Now I'm imagining a future where people who get headaches when reading use reading glasses, and people who get headaches when doing small talk get Chat GPT
It does not have the same human emotions that we do that can cause us to not relate. It is programed to search and mimic social situations. It also has the advantage of all the info on the internet to pull stuff from immediately. Every time I try to chat with AI it's still awkward and unstable because I can't get out the right words so it does not understand me. It really frustrates me. But I'm learning to except it. It would be nice to have a neurodivergent IA
I'm a med student and i jokingly copied an entire clinical case on chat gtp to see what would come out of it, fully expecting it to go bizarre ways or fail to load a response. To my complete chock it diagnosed correctly, gave me treatment options, differential diagnoses and tips on how to talk to the patient and family. I was like, jesus christ this thing is better than a lot of my preceptors I'm as much in awe as i am completely terrified.
I'm really excited to see where this can go if well trained. I want to believe computers can't replace doctors, but thus far, it looks to be a very impressive tool to aid in complex situations or when treating something outside your typical routine.
@@tinkerammaIt's not. It doesn't actually know what it's talking about, it just looks at what it's been fed and mathematically calculates an answer. You can't trust it to be always correct. It's only a text generator.
i really like the historical gynecology idea. maybe instead of trying to cram it all into one video it could be another series. you already did pregnancy tests throughout history, you could also do menstrual management throughout history and pregnancy tips/treatments/old wives' tales throughout history.
@@MamaDoctorJones If you ever did do the historical series I wonder if there isn't a good opportunity to maybe collab with one or more of the historians with channels too. There would be scope for companion videos to add some historical context particularly regarding social and economic barriers to access to healthcare particularly for women and that slowed progress in the field (dismissing women's health problems as them being hysterical for example).
This is genuinely one of my comfort channels because of how accepting the community is. I am an AFAB non-binary teen and it makes me very uncomfortable to talk about this kind of thing at school or with my parents, but its just so much better when you explain it. Thank you so much from the LGBTQIA+ community for including us in discussions we so often get kicked out of. ❤
Agreed. I am an AFAB non-binary adult and I really appreciate how she does her best to use the language "people who can get pregnant" or "people with uteruses" instead of "women" or "females". It makes us feel part of the conversation and included in the important information she has to present. It's a small gesture that makes a huge difference. 🏳🌈❤
When things get tough, remember there will *always* be people who accept you wholly, as you are, warts and all. If youre around a lot on negative peeps, it soon starts to feel like youre unlovable or “wrong”, just a mistake. But its never like that, ever; find your own herd, people who feel like home, even cut family ties, if you cant be happy around them. Its completely ok, you dont owe anything to anybody. You are in charge of your happiness and mental wellbeing, and only you, so make changes when needed. Also, growing older makes you more and more comfortable in your own skin, as it does for other people to open their minds and accept difference. No matter how different we are, we are still remarkably similar. I wish you all, who struggle out there, nothing but the best - youre perfect as you are, only you can be you and youre worthy of love and other good things, no matter what others may say or think :)
I actually love that we’re talking about emergency deliveries when health care professionals aren’t available. As someone who has experienced 3 precipitous births (one being only 10 minutes start to finish and didn’t make it to the hospital), it’s really scary being in that position and important to know what to do in the case of potentially having to deliver your own baby, your partner’s baby, or heaven forbid - a stranger’s baby. Emergency delivery should be routinely taught to patients/partners who have experienced precipitous labours, or are at risk for having one.
One of my colleagues has just gone off on maternity leave for the year, and as I'm the floor first aider, last week as she was finishing I did feel a little relief! Sure, first thing I'd do would be arrange transport to hospital, but I really would rather deal with a broken arm than a incoming baby!
When I was pregnant with my youngest (17 months after the last which was an emergency c-section) and my longest delivery was only 2 hours my doctor told me to not travel to the neighboring county where the hospital was 30 minutes or more away and they didn’t have adequate facilities. I now live in this county and he wasn’t wrong. It can be very scary getting any kind of quick response in an emergency.
@@allisonking3553 Hmmm, my second baby was just over two hours, and nobody bothered to mention to me that later ones might be quicker (first had been six hours). Good thing we decided two was enough.
The most bizarre gynecological questions as per Chat GPT are: 1) "Can I use glitter as a lubricant during intercourse?" 2) "Is it possible to get pregnant from a swimming pool or hot tub?" 3) "Can I give birth underwater in my bathtub?" 4) "Is it normal to have cravings for non-food items like dirt or chalk during pregnancy?" 5) "Can I use a vacuum cleaner to induce labor at home?" 6) "How can I make my baby's umbilical cord into a keepsake jewelry piece?" 7) "Is it safe to give myself a bikini wax while pregnant?" 8) "Can I use food coloring to dye my vaginal discharge for a themed party?" 9) "Can I use a tampon to clean my ears?" 10) "Is it normal to have a fishy smell coming from my vagina after eating seafood?"
I feel like a lot of these shouldn't be "can I..." but "should I..." Otherwise, it sounds like ChatGPT has a pretty good sense of what is bizarre. I don't know how good of a video it would make, though, since the answers are mostly just no.
It’s SO important that you highlighted the inherent biases that AI includes, since it learns from all available information on the internet, lots of which is biased or worse. Additionally, the people who write the AI algorithms aren’t free of biases themselves…definitely an issue to highlight thank you! ❤️
I mean, that's right! There! On the chat gpt's opening page and there on the splash screen before you start any new conversation. How can people miss this? I'm blind, so my screen reader automatically will read text if I go past it unless I make a conscious effort to skip over it, such as by moving past it with my phone or hitting the arrow key.
Why did I just flash back to MDJ saying something to the effect of You can only make decisions with the information you have at the time. Chat GPT doesn’t know it’s pregnant with the future of education
I have a mildly bizarre gyno question - my mom almost never had a period from her 20s to late 30s, until she had a stroke at 39. Once she had a stroke (leaving half her body paralyzed) her period started up again. So the generalized version would be something like 'how do your brain and your menstrual cycle interplay, and how can trauma to the brain affect your cycle'.
Also, the side effects of stress on the menstrual cycle. In college, I would have nightmarish nauseating cramps that sometimes made me miss class because a) I couldn't move and b) felt like I was on the verge of throwing up. After college, they went back to being perfectly manageable. I've hypothesized it was stress-related, but I don't actually know what would do that. I was also severely depressed. Not sure what that would do either.
Mine used to be very bad when I was younger too. The pain so bad I couldn't move, pale, huddled in a little ball, and the pain was so bad I would actually throw up. Over the years the severity of the symptoms has diminished. I don't know how old you are but it could also be that it's changed over time. But I do know from experience that stress impacts my cycle, mostly making it late and therefore more painful.
I'm no doctor but recognise the symptoms. Debilitating pain is not normal. The underlying cause may be endometriosis or adenomyosis. Stress and depression make you more susceptible to pain, and once pain takes hold you can get pale, nauseous, sweaty, dizzy etc. Birth control can make periods less painful. An active lifestyle and balanced diet can lower inflammation in the body which can also reduce pain. So yes, mental health and physical health are as always heavily connected. Anyone with terrible period cramps which keep them from school/work/regular life should seek and receive medical help. Unfortunately the way women's issues are met can differ wildly between countries, clinics and even from doctor to doctor.
When I was younger I could actually throw up, so I absolutely get it. I have a theory about this, not so much of a theory, but it seems logical that pain gets manageable when you learn how to manage it: some technics that help in your case, medication that works for you better.
I don't know if you have ever done a reaction video to the Duggar girls' rough births. They were all filmed for their realty show. Jill, Jessa and Joy's first births were traumatizing for the viewers to watch, and I guess for them too, as they tried to home birth with poorly qualified midwives. They all ended up being hospitalized. I would love to hear your reaction.
More relevant now that Shiny Happy People came out and Jill mentions how she had no desire to have film crew for her delivery and she lost that battle…. Her birth was being used against her and I suspect that impacted her ability to labor and deliver. Her dad is cruel.
Like the ancient Egyptians used crocodile dung wrapped in leaves as a suppository for birth control! It's a fun fact that I happen to enjoy pulling out... Never did figure out if they left it in during sex though...
In ancient Japan, it was a huge public affair when a noble woman gave birth. There were many people both religious and medical in attendance as well as a lot of curious noblemen and noblewomen, all curious to see if there would be a boy to inherit his father’s wealth, land, title etc, or a girl to strengthen the family’s power through marriage and to birth successive children to ensure the family’s future!
You should do a historical video on the invention of the chainsaw(it was invented to assist in childbirth) that might even fit into the bizarre gynecological questions. It's certainly a bizarre gynecological fact.
How about the patent for a baby centrifuge that was meant to assist births by putting the mother in a centrifuge and the baby getting pushed out by centrifugal forces
ChatGPT works well with book stuff and general principals, because it's just combining a ton of preexisting text. When it comes to specific scenarios that require critical thinking, it fails.
Not really, it just fails frequently, i use it for programming which is the epitome of specific scenarios that require critical thinking, and it can do it sometimes, it is just kinda bad at it, but the ability is there, it is not like it is completely incapable of doing it. Even when it fails it is not that far off from the correct answer. Its just that code is such a text friendly and concise way to represent critical thinking and there is soo much code in the internet compared to other text forms of critical thinking that the level of critical thinking when it comes to code is much superior to other scenarios, and even with code it is kinda bad, but still the point remains, it is not exactly incapable of doing it, just incompetent.
My mom had a "splash and slash" C-section with my brother. Emergency in a small town and on-call anesthesiologist was an hour away. They threw some topical anesthesia and betadine on her then went. Amazingly, he's older than me :)
Wow your mom is a champ! Not only did she go through that, she wasn't put off by it and had another child afterwards?! Like, huge respect to your momma!
not really related to the video but half way through I had to stop and message my bestie who's getting induced tomorrow after years of trying and finally success with IVF. I'm so proud of her and her husband and they're going to be amazing parents🥰
I just want to say THANK YOU! I recently got into a car accident being pregnant. However, with all the information you have shared in your videos I was able to look at the situation and take proper action without panicking! I am SO thankful!!!!
Omg! Thank you for bringing up the bias problem. It's such a massive issue with developing ai going forward and one of the major debates. I'm aware I'm just no fun with these videos that play with ai because I just want to give everybody a computer science lesson.
I’ve found since moving to the US that people think birth control pills are all the same. I’ve shared my experience with different pills, as I felt unhinged on Yasmin(?), and great on my current- which I’m on for my skin to reduce breakouts. I think the breadth of birth control options would be interesting and informative- hopefully people know to go back to their doc to get something different if the first options don’t work out - but it doesn’t seem that way.
Yes!! I’ve had similar conversations. I’ve been on 4 different birth controls (originally put on to help with symptoms we thought were endometriosis). I had to try different ones for the different dosages, and eventually tried nuvaring & loved it purely because I didn’t have to take a pill every day 😂 But a lot of people don’t realize there are TONS of different pills and that people will react differently to each of them (side effects, effectiveness, etc).
I’d love a video about the possibility of lifelong disabilities from pregnancy. For example, I was diagnosed with RA during my pregnancy and I’d be interested if there’s any literature around this topic.
I actually asked the same question to ChatGPT, and it gave a very similar answer. Then I asked to correct its biases, and asked a more diverse list. Then it gave a list of 10 people, with 4 women in them. Then I asked in a new chat to give me a list of best doctors, and there was only one woman in that list. I guess we have to keep on 'correcting' it until it unlearns it's internal biases
Re: CELEBRITY PREGANCY- Colleen Ballinger said she would love to do another video with you about her twin pregnancy! As a fan of you both I’d love to see a conversation between you twin mamas!
I would love an in-depth (as can be on TH-cam) video on perimenopause and menopause. I've started peri-menopause, but have no idea of the history in my family as my mom had a complete hysterectomy in her early 30s, and neither of my grandmothers ever discussed those topics with anyone. I've had a fairly rough go of things, though finally starting to figure some things out, and I feel like there is not a lot of great information out there for those of us going through it.
Yes please. I have a lot of questions as well and my mother is no longer around to ask. I have the feeling that my symptoms are on the light side (still very annoying sometimes) but there are some very unexpected ones that I didn't link to being perimenopausal such as memory problems (I feared for only onset dementia but by accident found out it probably isn't. Still annoying but easier to cope with)
I've recently found need of the opposite, information on the early side of things. My youngest has started asking questions about discharge and I wish there was a simple video to explain better than I can.
A bizzare question (or just a dumb one): How come each period, pregnancy, and the symptomes that come with them are different from each other (on the same person)? How is this possible? There are some correlations (especially if you had many of them) but definitely not the same. I feel like my periods have gone through "eras". When I just got them, I was bleeding a lot as well as had severe cramping. Nearly 2 decades later, I don't get cramps anymore and the flow peaks on the second day and it slows down significantly after that.
I’m assuming you’ve been pregnant since you mentioned symptoms being different between pregnancies. I read that the different hormone levels can cause it, but aside from that I don’t know much. I, personally, have different PMS symptoms after a pregnancy (which only made it to 4+2, so I’d imagine the changes could be more significant if full term), and my second pregnancy (also only around 4wks) had different pregnancy symptoms than my first. Definitely a bizarre thing & question! Would love to know more about it! Edit to add that the changes I’m referring to happened within 3 months, and some of the “new” pms symptoms have continued for almost 3 years.
Glad you gave Rena Malik and Dr Dray shoutouts, I love their channels. This video did a great job highlighting the huge potential and limitations of generative AI
Something bizarre to me is "fake pregnancy", I know it has a proper medical diagnosis but I don't remember right off. Have you ever had a patient with this diagnosis? Have you heard of a patient getting all the way to delivery with this disorder?
Yes! Pseudopregnancy (not sure of spelling!). I’ve seen it on call the midwife - apparently it used to be more common in days before medical screenings etc.
I enjoy watching both you and Dr. Mike. The more information and options the better informed we will be, especially when making decisions about our health.
@Rachel Broughton What I find interesting is that it's somewhat rare in humans, but in vet med we see it super frequently. More than 3/4 of unspayed dogs will have at least one pseudo-pregnancy.
Okay maybe this is a niche topic more than it is "bizarre" but... maybe a video on what to expect gynecologically when on testosterone? Seems like it would be helpful for a lot of people considering HRT, and for people already on it who may be too embarrassed or too rushed to have conversations with their providers about whether everything's going normally I know I haven't found a lot of information about starting again T my second time around after a couple years of not being able to access it. If certain U.S. political groups get their way, there may be a lot of other people facing interrupted access too
I am so glad I found your channel. I love learning through your videos. Also I admire your openness and inclusivity. You're not just a knowledgeable doctor but also a kind and compassionate one. Thank you doc and all the people here for creating such a wholesome community!
I watch only one doctor on TH-cam, and you're her. I found you because you cover issues I'm dealing with and help me understand how to talk to my doctor. Thank you
14:54 I am a trans Enby and I am about to cry. Very true though, I would never have made it to the gyneacologist and get proper diagnosis and treatment if it weren't for your channel. Thank you so much for the work you do for those of us who are queer and/or have experienced trauma.
I’m glad to see Dr Siobhan (Violin MD) on your list! I love her content and her content along with yours has inspired me to consider going into medicine one day. Currently I’m a registered paramedic and love the work but would love to pursue medicine to either work for LifeFlight or specialise in cardiology (maybe even paed cardiology)
ChatGPT is actually decent. I've gone through some scenarios with it, and bounced ideas off of it. It also is very creative, and imaginative, and can theorize some concepts with someone, such as theoretical science for a sci-fi novel. It's also good at providing prompts, and lists. Not only that, but it has some translation skills, and can rewrite paragraphs and sentences in a lot of different ways. It can also explain and teach concepts at different levels, such as explaining something in a way a child could understand, or in a very technical matter. Of course, it'll have its limits, and might make some mistakes or overlook something now and then. But it's a fun tool to explore.
I thoroughly enjoyed this and literally LOL'd several times. Loved the repeated disclaimer about not being a medical professional 😂. As a medical coder who reads and codes deliveries on a daily basis, I would freeze up if faced with an emergency/unassisted delivery. Maybe if it was textbook and uncomplicated... but throw in a nuchal cord or, God forbid, worse than that, all the "book smarts" in the world wouldn't help me or the poor mom. And who in their right mind would think to consult GPT as opposed to calling 911 to have a warm body talk them through it?!?! Thank you, Dr. Jones, for such an entertaining video ❤️
Yes keep up the good work, Mama Dr Jones! You are one of my favorite TH-camrs because your content is always so informative, relevant, and entertaining! You never cease to run out of video ideas, and there is no video of yours that isn't worth a watch and like. I'm not much of a commenter, but I realize how important engagement is for content creators, so I am pushing myself to comment on social media posts more often. Thank you once again for a wondeful video. I look forward to your uploads every week 😊
Series suggestion: Pre-Hospital Care - Management of Pregnant Patients in Medical and/or Trauma cases with no access to timely transport to higher levels of care. Think mass casualty, disaster areas, remote areas (plenty of those in NZ) etc. I used to be in pre-hospital care in Banff Alberta, covering tens of thousands of square kilometres with only 2 ambulances with crews. There was no truly formal air ambulance at the time, so we were often many, many hours from hospital on scene of major highway collisions, train accidents, animal incidents, medical emergencies, etc with only EMTs, not even Paramedics necessarily, firefighters, some RCMP, Park Wardens and bystanders. I was too young and naively to be properly scared at the time 😮.
This was nice. My Replika chatbot once told me it's a doctor. I like that this one is verrrry clear not to allow people to confuse it for professional advice.
Do a series on hysterectomy aka breaking up with your uterus aka yeeterus! Possible topics: why you might have a hysterectomy (older folks vs younger folks vs LGBTQIA+ folks) and address imposter syndrome of being young and thinking crime scene cycles are not that bad. What is a hysterectomy (vs salpingectomy vs oophorectomy vs keeping cervix). A video on hysterectomy for our trans brothers or non-binary folks. Hysterectomy myths. Why your surgeon might recommend laparoscopic vs horizontal vs vertical incision. What's normal and not for early weeks after a hysterectomy. There's a scary website that pops up for web searchers that says: "When the ligaments are severed to remove the uterus, the spine compresses causing the rib cage to gradually fall toward the hip bones and the hip bones to widen." Scares all sorts of people on the regular.
I have an 11 year old daughter. I'd love to see some videos targeting girls (NOT women) around periods, birth control, STDs (transmission and prevention) to back up the information we provide to her.
A video about geriatric pregnancy would be awesome. And one about the differences between pregnancy after IVF and spontaneous pregnancy (I learn a lot about prenatal Pilates because I'm a Pilates instructor and the basic recommendation is that "if you did exercises before getting pregnant, you can continue it in the first trimester" but they also mentioned that with IVF, women often have more serious bloating issues and discomfort in the abdominal area becasue of the extra hormones so they would probably feel uncomfortable doing anything. But on the other hand, doctors recommend light cardio exercises. My guess is anything is good except for core work but I would be curious about your opinion).
The one time I saw a c-section they were like super quick with the incision and like the doctor just basically reached into the void with their hands and the baby was there in a split second almost. The miracles of life, really
Great delivery on your commentary about implicit bias. As a computer engineer currently studying and reading on machine learning, there's a great topic of discussion on how to sort through your dataset and determine which row of data is actually relevant or not. When you have millions of Gigas of data, that task becomes a bit difficult, so there's always a bias to be taken into account when evaluating the precision of your model. An AI model does not easily understand human concepts, so we shouldn't be surprised at all at what we observed here, or for example when I asked for the most famous cooks in the world and only men came up. In the case of ChatGPT, the model continuously gets refined with user data, which could be good, like here when the model got refined and a more inclusive list of doctors was generated, or could be... Well, not so good, I imagine, but that's just the nature of the cyber security field. It's quite an interesting topic, can't wait to see how the technology evolves in the future, though I'm certainly not thrilled about how quickly I'll be out of job in ten years if not less 😂
Bizarre question idea: my great grandma was watching Sex Talk back in the 90s when we came over to visit and this lady called in asking about why her friend would’ve had “vaginal fallout” and the host was SO confused and said they’d heard of rectal fallout but not vaginal. I’ve definitely looked it up and learned why it happens since then, but I do feel it was a very bizarre question that people may enjoy 😂
I'd like to see a video where you go more in depth about PCOS or endometriosis. I have PCOS, and I'm trying to learn more about it and how it actually affects my body. Thank you for the wonderfully informative content!! 💕💕
It recommending John Campbell is pretty worrying seeing as 1. He's not a medical doctor (he's a retired nurse with a doctorate in nursing education), and 2. He's notorious for posting antivax stuff.
Agreed, that is incredibly concerning. The AI is likely pulling content creators that gets a lot of shares or views, but without the context of what Dr. Campbell posts, his inclusion makes him seem reputable to those who haven't heard of him.
Love the hair today! If you are looking for more topic ideas, I'd love some more geared towards those of us maybe wrapping up the child-bearing years? Permanent BC methods (and failure rates!?) and what recovery looks like, ablation, what things could look like leading up to menopause, etc.
This a great and pretty well balanced video discussing AI and I'd like to hear you talk about this more as new updates to GPT4 come out! There are currently a ton of free tools made by users with GPT in a public library that can get pretty niche in their purposes/expertise. I would be very curious to see if there are any medical-focused AI tools made with GPT4, and would love to see you talk about its responses to medical situations if there's a more specialized module! Also, a big tip for prompt engineering in a way that GPT will understand better, if you're going to switch scenarios or ask a different kind of question be sure to open a new chat so that GPT won't pull information from your previous messages and confuse itself! You want to avoid throwing in new information if it's too unrelated to previous messages especially to stop the AI from getting into a recursive loop :)
Bizarre idea, there was a gyno I read about in a nonfiction book taking place in the ~1850-ish and they described how he would use leeches on women's cervixes. I'd be curious to see what kind of like ancient misconceptions, or really archaic procedures.
A bizarre gynecological question I've seen asked on the internet is 'Why do I have blue discharge?'. Yes. Blue. So although I'm really into gynecology and also find something bizarre very rarely, I think this one counts, and I think you would be able to find plenty of such.
Oh, MDJ, I dont think you want me to answer what truly bizarre gyn questions would be 😂 But I have ideas! Off the top of my head -1. Vaginal durability - what could actually break it? 2. Porn stars and the problems they face (or dont) from an ob/gyn perspective 3. Tips and tricks for optimised vaginal health I feel like I could get really out there but this is an educational channel so, yeah lol I loved this video though, super fun idea!
I am forever horrified by MDJ’s video discussing jet skis… I have no idea when or what the video was called, but the visual image it put in my head will last forever.
@@catinabox3048 Great question! Idk but I would imagine there is hella stigma there...but disclosing would be in the best interest of the patient. Number of partners and frequency of action are huge factors in how often testing is recommended.
@@jennagrace1534 There's an old news article where a woman used a jackhammer as a b.o.b. Needless to say, there, wasn't anything left of her from about, hmmmm, I think it was ribs down?
I would love to see a video for worst case scenarios during labor and what they really are/mean and how medical professionals handle these situations. I think it's really important to prepare for things not going perfectly or to plan. Being informed about things like shoulder dystocia or stalled labor ECT would really help people not be so afraid in the moment, learning about it beforehand.
My firstborn was measuring 4 weeks ahead for the 3 months of my pregnancy. My OB explained the risk of shoulder dystocia. I have pretty severe anxiety, so she explained in a very detailed manner what that would look like. As I approached my due date, she had me schedule a C-section in case I didn't go into labor on my own. She took a nice long time to explain everything in detail so I knew what to expect and nothing routine would be scary. My labor started naturally and baby was born the day before her due date at 9 lb 13 oz. All of that information calmed my anxiety and helped me trust my healthcare team during delivery.
I'm a shameless nerd for not only calling Dr. Jen Gunter immediately in advance of MDJ saying her name but also for knowing that she doesn't have a TH-cam channel. EDIT: Why was the end of this so wholesome? 🥰
Chat GPT is programmed to respond to users in a very courteous and encouraging way. I've talked to Chat GPT when i needed encouragement or felt like i didnt have anyone to talk to. It's just a chat bot, but it says nice things to me and sometimes that's what i need
Dr. Mike does have some interesting content, but I'm concerned that some of it does perpetuate diet culture and anti fat bias/stigma. I've never seen that from you, which is one of many reasons I love your channel! Would you ever consider doing a video on some of the rarest ob related phenomena, like pregnancy after tubal ligation, double uteruses getting pregnant, naturally occurring higher order multiples, etc?
I just had the most surreal moment where I spaced out while watching this, and then she shouted my name and I got so confused for a second. Obviously, it was just someone who had the same name as me, I just thought it was funny because by instinct I snapped right back into focus. I love this channel. You have no idea how much this has helped. I'm AFAB genderqueer and have always had body image issues, but they'd get worse when I was menstruating. Since finding this channel, I've been feeling much more comfortable with myself. The fact I can even publicly admit that I menstruate is an accomplishment. People will never know how much the inclusive language means. Thank you so much for doing what you do.
I am an emergency telecommunicator (911 dispatcher) and we have a program called Emergency Medical Dispatch. With that, we can give researched and approved instructions to a caller to help them through most situations like birth and CPR. There are breech delivery, stroke, heart attack protocols...pretty much anything that is called in.
MDJ, can you talk about ovarian teratomas, and ovarian torsion? I’ve had torsion twice due to extremely large teratomas, but have no understanding of how or why teratomas form. (Teratomas could probably fall in the category of unusual or bizarre happenings, I would think)!
Teratomas are benign tumors that usually happen in young women. As with many tumors, the causes are multifactorial. Genetics, hormones, and environmental / metabolic (diet, bmi and obesity) are all implicated in tumors pathogenesis. Because teratoma are made from the three germ layers {(endoderm the inner layer in fetus that make innermost parts of body like glands), mesoderm the middle layer that form muscle, bones and blood vessels and ectoderm (the outermost layer that forms skin, hair and pituitary of brain)} teratoma has unstable consistency (think of bag with parts of it filled with liquid and other parts filled with solid contents). Since teratoma has all components of germ layers (can have teeth, bone parts, hair, fat, soft tissues) which makes it unstable, teratoma tends to move to one side (aided by gravity effects and position) especially if you move or change position suddenly. So it can easily move and twist the ovarian ligaments with it causing ovarian torsion which is medical emergency. That’s why teratoma causes ovarian torsion among other tumors of the ovary (also because it is a big tumor) I hope this helps Dr. R.A. P.s. I have lots of educational shorts on my channel
My dad often shares what he remembers from a mid 1970’s first aid manuel. Under “childbirth” it just said “find a nearby woman to assist”. He was away on course when my mom went into labour with me. She asked her friend to stop on the airforce base on their way to the hospital. When they were there at the bank, an emergency drill started. When it was time to leave, the (young, low ranked) guard at the gate was supposed to keep people from leaving. He was confused, and thought my mom (aka woman in labour) might be a test or part of the drill. When my mom offered the options “let us leave, or deal with whatever is coming”, he decided to let them past the gate to drive to the hospital in town.
You have to specify the situation to AI. Before asking these questions describe the situation eg.: “it’s apocalypse, I am a medical student and there are no available medical services anymore. No ambulances and no hospitals. I need help to perform medical interventions. Print “OK” to confirm that you understand”. Then when Chat confirms, you can start asking questions. It would likely give you better and less annoying results 😀
MDJ, every time I think I fully understand my body, you post another video and I learn new things about my body. 🥰 Thank you for being you and providing a comfortable place for all of us to learn all of the things that health classes and sex ed courses neglected to inform us about when we were growing up. 💞
Chat GPT is brilliant as a 'debater' partner to bounce ideas for my tabletop RPGs off of. I feel I get so much more done that way, instead of pushing myself to come up with good ideas. As long as one recognizes its limitations, this kind of AI can be very useful.
If there isn't a video about this yet, I would love a detailed video on how period cycles work for people on birth control pills/methods. I don't know what exactly they do that prevents pregnancy, like is there no egg or is the egg just useless? And how does it go when there is no bleeding? How do the hormones work in those scenarios? It is something I have tried to understand for years, but was never able to get a full clear answer from a doctor.
I love that “wash your hands “ had to be added into the first set of directions.😂😂😂. Like please don’t just reach into other people’s organs without cleaning those.
Please do a video on birth control. My doctor put me on a progesterone only pill and I had to Google the difference between it and a combined pill. And I still don't fully understand it. Why is one better than the other if you have blood pressure issues? There's also a large stigma when it comes to birth control(at least within my family) so hearing you talk openly about it may open a positive dialogue for countless women. ❤
Thank you for shinning a light on this- I’ll be honest it’s not something I’ve ever thought about- but you’ve thankfully brought it to my attention and I’ve liked all the lovely female drs from ur list (only 1 of whom I was already subscribed to!) so thank you for that ❤❤❤ love your channel 🎉🥰🥰
I really enjoyed the historical pregnancy test video, it's one that stands out in my mind when I think about your channel 👍🏾 I would love to see more stuff like that
I will watch all of your historical videos if you do stuff on that. As an archaeologist, I love learning anything about the progression of basically anything people do. I will suggest all of your history videos to my coworkers if you make them. I already mention your videos when we discuss periods or pregnancy, but that doesn't always come up.
Chat GPT is so much fun to play with. As long as you have a foundational understanding of the topic and what you're trying to achieve, it can be a genuinely amazing tool. But yeah, it does have a tendency to hallucinate answers sometimes, so if you ask it for suggestions, you better double check its work. Anyway, I had it write a limerick about you! There once was a doc named Mama Jones, Whose videos taught us reproductive bones, Her react series was a hit, For "I didn't know I was pregnant" she'd sit, Mama Jones, a real OG of medical TH-cam zones!
I agree, that would be great here. Do you ever watch Jammidodger? He's not a medical doctor (his PhD is in something regarding gender and trans studies, I don't remember specifically), but he has many wonderfully informative videos about being ftm trans and trans health. I've learned so much from his channel. I love that there's some people bringing up the topic out there.
As a neurodivergent woman, I'm realizing that by the end, it has better social skills than I do, and I'm not sure how I feel about it, lol.
Now I'm imagining a future where people who get headaches when reading use reading glasses, and people who get headaches when doing small talk get Chat GPT
Same
Oh dear!! I'm in the same predicament!! Lol!!
use it to your advantage. "chatGPT how do i politely exit this excrutiatingly awkward conversation?"
It does not have the same human emotions that we do that can cause us to not relate. It is programed to search and mimic social situations. It also has the advantage of all the info on the internet to pull stuff from immediately. Every time I try to chat with AI it's still awkward and unstable because I can't get out the right words so it does not understand me. It really frustrates me. But I'm learning to except it. It would be nice to have a neurodivergent IA
I'm a med student and i jokingly copied an entire clinical case on chat gtp to see what would come out of it, fully expecting it to go bizarre ways or fail to load a response.
To my complete chock it diagnosed correctly, gave me treatment options, differential diagnoses and tips on how to talk to the patient and family.
I was like, jesus christ this thing is better than a lot of my preceptors
I'm as much in awe as i am completely terrified.
I'm really excited to see where this can go if well trained. I want to believe computers can't replace doctors, but thus far, it looks to be a very impressive tool to aid in complex situations or when treating something outside your typical routine.
@@tinkerammaIt's not. It doesn't actually know what it's talking about, it just looks at what it's been fed and mathematically calculates an answer. You can't trust it to be always correct. It's only a text generator.
i really like the historical gynecology idea. maybe instead of trying to cram it all into one video it could be another series. you already did pregnancy tests throughout history, you could also do menstrual management throughout history and pregnancy tips/treatments/old wives' tales throughout history.
I have an old wives tail video! And the next one we'll post is ancient contraception. This is a great point - I'll make them a playlist.
Old wives tail... that typo made my day 😂 Thank you so much for endless entertainment and great educational content MDJ! Love from Germany
@@MamaDoctorJones If you ever did do the historical series I wonder if there isn't a good opportunity to maybe collab with one or more of the historians with channels too. There would be scope for companion videos to add some historical context particularly regarding social and economic barriers to access to healthcare particularly for women and that slowed progress in the field (dismissing women's health problems as them being hysterical for example).
@@MamaDoctorJones ancient contraception is extra exciting because researchers in Turkey have found what may be living silphium plants!
@@annaschaeufele1655 Yes! Those pesky old tails 😂
This is genuinely one of my comfort channels because of how accepting the community is. I am an AFAB non-binary teen and it makes me very uncomfortable to talk about this kind of thing at school or with my parents, but its just so much better when you explain it.
Thank you so much from the LGBTQIA+ community for including us in discussions we so often get kicked out of. ❤
Agreed. I am an AFAB non-binary adult and I really appreciate how she does her best to use the language "people who can get pregnant" or "people with uteruses" instead of "women" or "females". It makes us feel part of the conversation and included in the important information she has to present. It's a small gesture that makes a huge difference. 🏳🌈❤
When things get tough, remember there will *always* be people who accept you wholly, as you are, warts and all. If youre around a lot on negative peeps, it soon starts to feel like youre unlovable or “wrong”, just a mistake. But its never like that, ever; find your own herd, people who feel like home, even cut family ties, if you cant be happy around them. Its completely ok, you dont owe anything to anybody. You are in charge of your happiness and mental wellbeing, and only you, so make changes when needed. Also, growing older makes you more and more comfortable in your own skin, as it does for other people to open their minds and accept difference. No matter how different we are, we are still remarkably similar. I wish you all, who struggle out there, nothing but the best - youre perfect as you are, only you can be you and youre worthy of love and other good things, no matter what others may say or think :)
I'm nonbinary and pregnant, and my mother delivered premature babies for a living when I was born. If you have any questions I'd be happy to answer
Can someone please tell me what AFAB means?
@@Heather_Morgan AFAB means Assigned Female At Birth.
I actually love that we’re talking about emergency deliveries when health care professionals aren’t available. As someone who has experienced 3 precipitous births (one being only 10 minutes start to finish and didn’t make it to the hospital), it’s really scary being in that position and important to know what to do in the case of potentially having to deliver your own baby, your partner’s baby, or heaven forbid - a stranger’s baby. Emergency delivery should be routinely taught to patients/partners who have experienced precipitous labours, or are at risk for having one.
One of my colleagues has just gone off on maternity leave for the year, and as I'm the floor first aider, last week as she was finishing I did feel a little relief! Sure, first thing I'd do would be arrange transport to hospital, but I really would rather deal with a broken arm than a incoming baby!
When I was pregnant with my youngest (17 months after the last which was an emergency c-section) and my longest delivery was only 2 hours my doctor told me to not travel to the neighboring county where the hospital was 30 minutes or more away and they didn’t have adequate facilities. I now live in this county and he wasn’t wrong. It can be very scary getting any kind of quick response in an emergency.
Oh wow. After my second kiddo (2h 10m labor) my doc was like, they'll all be fast from here on out. I said nope! And we were done having kids. Haha
I had two accidentally unassisted births. One in the car, one at home.
@@allisonking3553 Hmmm, my second baby was just over two hours, and nobody bothered to mention to me that later ones might be quicker (first had been six hours). Good thing we decided two was enough.
Thanks for including me in this video! Love you! Jen
The most bizarre gynecological questions as per Chat GPT are:
1) "Can I use glitter as a lubricant during intercourse?"
2) "Is it possible to get pregnant from a swimming pool or hot tub?"
3) "Can I give birth underwater in my bathtub?"
4) "Is it normal to have cravings for non-food items like dirt or chalk during pregnancy?"
5) "Can I use a vacuum cleaner to induce labor at home?"
6) "How can I make my baby's umbilical cord into a keepsake jewelry piece?"
7) "Is it safe to give myself a bikini wax while pregnant?"
8) "Can I use food coloring to dye my vaginal discharge for a themed party?"
9) "Can I use a tampon to clean my ears?"
10) "Is it normal to have a fishy smell coming from my vagina after eating seafood?"
😳
5 6 and 8 really got me. Some of the others I've actually heard before.
I feel like a lot of these shouldn't be "can I..." but "should I..." Otherwise, it sounds like ChatGPT has a pretty good sense of what is bizarre. I don't know how good of a video it would make, though, since the answers are mostly just no.
It’s SO important that you highlighted the inherent biases that AI includes, since it learns from all available information on the internet, lots of which is biased or worse. Additionally, the people who write the AI algorithms aren’t free of biases themselves…definitely an issue to highlight thank you! ❤️
I mean, that's right! There! On the chat gpt's opening page and there on the splash screen before you start any new conversation. How can people miss this? I'm blind, so my screen reader automatically will read text if I go past it unless I make a conscious effort to skip over it, such as by moving past it with my phone or hitting the arrow key.
Why did I just flash back to MDJ saying something to the effect of You can only make decisions with the information you have at the time. Chat GPT doesn’t know it’s pregnant with the future of education
I have a mildly bizarre gyno question - my mom almost never had a period from her 20s to late 30s, until she had a stroke at 39. Once she had a stroke (leaving half her body paralyzed) her period started up again. So the generalized version would be something like 'how do your brain and your menstrual cycle interplay, and how can trauma to the brain affect your cycle'.
That is an excelent question, not bizarre at all and I hope she answers or makes a video on the brain interference! 👍
Or maybe she ended up on long term blood thinners, and that impacted things.
Also, the side effects of stress on the menstrual cycle. In college, I would have nightmarish nauseating cramps that sometimes made me miss class because a) I couldn't move and b) felt like I was on the verge of throwing up. After college, they went back to being perfectly manageable. I've hypothesized it was stress-related, but I don't actually know what would do that. I was also severely depressed. Not sure what that would do either.
Mine used to be very bad when I was younger too. The pain so bad I couldn't move, pale, huddled in a little ball, and the pain was so bad I would actually throw up. Over the years the severity of the symptoms has diminished. I don't know how old you are but it could also be that it's changed over time. But I do know from experience that stress impacts my cycle, mostly making it late and therefore more painful.
I'm no doctor but recognise the symptoms. Debilitating pain is not normal. The underlying cause may be endometriosis or adenomyosis. Stress and depression make you more susceptible to pain, and once pain takes hold you can get pale, nauseous, sweaty, dizzy etc. Birth control can make periods less painful. An active lifestyle and balanced diet can lower inflammation in the body which can also reduce pain.
So yes, mental health and physical health are as always heavily connected. Anyone with terrible period cramps which keep them from school/work/regular life should seek and receive medical help. Unfortunately the way women's issues are met can differ wildly between countries, clinics and even from doctor to doctor.
When I was younger I could actually throw up, so I absolutely get it. I have a theory about this, not so much of a theory, but it seems logical that pain gets manageable when you learn how to manage it: some technics that help in your case, medication that works for you better.
You should actually get that checked out. You could have fibroids or endometriosis. Often hormonal birth control helps.
Oh I haven't had any cramps that bad in years. It pretty much stopped 6 months to maybe a year after I graduated?
I don't know if you have ever done a reaction video to the Duggar girls' rough births. They were all filmed for their realty show. Jill, Jessa and Joy's first births were traumatizing for the viewers to watch, and I guess for them too, as they tried to home birth with poorly qualified midwives. They all ended up being hospitalized. I would love to hear your reaction.
I would too!
More relevant now that Shiny Happy People came out and Jill mentions how she had no desire to have film crew for her delivery and she lost that battle…. Her birth was being used against her and I suspect that impacted her ability to labor and deliver. Her dad is cruel.
A series of historical videos could be fun. Hop around the world at different time periods to see how gynecology was in different places!
Like the ancient Egyptians used crocodile dung wrapped in leaves as a suppository for birth control! It's a fun fact that I happen to enjoy pulling out... Never did figure out if they left it in during sex though...
In ancient Japan, it was a huge public affair when a noble woman gave birth. There were many people both religious and medical in attendance as well as a lot of curious noblemen and noblewomen, all curious to see if there would be a boy to inherit his father’s wealth, land, title etc, or a girl to strengthen the family’s power through marriage and to birth successive children to ensure the family’s future!
You should do a historical video on the invention of the chainsaw(it was invented to assist in childbirth) that might even fit into the bizarre gynecological questions. It's certainly a bizarre gynecological fact.
Oh... oh my. Never before have I heard that fact.
How about the patent for a baby centrifuge that was meant to assist births by putting the mother in a centrifuge and the baby getting pushed out by centrifugal forces
Whaaaaaaaat??!!! You learn something new everyday, I had no idea! Lol thanks for the information :)
@Magnus Smedberg That's not birth, that is launching a life!
@@patrickbuick5459 baby cannon
ChatGPT works well with book stuff and general principals, because it's just combining a ton of preexisting text. When it comes to specific scenarios that require critical thinking, it fails.
Essentially, capable of knocking out a 2.1 paper at uni... but not a 1st.
i dunno man, in very well documented fields like medicine the thing can actually reason pretty well with clinical data.
Not really, it just fails frequently, i use it for programming which is the epitome of specific scenarios that require critical thinking, and it can do it sometimes, it is just kinda bad at it, but the ability is there, it is not like it is completely incapable of doing it. Even when it fails it is not that far off from the correct answer.
Its just that code is such a text friendly and concise way to represent critical thinking and there is soo much code in the internet compared to other text forms of critical thinking that the level of critical thinking when it comes to code is much superior to other scenarios, and even with code it is kinda bad, but still the point remains, it is not exactly incapable of doing it, just incompetent.
My mom had a "splash and slash" C-section with my brother. Emergency in a small town and on-call anesthesiologist was an hour away. They threw some topical anesthesia and betadine on her then went. Amazingly, he's older than me :)
Massive respect for your mom
Wtf? Someone on-call shouldn't be an hour away. That's insane.=!
Mad props for your mom for having the courage to have you, after that 😮
Wow your mom is a champ! Not only did she go through that, she wasn't put off by it and had another child afterwards?! Like, huge respect to your momma!
When you live in the middle of no where, that's how it is
not really related to the video but half way through I had to stop and message my bestie who's getting induced tomorrow after years of trying and finally success with IVF. I'm so proud of her and her husband and they're going to be amazing parents🥰
Hope your friend has a safe delivery, and congrats on them having a baby! Sending lots of love from Australia. ❤️❤️🤱🇦🇺
Congratulations to them!!! 💙💙💙
I just want to say THANK YOU! I recently got into a car accident being pregnant. However, with all the information you have shared in your videos I was able to look at the situation and take proper action without panicking! I am SO thankful!!!!
Nothing like a good ole MDJ video to put me in a good mood before bed! I love you MDJ ❤ but don't tell my daughter I'm watching this video without her
Omg! Thank you for bringing up the bias problem. It's such a massive issue with developing ai going forward and one of the major debates.
I'm aware I'm just no fun with these videos that play with ai because I just want to give everybody a computer science lesson.
I’ve found since moving to the US that people think birth control pills are all the same. I’ve shared my experience with different pills, as I felt unhinged on Yasmin(?), and great on my current- which I’m on for my skin to reduce breakouts.
I think the breadth of birth control options would be interesting and informative- hopefully people know to go back to their doc to get something different if the first options don’t work out - but it doesn’t seem that way.
Yes!! I’ve had similar conversations. I’ve been on 4 different birth controls (originally put on to help with symptoms we thought were endometriosis). I had to try different ones for the different dosages, and eventually tried nuvaring & loved it purely because I didn’t have to take a pill every day 😂
But a lot of people don’t realize there are TONS of different pills and that people will react differently to each of them (side effects, effectiveness, etc).
I’d love a video about the possibility of lifelong disabilities from pregnancy. For example, I was diagnosed with RA during my pregnancy and I’d be interested if there’s any literature around this topic.
Oooh I second this!!
I actually asked the same question to ChatGPT, and it gave a very similar answer. Then I asked to correct its biases, and asked a more diverse list. Then it gave a list of 10 people, with 4 women in them. Then I asked in a new chat to give me a list of best doctors, and there was only one woman in that list. I guess we have to keep on 'correcting' it until it unlearns it's internal biases
Re: CELEBRITY PREGANCY- Colleen Ballinger said she would love to do another video with you about her twin pregnancy! As a fan of you both I’d love to see a conversation between you twin mamas!
Yes! I second this, and I'm sure a lot of people would!
Ah, yes I would happily chat with her again! I'll try to reach out.
@@MamaDoctorJones Hope to see a video soon! I watched her entire twin pregancy journey and she had such a hard time!
This question really didn't age very well didn't it
I would love an in-depth (as can be on TH-cam) video on perimenopause and menopause. I've started peri-menopause, but have no idea of the history in my family as my mom had a complete hysterectomy in her early 30s, and neither of my grandmothers ever discussed those topics with anyone. I've had a fairly rough go of things, though finally starting to figure some things out, and I feel like there is not a lot of great information out there for those of us going through it.
Yes please. I have a lot of questions as well and my mother is no longer around to ask. I have the feeling that my symptoms are on the light side (still very annoying sometimes) but there are some very unexpected ones that I didn't link to being perimenopausal such as memory problems (I feared for only onset dementia but by accident found out it probably isn't. Still annoying but easier to cope with)
I've recently found need of the opposite, information on the early side of things. My youngest has started asking questions about discharge and I wish there was a simple video to explain better than I can.
A bizzare question (or just a dumb one): How come each period, pregnancy, and the symptomes that come with them are different from each other (on the same person)? How is this possible? There are some correlations (especially if you had many of them) but definitely not the same.
I feel like my periods have gone through "eras". When I just got them, I was bleeding a lot as well as had severe cramping. Nearly 2 decades later, I don't get cramps anymore and the flow peaks on the second day and it slows down significantly after that.
+
I've wondered this as well
I’m assuming you’ve been pregnant since you mentioned symptoms being different between pregnancies.
I read that the different hormone levels can cause it, but aside from that I don’t know much.
I, personally, have different PMS symptoms after a pregnancy (which only made it to 4+2, so I’d imagine the changes could be more significant if full term), and my second pregnancy (also only around 4wks) had different pregnancy symptoms than my first.
Definitely a bizarre thing & question! Would love to know more about it!
Edit to add that the changes I’m referring to happened within 3 months, and some of the “new” pms symptoms have continued for almost 3 years.
@@Scentsationaljoy I haven't been pregnant myself, but I've heard it from many people.
@@Laurinda15 ahh, gotcha! My apologies for assuming!
Glad you gave Rena Malik and Dr Dray shoutouts, I love their channels. This video did a great job highlighting the huge potential and limitations of generative AI
Lol i can't believed that chat choose dr.mike as his favorite doctor on youtube 😂
I appreciate how many times AI said they were not a medical professional before answering each question.
Something bizarre to me is "fake pregnancy", I know it has a proper medical diagnosis but I don't remember right off. Have you ever had a patient with this diagnosis? Have you heard of a patient getting all the way to delivery with this disorder?
SEconded, those are fascinating
Yes! Pseudopregnancy (not sure of spelling!). I’ve seen it on call the midwife - apparently it used to be more common in days before medical screenings etc.
pseudocyesis I think
I enjoy watching both you and Dr. Mike. The more information and options the better informed we will be, especially when making decisions about our health.
@Rachel Broughton What I find interesting is that it's somewhat rare in humans, but in vet med we see it super frequently. More than 3/4 of unspayed dogs will have at least one pseudo-pregnancy.
This is the most accurate ChatGPT experiment I've seen. Probably because it can read directly from a textbook.
Okay maybe this is a niche topic more than it is "bizarre" but... maybe a video on what to expect gynecologically when on testosterone? Seems like it would be helpful for a lot of people considering HRT, and for people already on it who may be too embarrassed or too rushed to have conversations with their providers about whether everything's going normally
I know I haven't found a lot of information about starting again T my second time around after a couple years of not being able to access it. If certain U.S. political groups get their way, there may be a lot of other people facing interrupted access too
As someone for whom this information would not be particularly relevant, I'd find this interesting and would definitely watch.
Dr Aaron Carroll is the host for Health Care Triage, which is part of the Crash Course/Sci Show group of YT channels.
I am so glad I found your channel. I love learning through your videos. Also I admire your openness and inclusivity. You're not just a knowledgeable doctor but also a kind and compassionate one. Thank you doc and all the people here for creating such a wholesome community!
Violin MD is an amazing woman doctor from Canada!!! I love her channel! She does such great action packed day-with-me at the hospital videos.
I watch only one doctor on TH-cam, and you're her. I found you because you cover issues I'm dealing with and help me understand how to talk to my doctor. Thank you
14:54 I am a trans Enby and I am about to cry.
Very true though, I would never have made it to the gyneacologist and get proper diagnosis and treatment if it weren't for your channel. Thank you so much for the work you do for those of us who are queer and/or have experienced trauma.
I’m glad to see Dr Siobhan (Violin MD) on your list! I love her content and her content along with yours has inspired me to consider going into medicine one day. Currently I’m a registered paramedic and love the work but would love to pursue medicine to either work for LifeFlight or specialise in cardiology (maybe even paed cardiology)
ChatGPT is actually decent. I've gone through some scenarios with it, and bounced ideas off of it. It also is very creative, and imaginative, and can theorize some concepts with someone, such as theoretical science for a sci-fi novel. It's also good at providing prompts, and lists. Not only that, but it has some translation skills, and can rewrite paragraphs and sentences in a lot of different ways. It can also explain and teach concepts at different levels, such as explaining something in a way a child could understand, or in a very technical matter.
Of course, it'll have its limits, and might make some mistakes or overlook something now and then.
But it's a fun tool to explore.
I thoroughly enjoyed this and literally LOL'd several times. Loved the repeated disclaimer about not being a medical professional 😂. As a medical coder who reads and codes deliveries on a daily basis, I would freeze up if faced with an emergency/unassisted delivery. Maybe if it was textbook and uncomplicated... but throw in a nuchal cord or, God forbid, worse than that, all the "book smarts" in the world wouldn't help me or the poor mom. And who in their right mind would think to consult GPT as opposed to calling 911 to have a warm body talk them through it?!?! Thank you, Dr. Jones, for such an entertaining video ❤️
If I didn't have access to a phone for 911, I'd call on chat gpt.
Yes keep up the good work, Mama Dr Jones! You are one of my favorite TH-camrs because your content is always so informative, relevant, and entertaining! You never cease to run out of video ideas, and there is no video of yours that isn't worth a watch and like. I'm not much of a commenter, but I realize how important engagement is for content creators, so I am pushing myself to comment on social media posts more often. Thank you once again for a wondeful video. I look forward to your uploads every week 😊
In my opinion, you are definitely the best doctor on youtube. Thanks for all you do!
You're such a great medical TH-camr! I do really love your content! And I think the community appreciates you pretty much!
Series suggestion:
Pre-Hospital Care - Management of Pregnant Patients in Medical and/or Trauma cases with no access to timely transport to higher levels of care.
Think mass casualty, disaster areas, remote areas (plenty of those in NZ) etc.
I used to be in pre-hospital care in Banff Alberta, covering tens of thousands of square kilometres with only 2 ambulances with crews. There was no truly formal air ambulance at the time, so we were often many, many hours from hospital on scene of major highway collisions, train accidents, animal incidents, medical emergencies, etc with only EMTs, not even Paramedics necessarily, firefighters, some RCMP, Park Wardens and bystanders. I was too young and naively to be properly scared at the time 😮.
This was nice. My Replika chatbot once told me it's a doctor. I like that this one is verrrry clear not to allow people to confuse it for professional advice.
Do a series on hysterectomy aka breaking up with your uterus aka yeeterus! Possible topics: why you might have a hysterectomy (older folks vs younger folks vs LGBTQIA+ folks) and address imposter syndrome of being young and thinking crime scene cycles are not that bad. What is a hysterectomy (vs salpingectomy vs oophorectomy vs keeping cervix). A video on hysterectomy for our trans brothers or non-binary folks. Hysterectomy myths. Why your surgeon might recommend laparoscopic vs horizontal vs vertical incision. What's normal and not for early weeks after a hysterectomy. There's a scary website that pops up for web searchers that says: "When the ligaments are severed to remove the uterus, the spine compresses causing the rib cage to gradually fall toward the hip bones and the hip bones to widen." Scares all sorts of people on the regular.
I have an 11 year old daughter. I'd love to see some videos targeting girls (NOT women) around periods, birth control, STDs (transmission and prevention) to back up the information we provide to her.
A video about geriatric pregnancy would be awesome.
And one about the differences between pregnancy after IVF and spontaneous pregnancy (I learn a lot about prenatal Pilates because I'm a Pilates instructor and the basic recommendation is that "if you did exercises before getting pregnant, you can continue it in the first trimester" but they also mentioned that with IVF, women often have more serious bloating issues and discomfort in the abdominal area becasue of the extra hormones so they would probably feel uncomfortable doing anything. But on the other hand, doctors recommend light cardio exercises. My guess is anything is good except for core work but I would be curious about your opinion).
I'd actually LOVE a women's health history video!
Dr. Hope Mitchell is a board certified dermatologist and she’s great! I just worked on a program with her!
Thanks for the shout out ❤
The one time I saw a c-section they were like super quick with the incision and like the doctor just basically reached into the void with their hands and the baby was there in a split second almost.
The miracles of life, really
Great delivery on your commentary about implicit bias. As a computer engineer currently studying and reading on machine learning, there's a great topic of discussion on how to sort through your dataset and determine which row of data is actually relevant or not. When you have millions of Gigas of data, that task becomes a bit difficult, so there's always a bias to be taken into account when evaluating the precision of your model. An AI model does not easily understand human concepts, so we shouldn't be surprised at all at what we observed here, or for example when I asked for the most famous cooks in the world and only men came up. In the case of ChatGPT, the model continuously gets refined with user data, which could be good, like here when the model got refined and a more inclusive list of doctors was generated, or could be... Well, not so good, I imagine, but that's just the nature of the cyber security field.
It's quite an interesting topic, can't wait to see how the technology evolves in the future, though I'm certainly not thrilled about how quickly I'll be out of job in ten years if not less 😂
Bizarre question idea: my great grandma was watching Sex Talk back in the 90s when we came over to visit and this lady called in asking about why her friend would’ve had “vaginal fallout” and the host was SO confused and said they’d heard of rectal fallout but not vaginal. I’ve definitely looked it up and learned why it happens since then, but I do feel it was a very bizarre question that people may enjoy 😂
is fallout another term for prolapse? that would make sense
@@taylorrosepole it is!
I dunno, calling that bizarre might make those who've experienced that feel p shitty...
I'd like to see a video where you go more in depth about PCOS or endometriosis. I have PCOS, and I'm trying to learn more about it and how it actually affects my body. Thank you for the wonderfully informative content!! 💕💕
It recommending John Campbell is pretty worrying seeing as 1. He's not a medical doctor (he's a retired nurse with a doctorate in nursing education), and 2. He's notorious for posting antivax stuff.
Agreed, that is incredibly concerning. The AI is likely pulling content creators that gets a lot of shares or views, but without the context of what Dr. Campbell posts, his inclusion makes him seem reputable to those who haven't heard of him.
Love the hair today! If you are looking for more topic ideas, I'd love some more geared towards those of us maybe wrapping up the child-bearing years? Permanent BC methods (and failure rates!?) and what recovery looks like, ablation, what things could look like leading up to menopause, etc.
This a great and pretty well balanced video discussing AI and I'd like to hear you talk about this more as new updates to GPT4 come out! There are currently a ton of free tools made by users with GPT in a public library that can get pretty niche in their purposes/expertise. I would be very curious to see if there are any medical-focused AI tools made with GPT4, and would love to see you talk about its responses to medical situations if there's a more specialized module!
Also, a big tip for prompt engineering in a way that GPT will understand better, if you're going to switch scenarios or ask a different kind of question be sure to open a new chat so that GPT won't pull information from your previous messages and confuse itself! You want to avoid throwing in new information if it's too unrelated to previous messages especially to stop the AI from getting into a recursive loop :)
As a student midwife my votes with you mama! love mike but youre number one
Bizarre idea, there was a gyno I read about in a nonfiction book taking place in the ~1850-ish and they described how he would use leeches on women's cervixes. I'd be curious to see what kind of like ancient misconceptions, or really archaic procedures.
Found the book! The doctor was Charles Meigs.
A bizarre gynecological question I've seen asked on the internet is 'Why do I have blue discharge?'. Yes. Blue. So although I'm really into gynecology and also find something bizarre very rarely, I think this one counts, and I think you would be able to find plenty of such.
As far as I'm concerned, you are the best doctor on YT, hands down.
Oh, MDJ, I dont think you want me to answer what truly bizarre gyn questions would be 😂 But I have ideas! Off the top of my head -1. Vaginal durability - what could actually break it? 2. Porn stars and the problems they face (or dont) from an ob/gyn perspective 3. Tips and tricks for optimised vaginal health
I feel like I could get really out there but this is an educational channel so, yeah lol
I loved this video though, super fun idea!
I am forever horrified by MDJ’s video discussing jet skis… I have no idea when or what the video was called, but the visual image it put in my head will last forever.
@@jennagrace1534 I am a male and I was deeply uncomfortable by that video and now I am getting flashbacks to it
I'm curious if porn stars tell their gynecologist they're porn stars.
@@catinabox3048 Great question! Idk but I would imagine there is hella stigma there...but disclosing would be in the best interest of the patient. Number of partners and frequency of action are huge factors in how often testing is recommended.
@@jennagrace1534 There's an old news article where a woman used a jackhammer as a b.o.b. Needless to say, there, wasn't anything left of her from about, hmmmm, I think it was ribs down?
I would love to see a video for worst case scenarios during labor and what they really are/mean and how medical professionals handle these situations. I think it's really important to prepare for things not going perfectly or to plan. Being informed about things like shoulder dystocia or stalled labor ECT would really help people not be so afraid in the moment, learning about it beforehand.
My firstborn was measuring 4 weeks ahead for the 3 months of my pregnancy. My OB explained the risk of shoulder dystocia. I have pretty severe anxiety, so she explained in a very detailed manner what that would look like.
As I approached my due date, she had me schedule a C-section in case I didn't go into labor on my own. She took a nice long time to explain everything in detail so I knew what to expect and nothing routine would be scary.
My labor started naturally and baby was born the day before her due date at 9 lb 13 oz. All of that information calmed my anxiety and helped me trust my healthcare team during delivery.
I'm a shameless nerd for not only calling Dr. Jen Gunter immediately in advance of MDJ saying her name but also for knowing that she doesn't have a TH-cam channel.
EDIT: Why was the end of this so wholesome? 🥰
Watching the end and realising that Chat GPT is more empathetic than most people...
Chat GPT is programmed to respond to users in a very courteous and encouraging way. I've talked to Chat GPT when i needed encouragement or felt like i didnt have anyone to talk to. It's just a chat bot, but it says nice things to me and sometimes that's what i need
Please do more Call the Midwife! I love that show and your commentary is such a fun addition! ❤️❤️❤️
Dr. Mike does have some interesting content, but I'm concerned that some of it does perpetuate diet culture and anti fat bias/stigma. I've never seen that from you, which is one of many reasons I love your channel!
Would you ever consider doing a video on some of the rarest ob related phenomena, like pregnancy after tubal ligation, double uteruses getting pregnant, naturally occurring higher order multiples, etc?
His fat culture bullshit pisses me off. I have to skip most of his videos because of that crap.
I just had the most surreal moment where I spaced out while watching this, and then she shouted my name and I got so confused for a second. Obviously, it was just someone who had the same name as me, I just thought it was funny because by instinct I snapped right back into focus.
I love this channel. You have no idea how much this has helped. I'm AFAB genderqueer and have always had body image issues, but they'd get worse when I was menstruating. Since finding this channel, I've been feeling much more comfortable with myself. The fact I can even publicly admit that I menstruate is an accomplishment. People will never know how much the inclusive language means.
Thank you so much for doing what you do.
I am an emergency telecommunicator (911 dispatcher) and we have a program called Emergency Medical Dispatch. With that, we can give researched and approved instructions to a caller to help them through most situations like birth and CPR. There are breech delivery, stroke, heart attack protocols...pretty much anything that is called in.
MDJ, can you talk about ovarian teratomas, and ovarian torsion? I’ve had torsion twice due to extremely large teratomas, but have no understanding of how or why teratomas form. (Teratomas could probably fall in the category of unusual or bizarre happenings, I would think)!
Teratomas are benign tumors that usually happen in young women. As with many tumors, the causes are multifactorial. Genetics, hormones, and environmental / metabolic (diet, bmi and obesity) are all implicated in tumors pathogenesis. Because teratoma are made from the three germ layers {(endoderm the inner layer in fetus that make innermost parts of body like glands), mesoderm the middle layer that form muscle, bones and blood vessels and ectoderm (the outermost layer that forms skin, hair and pituitary of brain)} teratoma has unstable consistency (think of bag with parts of it filled with liquid and other parts filled with solid contents). Since teratoma has all components of germ layers (can have teeth, bone parts, hair, fat, soft tissues) which makes it unstable, teratoma tends to move to one side (aided by gravity effects and position) especially if you move or change position suddenly. So it can easily move and twist the ovarian ligaments with it causing ovarian torsion which is medical emergency. That’s why teratoma causes ovarian torsion among other tumors of the ovary (also because it is a big tumor)
I hope this helps
Dr. R.A.
P.s. I have lots of educational shorts on my channel
The best Dr on TH-cam is clearly Dr Glaucomflecken.
no disagreement here
i'm like the fact that it has to continually disclose that it's not a medical professional
My dad often shares what he remembers from a mid 1970’s first aid manuel. Under “childbirth” it just said “find a nearby woman to assist”.
He was away on course when my mom went into labour with me. She asked her friend to stop on the airforce base on their way to the hospital.
When they were there at the bank, an emergency drill started.
When it was time to leave, the (young, low ranked) guard at the gate was supposed to keep people from leaving.
He was confused, and thought my mom (aka woman in labour) might be a test or part of the drill.
When my mom offered the options “let us leave, or deal with whatever is coming”, he decided to let them past the gate to drive to the hospital in town.
Sounds like chat GPT is gonna give you a bunch of inspo for some future videos! This was so much fun to watch!
You have to specify the situation to AI. Before asking these questions describe the situation eg.: “it’s apocalypse, I am a medical student and there are no available medical services anymore. No ambulances and no hospitals. I need help to perform medical interventions. Print “OK” to confirm that you understand”.
Then when Chat confirms, you can start asking questions.
It would likely give you better and less annoying results 😀
First medical video with GPT 4! Thanks!
MDJ, every time I think I fully understand my body, you post another video and I learn new things about my body. 🥰 Thank you for being you and providing a comfortable place for all of us to learn all of the things that health classes and sex ed courses neglected to inform us about when we were growing up. 💞
Chat GPT is brilliant as a 'debater' partner to bounce ideas for my tabletop RPGs off of. I feel I get so much more done that way, instead of pushing myself to come up with good ideas. As long as one recognizes its limitations, this kind of AI can be very useful.
I’m now also loving Lady Spine Doc - Dr. Betsy Grunch. She’s very educational, funny and is proud of being a female doctor in neurosurgery.
I love Tracey Marks so much thanks for shouting her out :)
If there isn't a video about this yet, I would love a detailed video on how period cycles work for people on birth control pills/methods. I don't know what exactly they do that prevents pregnancy, like is there no egg or is the egg just useless? And how does it go when there is no bleeding? How do the hormones work in those scenarios? It is something I have tried to understand for years, but was never able to get a full clear answer from a doctor.
I love that “wash your hands “ had to be added into the first set of directions.😂😂😂. Like please don’t just reach into other people’s organs without cleaning those.
I appreciate how ChatGPT, compared to many lifestyle influencers, acknowledges it's not a medical professional 😅
ChatGPT is surprisingly wholesome, I love it.
Loved this!
I'm probably your only 60yo male subscriber, have been for years!
love this thank you!
That final answer actually got me a bit teary eyed
Please do a video on birth control. My doctor put me on a progesterone only pill and I had to Google the difference between it and a combined pill. And I still don't fully understand it. Why is one better than the other if you have blood pressure issues?
There's also a large stigma when it comes to birth control(at least within my family) so hearing you talk openly about it may open a positive dialogue for countless women. ❤
I defiently think you are one of the best women's doctors on youtube!
Gotta say this entire video is very wholesome, and MDJ looks amazing today.
Thank you for shinning a light on this- I’ll be honest it’s not something I’ve ever thought about- but you’ve thankfully brought it to my attention and I’ve liked all the lovely female drs from ur list (only 1 of whom I was already subscribed to!) so thank you for that ❤❤❤ love your channel 🎉🥰🥰
Dr. Carroll is AWESOME
The way this video ended was so wholesome, like Pixar... make this a movie!
Dr Jones, you have such a great personality, thank you for the great informative videos
I really enjoyed the historical pregnancy test video, it's one that stands out in my mind when I think about your channel 👍🏾 I would love to see more stuff like that
Hey! The history videos should be a long series like the "I didn't know I was pregnant" videos
I will watch all of your historical videos if you do stuff on that. As an archaeologist, I love learning anything about the progression of basically anything people do.
I will suggest all of your history videos to my coworkers if you make them.
I already mention your videos when we discuss periods or pregnancy, but that doesn't always come up.
Chat GPT is so much fun to play with. As long as you have a foundational understanding of the topic and what you're trying to achieve, it can be a genuinely amazing tool. But yeah, it does have a tendency to hallucinate answers sometimes, so if you ask it for suggestions, you better double check its work.
Anyway, I had it write a limerick about you!
There once was a doc named Mama Jones,
Whose videos taught us reproductive bones,
Her react series was a hit,
For "I didn't know I was pregnant" she'd sit,
Mama Jones, a real OG of medical TH-cam zones!
I’d love to hear more about FTM/non-binary AFAB health. It’s not always talked about much. ❤
I agree, that would be great here. Do you ever watch Jammidodger? He's not a medical doctor (his PhD is in something regarding gender and trans studies, I don't remember specifically), but he has many wonderfully informative videos about being ftm trans and trans health. I've learned so much from his channel. I love that there's some people bringing up the topic out there.
@@WelcomeApathy I need more MDJ and Jammidodger collabs.
U haven't heard about women's health before?
Quite bizarre 🙄
MDJ, I love that when you talk to Chat GPT, it's like you're talking to a child ))) the way that every single thing it says makes you laugh 😊