, extremely technical multifaceted workloads are conducive to multiple surgeons and physicians operating in tandem and they are trained to do this too.
Think of it like having a co-pilot or relief team, you slowly cycle in trainees until you have a great workforce, but you never stop the training. It seems crazy to try it on someone's brain but eventually it's impossible to avoid the fact that residents need to practice on live patients.
They have very very very likely done this maneuver many times on cadavers and dummy heads, as well as in preparation for this surgery done many parts of the procedure. The resident required assistance here not for incompetence, but because he had to perform with a group. The residents requests were not due to incompetence but due to features of the brain that would be inoperable on a cadaver.
A live brain will have "glide" and smoothness, so likely the live brain felt very different from the cadaver. He also needed a relay by the imaging source to discuss his exact movement. He likely suspected he needed to move in such a way, but he waited because you should always wait for your team to confirm.
The trope of, "Do you concur" is an old doctor trope, but much like piloting a plane you often will, aloud, confirm things you already "know" but aren't certain of. None of this suggested the resident was incompetent, but that his trajectory was incorrect.
This could be due to a lot of factors such as patient breathing, it could be the way they're suspended or simple the way the table is setup. Having practice on cadavers the body isn't at rest the same way a cadaver is, this slight variation could have changed his trajectory from practice and he is trained to rely on his team to spot the change in direction. The course correction was very subtle, he simply had to go straight down (down 6 o'clock on the y-axis means straight down). This suggests that he simply didn't account for the "living" and rising of the body, and while his positioning on the cadaver was perfect due to muscle memory, the difference in a live and dead body threw him off just slightly enough to need a correction.
You can't know you're off course until you're poking around, because the needle doesn't go in straight. It goes in at a curve like a sewing needle - it's a straight needle, but you generally start slightly higher and then curve down, this is to prevent vestibular anomalies while accommodating for gravity.
To simplify that idea, imagine a zombie situation. You stab them in the head with a knife hard, the knife plunges in. Now you have to get it out - you have to wiggle it to slightly widen the hole to get it back out. That's more chaotic and catastrophic of course, but the principle is the same. If you have to go in slowly, you have to create some additional trauma due to the fact that the needle won't scrape or be affected by soft tissue, and you glide it in using gravity.
He did this too much, and it's likely the live tissue that threw him of. The hole was drilled, but you need some trauma in the soft tissue near the outside of the head to make sure the needle "drops" perfectly as it gets weighted more and more by gravity.
Imagine holding a baseball bat out - it drops, so you hold it higher.
It's subtle but this is what training would look like, but in real life I'd actually expect less oversight on scene. We just haven't seen this residents preparation was likely more extensive than people imagine, the preparatory steps for medical doctors are absolutely insanity, it takes 10 years of medical training to become a doctor, during which you do thousands of procedures over, and over, and over.
These adjustments seem huge, but are really quite minor. You could die from a simple poke into the brain stem, sure, but that's why there's 4 people in the room.
Eventually, someday, you get somebody whose never done the surgery. They get redundancy then, and the surgeons make sure it goes ok. Other than small adjustments like we see here, residents don't typically make huge mistakes because their training is SO rigorous and their job SO competitive, if they can't hack it they'd be washed out long before they were ever stabbing needles. There's a reputation among surgeons for ego as well due to this, because by the end they are so righteously qualified they ARE as good as they boast, and confidence makes for steady hands. There's few disciplines that have this level of training, not fighter pilots, not commercial pilots, not concert pianists - the scrutiny is UNREAL when it comes to medical training, so... this scene is pretty accurate, though it highlights every complication in what is likely a much longer surgery with multiple steps that went through with only confirmations.
A lot of procedures wouldn't be used today if doctors didn't try on patients first. Lots of surgical procedures were tried on soldiers in field hospitals during wartime. Lots of surgical instruments were invented by military mechanics.
The Lord Bless of the Blessed work.
How to get full series?
Buy tv? Its local
Stemio (app)
Which episode is this
Last nights
This show is ok except it's frustratingly inaccurate. There is no way a handful of Drs are specialised in all speciality areas. How can they do brain surgery one minute and heart surgery the next. Plus there is no way junior residents would be like this show portrays. ER was the best ever medical show and accurate
Asher's training as a neurologist I believe he said in his initial appearance. Shaun's General Surgery, but I don't think they ever really went into what most of the residents specialize in. Lim's a Trauma Surgeon and I think Melendez was a heart doctor. Glassman's a neurosurgeon and Andrews is a plastic surgeon I think.
Haha!MorgN and park are so cute!
Episode?
This is season 4 episode 6: "Lim"
paren-kai-ma 😂
Where I can watch season 4? Not on Netflix!!
Hulu
وين ممكن اجد الترجمه
بلييييز
This guy from Bates motel is a good actor an I would like to watch him but this series is too dark for me .. I have anxiety... I want to watch him in something like Bates motel again
why its too dark ?
What? Too dark? In Bates Motel there's drugs, murder, serious mental illness, trauma and abuse, but in good doctor you have residents training to be doctors, saving lives and the absolute sweetheart that Shaun is. But I agree, we need more Freddie Highmore.
if anything, bates motel is dark, not the good doctor 😂
You recognize him from Bates Motel and you think *this* series is too dark?!
I have anxiety too, but why does a show have anything to do with that?? and this show not dark AT ALL. Bates Motel is very very dark. and some anxiety comes from stress or pasts not from watching a show about doctors
Was Park And Lim together?
This is season 4 episode 6: "Lim"
jajaj shuan asuto a dra lim imgane a normanbates jajajaj 😂😂😂😂😂
Wait, walking around with something in your mouth like that is what, completely distracting you from your work? To the point where their patients are at risk? Those things didn't even change their ability to speak, and they seem like things you can actually forget about when you get into the rhythm of a task. So sure, send home two doctors who did practically nothing wrong, they only apparently have literal dying patients. Good decision right there. Just throw that work on doctors with their own patients.
It’s most likely due to the fact that they were goofing around as well as the fact that the bits are made of metal, which can mess certain machines up
They either take their work seriously or they don't. Imagine if a patient or visitor saw what they had in their mouth and filed a complaint. Or what if a patient died on their watch? Try explaining in court or to a medical board that their tomfoolery had nothing to do with the patient's death. The supervising physician was completely correct in sending them home.
When did this happened 🙄🤔
This is season 4 episode 6: "Lim"
Is this even possible for in reality? I mean he does some mid section surgery and now he is supervising Neuro stuff?
Any doctors reading my comment? Weigh in please.
(Didn't watch the full series just pieces so please be kind)
Different doctor is needed for neuro baisc is complicated (searched in Google
yikes excluding the terrible MR guidance they just transected the brainstem. thats how patients end up dead or locked in...
It’s tv, like we don’t watch this show for the accurate procedures
@@sporesports well its not like the acting or writing is so great either...
No one cares. Who is watching this show hoping to become a surgeon and using this show as a study guide?
Plzzzzz any one dubbed it on hindi....
Yeah you aren’t getting sent home hospitals don’t have enough drs as it is 😂
Why is she mean to everyone?
So... Norman Bates is a Rain Man Doogie Howser?
Not an idiot savant - that’s an offensive term. Just someone with savant syndrome. x
GIO ninja
By watching this you wouldn't become a doctor viewers 😜.. just joking
T
S P £ D
I hate the smug look on his face i don't care how good some of u luv him, I hope he has to have complete facial reconstruction
You sound jealous. His face is beautiful.
Inclusion pushed to extremes. Worst show ever.
What episode is this
which episode is this
This is season 4 episode 6: "Lim"