I’m a nurse and you contaminated your gloves by touching the orthotic then contaminated the cream by touching it with your contaminated gloves. I sure hope that was the patients cream and you don’t plan on using it for other patients since you had the patients blood on your gloves when you dipped your finger in it. This makes me question if this cream was used for other patients before him and is contaminated with their bodily fluids. Dude, what is the point in creating a sterile field if you are going to contaminate? And even if you were just using clean procedure you still contaminated. The fact that the patient is diabetic and this was on a diabetic ulcer meaning the patient is at higher risk for developing infection is even more concerning. Please do not be complacent about little things. This is why we are in the middle of a pandemic right now.
Kim Hamby lol so true. I’ve seen HCA’s with better clean technique tbh. My favorite was when the physician didn’t understand why he should wear a mask in the TB unit 😬😬😬
Bless his heart. I can only imagine the pain. My diabetic brother was hit on his Motorcycle by a lady texting and driving. 😡😡😡 He had to have his leg amputated. The end of his leg where they closed the wound looked just like this guys ulcer. It was so dang painful and his prosthetic made it worse. He said it was worse pain than the accident itself.
I’m a diabetic and have been for 47 years. I have controlled sugars, no neuropathy, my eyes are perfect. My sister was diagnosed just over five years ago. She refused to keep her sugars balanced, she lost, all feelings in her feet, she stubbed her toe and it became gangrene then her foot was amputated. When she first stubbed her toe her podiatrist had to clean it like this doctor. She had her own jar of ointment to use and took it too all appointments. She ended up loosing both feet, then a leg and had four heart attacks. She died three months ago from a combination of gangrene and a heart attack. If you’re a diabetic WATCH YOUR BLOOD SUGARS
Amen! I've had type 1 diabetes since an illness killed my pancreas in 2000 and have been managing it relatively well enough but not what I'd call fully controlled until recently. I'm lucky in that I have no complications at all beyond a small retinal hemorrhage that sealed itself and I'd like to keep it that way. I keep my sugar under tight control using a continuous glucose meter (Dexcom G6) and an insulin pump it directly talks to (Tandem t:slim x2). Together, they kind of work as an ad hoc pancreas and makes it SO much easier to keep my sugar under control. If you can, check into this kind of thing. The t:slim also talks to the Libre CGM as well. Most insurance companies will either pay the cost or heavily subsidize the cost because it actually costs them less over a diabetic's lifetime to provide these tools than it does to pay for surgeries and wound debridements like this. I'm really, really glad you've been so diligent with taking care of yourself. May you live a good, healthy life. 🙂
Jennifer Colon Diabetics sometimes develop something called Neuropathy in their feet. It means they may have nerve pain and or numbness. If a diabetic can’t feel their feet and don’t realize they have a cut or scrape, then it could get infected and create an even worse wound. And because diabetes don’t heal as well as healthy individuals, then that really makes it bad, sometimes leading to amputation. That’s why we as diabetics are told to look at our feet every night, and thoroughly examine them because we may not even know we have a cut because we may not be able to feel it. I hope that helps. 😀
my dad is the longest living diabetic in the world..he is now 73 and have had diabetis for 60 years..he got the diagnose when he was 13 years old in 1960 and the doctor told him that he would not live to be 40 years old...he is still going strong today, but he has allways tested his sugars 6-7 times a day..in Denmark all diabetis help are free.
How about the Dr sticking his hand into that huge tub of Antibiotic cream when he had just had his hand in the mans bloody wound. That tub is meant for either just one person. OR when used in a physicians office on multiple patients, you use a different CLEAN tongue depressor each time you dip into the tub. Some how I don't think the Dr stopped to think about that as he was quite unprepared for the extra bleeding as he was unaware that his patient was on blood thinners. Lets all hope and pray that he thought about it later and tossed the tub of ABO, as it's now just a petri dish of his patients organisms!!
Obviously the Dr here didn't do a thorough assessment. He didn't know that his patient was on blood thinners seriously ! Thank God for Nurses that's all I have to say !
Look at the rest of his toenails and the fact he don’t check his blood sugars daily, this guy is going to loose this foot within a year. He has massive peripheral neuropathy. He needs to be non weight bearing until it heels, oral or IV antibiotics. That needs to be managed by a specialist wound care nurse. He needs Doppler assessments because of previous dvt and blood thinners. This is horrific to watch.
Whoa that was scary interesting! I love how you cleaned this ulcer up isn't it dangerous to do this for a diabetic patient? Well it would be great to see the follow up and more. Yes by the way l have subscribed so l will be watching.
How clean was his finger that had blood and dead skin on it when he jammed it in the jar of antibiotic cream scooped some out and then will use it on another patient?
Gross! He’s holding that foot pad explaining what he’s going to do and I can only watch that pad touching the guys foot. Dirty glove fi get dipped into the antibiotic ointment. Nope no sir I agree with the person that said he wouldn’t take his dog to a podiatrist. I love my Foot specialist, Dr. Steven Neufeld in Falls Church, VA. He is the best. He has operated on both my feet when a drunk driver hit my husband and I head on doing 65 mph. Pins and all. After a few years he went back in and took the screws out. I walk better now with less pain then before the accident. Amazing work and one of the best post surgical care after. He’s amazing.
Doctor: "Who is your diabetes?" Patient: pretty good... Doctor: "what are your numbers?" Patient: "I don't know, I haven't check it in a couple of weeks..."
I just love when these podiatrists ask their diabetic patients, "So, how have your blood sugars been?" The answer is ALWAYS, "fine." Then they go on to reveal that's because they haven't been checking them!!!
I had a doctor recently who didn't believe me about my blood sugar so he trotted in a test kit. Lo and behold! My blood sugar was 114, my most recent A1C really was 5.3, my blood pressure really is normal. Not all patients lie to their doctors, some of them we actually trust!
It's videos like this that makes us Podiatrists look bad. Poor debridement technique, NO infection control whatsoever and crappy dressing applied on that wound. This is embarrassing. In fact it's beyond embarrassing- it's putting a high risk patient at even higher risk of losing his foot- It's dangerous. That poor patient is putting his trust in your skills and you are not taking care of him.
Dr. Lilley. There is an inexpensive antimicrobial insole called PodoPhylus. It slowly releases iodine that keep the shoe/foot aseptic. No infection, no amputation... Just in case your patients are not compliant...
What salve or creme are you putting on that? I have a tiny ulcer between two of my toes, so it shouldn't GET pressure...but it won't heal. I got this one to heal with black tarry CBD oil five or six years ago, but a year or so back it recurred, and I can't get the black tarry CBD oil any more, and the clear amber stuff isn't working---nor is anything else.
I like how they know they’re going to get asked how their diabetes is doing and almost always they give a vague, general answer before coming clean they haven’t been keeping up. You’d think they’d try to be more convincing 😅
How do you know that there’s been no rise in your blood sugar if you haven’t checked it in a few weeks! As a RN it really bugs me when my pt says “I know when my blood sugar is high or low without having to check it”. Stop playing rushing roulette with your life!
I had one of these under my big toe which turned into osteo myelitis , resulting. On big toe amputation. I had antibiotic IV and spent two weeks in the hospital. Not fun!!
I don’t know why I enjoy watching these videos. If I had a foot like that, no I won’t let any foot doctor do it for me. I will do it myself and enjoy doing it. Anyone there like me?
Checking your blood sugar daily it will help you keep your self on track with your diabetes! Very important you take care if your sugar otherwise you'll end up with a much worse ulcer or ever worse lose a limb.
“You have a blood thinner going on in here”. Was that really said? Did a blood thinner just walk up and jump in that wound? “You got to be careful with that”! Was that a reminder for the patient or for himself? The patient needs no reminders at this point in the process. The doctor however does. And as a patient you look to your provider to understand your medications that you list before your appointment so that they are aware. Being diabetic, he informed him. Being on blood thinners, he informed him. When and if I ever have a hole in my foot the size of the Grand Canyon, I want to see a Doctor Who is aware of cleaning all of a wound before and after and not a Fun GI! Not going to a clinic to dance.
I really should have waited until I saw the foot pad. Did you see all that ridiculous, sticky nonsense? There are other things that would be cleaner, dryer, and support healing. Avoid pad after pad if you are diabetic and viewing this! Goal is to keep clean and dry. Right now all I see are things going from bad to worse. Are you operating a free clinic? Because you’re falling short in more than one area and you’re actually injuring the patient because of that.
Hi! I just had an enquiry about my nails that would hopefully be answered quickly? I am 12 years old and I have been picking and ripping at my nails since I was 2 years old. They are EXTREMELY short. My toenails are worse than the nails. I have finally stopped and have been doing so for a week. There is no different between the nails or toenails. I am now very worried that they will never grow back. This has been stressing me out quite a bit lately and I came here for some help. Thank you!
You may have permanently damaged the nail bed/nail plate that attaches your nail to your finger. I'm a life long nail biter and often times when I stop biting, my worst nails take forever to look like they are growing back. I would say give it another week for your fingers and two for your toes. Good luck on your journey to stop picking!
Isn't that coping mechanism for stress situations? Maybe try to work on cause (psychotherapist if it's stress related) and find something else to do to cope with whatever makes you want to destroy your nails, like squishing one of those squishy toys or listen relaxing music. But please stop damaging your nails, you can get infection or some permenant damage.
So this one time, right. I totally found a homeless dude hack out an ulcer wound with his smack spoon whilst he was coming down on let. His procedure was way better than this. His jokes were way better too and he was unconscious
I couldn’t agree more I’m surprised he bothered to use gloves and he didn’t know the drugs the guy was on before he started butchering his foot. I wonder if the guy will keep his leg after MDr Mengela got hold of it!
I doubt the sore will heal properly if the guy doesn’t watch his sugars. What you call butchering really had to be done so gangrene doesn’t happen. The cream used is probably one the patient brought in because it doesn’t look like he cares for his self and probably has had other sores where the cream is used.
As a nurse of 35 years standing I feel that your argument is full of rebuttable presumptions whereas the posted video only shows lamentably lax bad practice on behalf of the physician,
I have numbness in both of my feet. If feels like electric shock when they touch something or someone touches them. I broke my right ankle on the 17th of Dec ( I didn't feel it at all) had surgery the next day. I can now tell you it's going to rain. I have never broke a bone before. First time and I shattered 3 bones. Haha Lolo.
"So there hasn't really been a rise in my blood sugar." How the frig would he know since he haven't done a test for +2 weeks ?! Also you contaminated the entire field by touching the insert and then the cream... well done, sir. You just messed up the entire thing.
Meu Deus Dotor só Jesus com sua misericórdia com vocês quê fais este trabalho tão delicado e perfeito como está pessoa estava sofrendo Mais Jesus usá este homem de Deus capacitado sempre apresento todos vocês Nais minha orações
By dipping your finger into the antibiotic jar, you contaminated the contents in your jar. I hope you threw the contaminated jar out after this pt. Retired RN
Who else saw the fly land on the back of his foot and he kept working and didn’t like wipe it away without the patient knowing. Also, there was no cleaner on that gigantic open deep, tunneling wound. And I hope he understands the structures of the feet, because it looked as if he was pulling on bone tendon and that’s why it kept snapping back into the foot. And he definitely has Aspergers Syndrome, how many times is he going to say Covid 30? And as a practitioner I am deeply concerned about the lack of “prep”
That’s not proffered do that. I like the other feet doctor. He did right thing to use knife and shave around it very gently and remove it. It was look a lot better. This doctor use the clipper and that make look sloppy and messy! I can’t watch it. Sorry to say this.
That was a horrifying wound on his foot. He’s in La La Land if he thinks his sugars are in balance. How can stepping on the curb in a funny way create that kind of serious deep wounds something in his story just doesn’t add up
I’m a nurse and you contaminated your gloves by touching the orthotic then contaminated the cream by touching it with your contaminated gloves. I sure hope that was the patients cream and you don’t plan on using it for other patients since you had the patients blood on your gloves when you dipped your finger in it. This makes me question if this cream was used for other patients before him and is contaminated with their bodily fluids. Dude, what is the point in creating a sterile field if you are going to contaminate? And even if you were just using clean procedure you still contaminated. The fact that the patient is diabetic and this was on a diabetic ulcer meaning the patient is at higher risk for developing infection is even more concerning. Please do not be complacent about little things. This is why we are in the middle of a pandemic right now.
Well spotted tell them off they need to be reminded you know your job
cyn harman I used to be a nursing instructor and I swear my head almost exploded during this video
That's the difference between RNs and Physicians
@@vinnievee5710 Yes, probably didn't wash his hands either. I have been nursing faculty and I stressed sterile technique.
Kim Hamby lol so true. I’ve seen HCA’s with better clean technique tbh. My favorite was when the physician didn’t understand why he should wear a mask in the TB unit 😬😬😬
Bless his heart. I can only imagine the pain. My diabetic brother was hit on his Motorcycle by a lady texting and driving. 😡😡😡 He had to have his leg amputated. The end of his leg where they closed the wound looked just like this guys ulcer. It was so dang painful and his prosthetic made it worse. He said it was worse pain than the accident itself.
😞😞😞😞
He should have mentioned the blood thinners at the beginning!
Yeah but he said it's in his chart. Docs are SUPPOSED to look at charts before treating patients
@@pamelaflirtyskunk7698 I totally agree!
Nurse should have told the patient not to take the blood thinners before the appointment
Let me see if I understand. Diabetic. When’s the last time you checked your blood sugar - a few weeks ago. On blood thinners. But bikes 35 miles??
I’m sensing someone is LYING!!
I’m a diabetic and have been for 47 years. I have controlled sugars, no neuropathy, my eyes are perfect. My sister was diagnosed just over five years ago. She refused to keep her sugars balanced, she lost, all feelings in her feet, she stubbed her toe and it became gangrene then her foot was amputated. When she first stubbed her toe her podiatrist had to clean it like this doctor. She had her own jar of ointment to use and took it too all appointments. She ended up loosing both feet, then a leg and had four heart attacks. She died three months ago from a combination of gangrene and a heart attack. If you’re a diabetic WATCH YOUR BLOOD SUGARS
Sorry about your sister..
I’m so sorry your loss❤Stay strong 🙏
Sorry for your loss
Amen! I've had type 1 diabetes since an illness killed my pancreas in 2000 and have been managing it relatively well enough but not what I'd call fully controlled until recently. I'm lucky in that I have no complications at all beyond a small retinal hemorrhage that sealed itself and I'd like to keep it that way. I keep my sugar under tight control using a continuous glucose meter (Dexcom G6) and an insulin pump it directly talks to (Tandem t:slim x2). Together, they kind of work as an ad hoc pancreas and makes it SO much easier to keep my sugar under control. If you can, check into this kind of thing. The t:slim also talks to the Libre CGM as well. Most insurance companies will either pay the cost or heavily subsidize the cost because it actually costs them less over a diabetic's lifetime to provide these tools than it does to pay for surgeries and wound debridements like this. I'm really, really glad you've been so diligent with taking care of yourself. May you live a good, healthy life. 🙂
As a diabetic myself, I have four words for other diabetics. CHECK YOUR BLOOD SUGAR!!!! 😆
It’s apparent they don’t care about blood sugar
Jennifer Colon Diabetics sometimes develop something called Neuropathy in their feet. It means they may have nerve pain and or numbness. If a diabetic can’t feel their feet and don’t realize they have a cut or scrape, then it could get infected and create an even worse wound. And because diabetes don’t heal as well as healthy individuals, then that really makes it bad, sometimes leading to amputation. That’s why we as diabetics are told to look at our feet every night, and thoroughly examine them because we may not even know we have a cut because we may not be able to feel it. I hope that helps. 😀
my dad is the longest living diabetic in the world..he is now 73 and have had diabetis for 60 years..he got the diagnose when he was 13 years old in 1960 and the doctor told him that he would not live to be 40 years old...he is still going strong today, but he has allways tested his sugars 6-7 times a day..in Denmark all diabetis help are free.
@@tonnymiller123 That is awesome that he has lived that long!!
Lord!! I just about had a fit when I saw that gnat flying around the wound at 3.24 in the video!! 😳
I laughed so hard thinking, his feet must smell bad 🤣
How about the Dr sticking his hand into that huge tub of Antibiotic cream when he had just had his hand in the mans bloody wound. That tub is meant for either just one person. OR when used in a physicians office on multiple patients, you use a different CLEAN tongue depressor each time you dip into the tub. Some how I don't think the Dr stopped to think about that as he was quite unprepared for the extra bleeding as he was unaware that his patient was on blood thinners.
Lets all hope and pray that he thought about it later and tossed the tub of ABO, as it's now just a petri dish of his patients organisms!!
Obviously the Dr here didn't do a thorough assessment. He didn't know that his patient was on blood thinners seriously ! Thank God for Nurses that's all I have to say !
Nurses keep doctors from killing us.
I gained 18 pounds with the quarantine. I had managed to loose 70 pounds before that. Back to hard work again.
Look at the rest of his toenails and the fact he don’t check his blood sugars daily, this guy is going to loose this foot within a year. He has massive peripheral neuropathy. He needs to be non weight bearing until it heels, oral or IV antibiotics. That needs to be managed by a specialist wound care nurse. He needs Doppler assessments because of previous dvt and blood thinners. This is horrific to watch.
This is horrible. I haven't seen this before but I have heard of people loosing a toe or worse.
GREAT JOB! Would love to see an update on this video
We will definitely have one up soon!
He made a bad move by not keep to the margins and then blindly pulling at a piece a flesh.. that's why the bleeding started..
He didnt even finish getting rid of the callus. And he blames it on the blood thinner...
He asked "How is your diabetes" doing fine, I am keeping it around like a pet. 😅
Cross-contamination 😱 I swear some doctors can not be left alone without a nurse to keep watch over them.
i was thinking about it
This guy is a joke..
The silvadene with the finger 🤦🏻♀️blood
It looked like he used the third finger for the ointment.
Why not use sterile maggots to keep wounds clean? They can be ordered
Tonya Mosig ? That’s a bit extreme. I think he cleaned it just fine, and quickly
@@neekikg yes I agree sheesh maggots wow it's bad but not that bad
First time I’ve seen this Doc do something gross like that. He’s usually so conscientious. I guess mistakes can be made by all of us
It’s human but in a medical situation a mistake can cost a life.
@@wahltowahl1 q1 see 2
What mustake?
Mistake that is
@@maryrimmer9133 Yeah. What mistake?
Come on doc dirty glove in the antibiotics white salve?
Whoa that was scary interesting! I love how you cleaned this ulcer up isn't it dangerous to do this for a diabetic patient? Well it would be great to see the follow up and more. Yes by the way l have subscribed so l will be watching.
中毒性のある映像ですね。何度も繰り返し視聴したくなる。
徐々に綺麗になっていく。回復していく。見ていて気持のいい映像です。
How clean was his finger that had blood and dead skin on it when he jammed it in the jar of antibiotic cream scooped some out and then will use it on another patient?
Susie D l know! That was not very sanitary!
After touching the dirty insole of the shoe..
ulitin mo yung tanong mo. tPos dahan dahan
Gross! He’s holding that foot pad explaining what he’s going to do and I can only watch that pad touching the guys foot. Dirty glove fi get dipped into the antibiotic ointment. Nope no sir I agree with the person that said he wouldn’t take his dog to a podiatrist. I love my Foot specialist, Dr. Steven Neufeld in Falls Church, VA. He is the best. He has operated on both my feet when a drunk driver hit my husband and I head on doing 65 mph. Pins and all. After a few years he went back in and took the screws out. I walk better now with less pain then before the accident. Amazing work and one of the best post surgical care after. He’s amazing.
I am so happy to hear you found the perfect foot specialist. I am still looking.
I feel so bad that I am actually enjoying it. I hope that all the sick people will heal quickly and be safe and thriving
Great video as usual:) I hope the patient will feel better soon
Omg why did you dip your dirty finger in the cream!?!? I adored you until I saw that 🤮
I came here to say the same. Now the gnat isn't surprising.
Connie Bridges yep! Nasty 🤢
Exactly, when I saw that I had to comment but u said it for me 🤮
Oh my gosh , I saw that too! Use something sterile or before you even start procedure scoop some out onto some gauze.
That's exactly what I was going to comment on.
Hey Dr Fun,
How fun was this for your patient?
Especially after you possibly send them home with an infection after handling that nasty insole.
Can't believe what I just watched. How on Earth does this happen and how long does it take?
Doctor: "Who is your diabetes?"
Patient: pretty good...
Doctor: "what are your numbers?"
Patient: "I don't know, I haven't check it in a couple of weeks..."
Oh my goodness. My father in law lost his leg due to diabetes. It started with a sore on his foot.
Great video very interesting, thanks for sharing it.
I just love when these podiatrists ask their diabetic patients, "So, how have your blood sugars been?" The answer is ALWAYS, "fine." Then they go on to reveal that's because they haven't been checking them!!!
Þy⁷
I had a doctor recently who didn't believe me about my blood sugar so he trotted in a test kit. Lo and behold! My blood sugar was 114, my most recent A1C really was 5.3, my blood pressure really is normal. Not all patients lie to their doctors, some of them we actually trust!
This is the worst example of care I have seen.
I enjoy your work. Thank You!
how deep does our skin actually go?
He said he was riding his bike and put his foot down to brace himself. Well did he not have any shoes on ???
Nice work!
Those first nippers are meant to be held thumb down/palm toward patient, for better control and the sake of your forearm and hand 💗
Boa noite Dotor kim Deus te abençoe cada dia mais no seu trabalho tão delicado e perfeito ❤
It's videos like this that makes us Podiatrists look bad. Poor debridement technique, NO infection control whatsoever and crappy dressing applied on that wound. This is embarrassing. In fact it's beyond embarrassing- it's putting a high risk patient at even higher risk of losing his foot- It's dangerous. That poor patient is putting his trust in your skills and you are not taking care of him.
Dr. Lilley. There is an inexpensive antimicrobial insole called PodoPhylus. It slowly releases iodine that keep the shoe/foot aseptic. No infection, no amputation... Just in case your patients are not compliant...
Is that his personal jar of cream? I surely hope so!
What salve or creme are you putting on that? I have a tiny ulcer between two of my toes, so it shouldn't GET pressure...but it won't heal. I got this one to heal with black tarry CBD oil five or six years ago, but a year or so back it recurred, and I can't get the black tarry CBD oil any more, and the clear amber stuff isn't working---nor is anything else.
I have never in my LIFE seen Docs. that was afraid to use some gauge.
Is there a shortage on this stuff EVERYWHERE!??!!??!?!?!!?
I like how they know they’re going to get asked how their diabetes is doing and almost always they give a vague, general answer before coming clean they haven’t been keeping up. You’d think they’d try to be more convincing 😅
You NEED to test your blood sugar! SERIOUSLY?!
Wow! Major ouch! Poor guy.
How do you know that there’s been no rise in your blood sugar if you haven’t checked it in a few weeks! As a RN it really bugs me when my pt says “I know when my blood sugar is high or low without having to check it”. Stop playing rushing roulette with your life!
Dr Kim, you seem like a very nice man. :) All the best!
I had one of these under my big toe which turned into osteo myelitis , resulting. On big toe amputation. I had antibiotic IV and spent two weeks in the hospital. Not fun!!
I don’t know why I enjoy watching these videos. If I had a foot like that, no I won’t let any foot doctor do it for me. I will do it myself and enjoy doing it. Anyone there like me?
Not sure this dr has followed cross-infection protocols or done a thorough pre-assessment in any way, shape, or form.
Checking your blood sugar daily it will help you keep your self on track with your diabetes! Very important you take care if your sugar otherwise you'll end up with a much worse ulcer or ever worse lose a limb.
Boa tarde Dotor Deus continuei lhe capacitando sempre no seu trabalho tão delicado e perfeito
That fly is little. He won’t eat much!🎂🎂🤣🤣😂
I have the covid minus 35 lol I've been losing weight during this pandemic 😊 *update I'm down 70 lbs now 😁 Only 30 more to go 🥳
Same here!
@@pamelaflirtyskunk7698 awesome! 😁
Awesome
@@lavianahampton4641 thank you 😊🙏
I am surprised that I lost weight.
Why we never see post-op pictures? Are all failures?
Dr. Why don’t u advise patient to check his sugar. Plus A1C
Doc does a nice job but totally forgot this Pt was on a thinner :(
How can he say he hasn’t had a rise in his sugars, when he hasn’t checked it in two weeks.
Why would a person let their foot get that bad??
“You have a blood thinner going on in here”. Was that really said? Did a blood thinner just walk up and jump in that wound? “You got to be careful with that”! Was that a reminder for the patient or for himself? The patient needs no reminders at this point in the process. The doctor however does. And as a patient you look to your provider to understand your medications that you list before your appointment so that they are aware. Being diabetic, he informed him. Being on blood thinners, he informed him. When and if I ever have a hole in my foot the size of the Grand Canyon, I want to see a Doctor Who is aware of cleaning all of a wound before and after and not a Fun GI! Not going to a clinic to dance.
I really should have waited until I saw the foot pad. Did you see all that ridiculous, sticky nonsense? There are other things that would be cleaner, dryer, and support healing. Avoid pad after pad if you are diabetic and viewing this! Goal is to keep clean and dry. Right now all I see are things going from bad to worse. Are you operating a free clinic? Because you’re falling short in more than one area and you’re actually injuring the patient because of that.
Hi! I just had an enquiry about my nails that would hopefully be answered quickly?
I am 12 years old and I have been picking and ripping at my nails since I was 2 years old. They are EXTREMELY short. My toenails are worse than the nails. I have finally stopped and have been doing so for a week. There is no different between the nails or toenails. I am now very worried that they will never grow back. This has been stressing me out quite a bit lately and I came here for some help. Thank you!
You may have permanently damaged the nail bed/nail plate that attaches your nail to your finger.
I'm a life long nail biter and often times when I stop biting, my worst nails take forever to look like they are growing back.
I would say give it another week for your fingers and two for your toes.
Good luck on your journey to stop picking!
Isn't that coping mechanism for stress situations? Maybe try to work on cause (psychotherapist if it's stress related) and find something else to do to cope with whatever makes you want to destroy your nails, like squishing one of those squishy toys or listen relaxing music. But please stop damaging your nails, you can get infection or some permenant damage.
I'm suffering from Covig23 (lbs)
That mess formed in just two weeks?
Covid 19, Delta, Omicron...I wonder how many more before we get our lives back.
Fascinating. ❤
Hi dr. Kim the heel of the foot needs to be drained out and clean with with iodine 🎉👍🌞
You put the ointment on using a bloody glove. Do you use out of the container for the next patient?
This has been going on for a long time.😢
Bro is that a community antibiotic ointment hes using
So this one time, right. I totally found a homeless dude hack out an ulcer wound with his smack spoon whilst he was coming down on let. His procedure was way better than this. His jokes were way better too and he was unconscious
🤣🤣
I couldn’t agree more I’m surprised he bothered to use gloves and he didn’t know the drugs the guy was on before he started butchering his foot. I wonder if the guy will keep his leg after MDr Mengela got hold of it!
I doubt the sore will heal properly if the guy doesn’t watch his sugars. What you call butchering really had to be done so gangrene doesn’t happen. The cream used is probably one the patient brought in because it doesn’t look like he cares for his self and probably has had other sores where the cream is used.
As a nurse of 35 years standing I feel that your argument is full of rebuttable presumptions whereas the posted video only shows lamentably lax bad practice on behalf of the physician,
Cleaness is healiness good to go thanks doc 👍
Everything contaminated ... this os how it works.. dirty gloves on so much stuf.....aaarrgghhh
My head says yuck and satisfying in the same time
I have numbness in both of my feet. If feels like electric shock when they touch something or someone touches them.
I broke my right ankle on the 17th of Dec ( I didn't feel it at all) had surgery the next day. I can now tell you it's going to rain. I have never broke a bone before. First time and I shattered 3 bones. Haha Lolo.
It’s called Covid 19 because that’s how many try’s it took Scientist to get it where they wanted.
"So there hasn't really been a rise in my blood sugar."
How the frig would he know since he haven't done a test for +2 weeks ?!
Also you contaminated the entire field by touching the insert and then the cream... well done, sir. You just messed up the entire thing.
Why not start taking down the callus from the outside first ?
Lock down never again!
He’s gonna need a transfusion after this 😅😅😅
Wrong equipments for this kind of treatment,only talk delay performance.
After he made that comment about the fly might smell something I would have gotten my ass off that table and told him something .😠😡🤬
His blood glucose is fine. No problem.
And this is why I use an orthopedic surgeon with a fellowship in feet. I wouldn't take my dog to a podiatrist.
doesn't it hurt
This dr. opened this foot up without knowing his patient was on blood thinners! OMG……BIG NO-NO…….Run as fast as you can away from this nut job!
Wow please take.care ok🤙🏽🌹
Meu Deus Dotor só Jesus com sua misericórdia com vocês quê fais este trabalho tão delicado e perfeito como está pessoa estava sofrendo Mais Jesus usá este homem de Deus capacitado sempre apresento todos vocês Nais minha orações
By dipping your finger into the antibiotic jar, you contaminated the contents in your jar. I hope you threw the contaminated jar out after this pt. Retired RN
Who else saw the fly land on the back of his foot and he kept working and didn’t like wipe it away without the patient knowing. Also, there was no cleaner on that gigantic open deep, tunneling wound. And I hope he understands the structures of the feet, because it looked as if he was pulling on bone tendon and that’s why it kept snapping back into the foot. And he definitely has Aspergers Syndrome, how many times is he going to say Covid 30? And as a practitioner I am deeply concerned about the lack of “prep”
That’s not proffered do that. I like the other feet doctor. He did right thing to use knife and shave around it very gently and remove it. It was look a lot better. This doctor use the clipper and that make look sloppy and messy! I can’t watch it. Sorry to say this.
Ouchie!!!
As he’s removing a huge chunk of dead skin he says my diabetes is ok 😢
Semoga tembus 100 juta subcriber
Handling an insole and then putting a finger in the big tub of cream? That's hardly good hygiene!
he put is finger in the blue container with dirty gloves>>>
Ouch!!
That was a horrifying wound on his foot. He’s in La La Land if he thinks his sugars are in balance. How can stepping on the curb in a funny way create that kind of serious deep wounds something in his story just doesn’t add up
Esse é demais !
Pena que não entendo o que estão falando