@@shasha96613 Honestly though I love that idea. Once I do become a surgeon myself, I will do the same to med students 😂. But offcourse I would teach them the answer.
@@johnnelson4411I guess. If the answer is obvious than humility is somewhat needed, but tbh I am a really kind person, so I would never make fun of a student over their knowledge. I would just do my job, and hope that the students would learn one thing or two when I become whatever I wish to become
I can say with confidence that the pathology one goes beyond the realm of human medicine. The vet tech who taught me the pathology equipment care is like this, and now so am I. The part at the end struck my basophil-loving heart.
@@samdajellybeenie14 It's not a really competitive specialty, not well-compensated and not prestigious. So the kind of people who go into pathology generally aren't the kind of people with big egos. And its lifestyle is really good (9 - 5 kind of job), so the pathologists are not typically over-worked/sleep deprived.
My mom was working for a pathologist, dying slides or something, when she met my dad, who assisted with autopsies. Based on what you said, it makes sense that my mom would be in that department, but now I'm curious what my dad's group might've been like. Can you offer any insight?
...but unfortunately the rest of it is entirely inaccurate 😒 I'm a Canadian psychiatrist. I'd start a skit with something real like, "The first thing you must learn is the PRNs for agitation. Oh, and speaking of Haldol, it used to be known as Vitamin H, back in the old days! Ha-ha! Like, ree-allly old days. Before my time. Speaking of time, we have a miracle called the lunch hour. Yes, an actual lunch hour, can you believe it?"
This was hilarious. I had a rare type of cancer and unusual side effects to some medications, so my doctors bring in medical students a lot. One doctor showed a medical student my scan and said that he would never believe that was my scan after meeting me because of how well I was doing. I kind of laughed. Guess I’m a medical unicorn. I was a nurse’s first heparin shot and another student’s first pelvic exam. I’m doing my part contributing to the future generation of doctors.
@@Penguinman2.0, I’m doing really well now. Thank you for asking. Pretty much back to normal life except for getting scans and more doctor appointments than most people. I had brain cancer that affected my left side and have weakness on that side from time to time. Physical therapy seems to be helping with that. Whenever I have an appointment with a new doctor and go through a health history, I tell them that other than the brain cancer, I’m pretty boring. I go big or go home.
being a medical unicorn/zebra for any reason isn't always fun. great to get uncommon things taught to med students but can be infuriating at times. I have rare conditions so even when I'm in hospital or er for a separate issue 5 docs come in asking about things I'm not there for and literally have no significance to what I'm there for. I love spreading awareness even to Drs and soon to be Drs but sometimes it's too much. I hope they didn't get you on the worst days when you were struggling and dealing with that many people learning and holding conversation that really shouldn't be in front of a patient if at all as if you weren't there. but also hope they didn't do that at the same time. you just never know hospital to hospital
This only reinforces my desire to go into Pathology....I thought the niceness was fake at first then realized pathologists are literal angels who are so excited to teach and show others cool things!
In general, yes, but there are exceptions, of course. But is true that as a Pathologist is not usual to have med students/interns in our offices so it's kinda cool to interact with them even more when they show real interest in what we do.
Dude is a comedic genius. I should be working on a grant, a paper and a presentation I’m doing in 3 days. Instead I’ve spent the last 45 minutes watching these videos back to back, lol
I just remembered House in House MD is a double specialist in nephrology and infectious diseases. The breaking in the patient's home part in ID video reminds me so much of the House's and his diagnostic team's M.O. in the show.
Love it. Retired family doctor here. Most of it was true, sadly so. My students werent abused by me but they were surprised that i expected as much as the other specialties did. Hurts to be ignored. Ran into one of my ortho attendings at the symphony and he gave me dollar to get him a Coke at the bar. LOL So who trains us then? the nursing staff.
Retired oncology nurse here (46 years). I have trained so many doctors. Oncology is super difficult. Most wanted all the help they could get. I sure do miss it.
You're hilarious. Not a doctor but I was a biomed tech, (the guy who fixes all your equipment so you can do your job, in case you didn't know) and in my 11 year career I met just about every archetype in this video, amazing work!
@@mahmoudharbi3985 I waiting 11 years to be able to move over. It's all about persistence. Obviously helps to be good at biomed work and to working at some high profile hospitals doesn't hurt lol
This ortho nurse says the ortho doc is perfect. I love them, but they are absolutely the jocks of the hospital. When I was a new nurse I asked one of them about his patients BMP results- he paused, stared at me for a second and said “I’m an orthopedic surgeon, I don’t know what any of that means.” 😂
@@irshviralvideo it's a simple score for detecting asphyxia in neonates directly after birth. They get points for good circulation and breathing as well as movement.
As an oncologist, I'm deeply offended that you didn't make fun of us in part 1. Fix this or else I'll start explaining how a 0.9 month survival benefit is statistically significant
I once maintained a home for a neurosurgeons one of the best in his field He was so busy he never came home Beautiful and luxurious home Paid others to caretake it He was Always at his job Real shame he was the epitome of “you can’t have your cake and eat it too” However it was there for him if he ever retired
Probably needs a back surgery after performing too many 10-hour surgeries. They're cranky sometimes, but I would be after spending so much time in the OR
Apparently even doctors get really leery about eyeballs (and the possiblity of needles in eyes). I mean, give them a gory childbirth or someone vomiting faeces, but leave those eyeballs to the opthalmologist
@@luciesimpson6437 Truth. I'm an OR nurse. For the circulators, eyeballs are easy on your back/no moving the patient. Once they are set up, it's quick. Set up is the same, meds are predictable. Don't have to run for much. But...they just SIT there. LOOKING AT YOU. Then, your eyes hurt. I'll happily do more colorectal cases, thanks. Stirrups and poop? Okay.
Your characters, delivery, poise and emulation are second to none! Genuinely- dr glauc needs a Netflix series with all the characters. A medical ‘the office’ type comedy drama! The intertwine stories and tales are endless! This is original gold! It’s been decades since we have seen an original character such as Johnathan!! For me this is on par with ‘fork handles’ from the Ronnies back in the day! Absolute genuine talent!
The radiologist is so true, there is only darkness 😳 some times you see a clock and cant even tell if it says 9am or 9pm 😝 when you finally leave the lights so bright you feel like Dracula 🤣
The cardiologist throwing EKGs at you immediately and the ER drs being literal athletes and sending you straight into a room with a patient right away are the most accurate things I’ve seen.
Within a few minutes of being in the pediatrics ward I was handed a baby for and I quote " good luck" because I told the pediatrician that I'm not good with kids. I was properly terrified because it was my first time interacting with such an tiny human, I'm still traumatised by most of the staff laughing at how stiffly I was holding the baby.
“Have you ever done a chart review so deep you found an APGAR score… on a 90 year old.” I literally bent over in histeric laughter! I’m an ICU RN and I feel like that just described me.
As a medical laboratory scientist, my boss will always be a pathologist. Almost all of the ones I met during internship and after getting licensed are so welcoming and answers all our questions (which can be stupid sometimes) always with correlations to our profession (not just showing off), and this include residents. For me, they're part of the "extremely smart" side of specialties because they need to correlate everything to everything-from history to the slides (*albeit without seeing the patient i guess). They are part of definitive diagnostics if that's a thing. (i'm not trying to fight the neuros k hahaha) Also, the lab is always cold because machines and temperature-controlled tests. In histopathology section, the smell of the formaldehyde is so strong I teared up at the entrance on my first day. Ventilation can only do so much. Kudos to the histotechs that assist our pathologists. I hope your sense of smell is still okay.
Great stuff and so accurate!My family doctor asked what I thought of my orthopedic surgeon. I said he was very self assured. My family doctor said, “Yeah, if he sat at the right hand of God he would tell God how badly he was doing things.” That’s so accurate I choked when he said it.
😂😂 when I was a MS3, my neurology attending was exactly like this - he was a sarcastic, condescending dick to everyone in the hospital... except to medical students. He was the coolest, chillest attending I had in 3rd year, and he was an amazing teacher. IM residents *hated* consulting him though. 😂
My daughter in laws grandfather was a cardiologist who taught medical school. He had a theory that the higher in the body the specialty covered, the bigger the ego of the specialist.
"My histories takes so long, cultures wait on me to finish" HAHAHAHA I FEEL THIS IN PERSONAL LEVEL CAUSE in internal medicine rotation I gotta ask patient this long list of questions so I don't missed out a thing but when I do that as well in surgery rotation, I got scolded for hours lol
lmao when i was a med student i started on IM and then went to surgery. polar opposites in every sense. i got so many tongue lashings it's not even funny.
@@seraphik My favorite general surgery moment in M3 was working in a community hospital so my attending was doing the case and had me running the camera, and some scrub tech helping manipulate organ movement in the 4th port...So 9 hours into the surgery with no breaks yet, and repeated things going wrong, we finally get to the point we want when my attending yells "NO-ONE FUCKING MOVES! STAY! DON'T FUCKING MOVE!". My blood sugar was low, I was holding my breath to not move the camera any, and the poor scrub tech was retracting omentum while standing in an awkward position. Have always joked with him about this every since then, saying I felt like I was in a Venezuelan bank robbery when he yelled that. Good times!
It’s all so accurate! The X-ray/CT Scan part is so accurate. I just survived Covid pneumonia and they take you for CTs and X-rays during the night and it’s like an abandoned hospital down there. My nurse even got lost and had to ask where CT was. Even down to the dimly lit room. I went for a chest X-ray one night and we got lost again (Different nurse) and couldn’t find anyone in the X-ray room and all of a sudden he popped up out of nowhere and was like, “Y’all looking for X-ray?”
I've seen one! As with many cells, sometimes they don't look quite how you would imagine, and IME, basophils stained way less than I expected them to, so they're both rare and easy to miss
I found one in my own blood sample in my first hematology lab actually!!! The lab assistant even let me do whatever i wanted to do for that session (which i took a look at everyones and found another 4 basophils) My luckiest day everr!!
The height of humor is self-aware and pulls the audience in. I loved 'mom' responding with a tilt of the head with the look of incredulity. ...life... is a bunch of different experiences. It's worth acknowledging the med's student feeling of discomfort even if the thought of "it's the hardest thing I've ever done" is also tactless in the face of someone else's (the person giving birth) experiences and feelings.
As a student of psychology, the psychiatry portion had me ROTFL HAHAHAHA!!! him reading the DSM5 - hilarious, "Naked Tuesdays are not a thing" - Priceless
I love the casual approach of psychiatry about the craziest situations, it's just like that hahaha! Nothing is unusual in the psych ward. I love this controlled chaotic ambient hahaha!
After everything I became and worked as a psych nurse for over 30 years. Never a dull moment. Especially when your patient tells you her family will be picking h er up and taking g her home that afternoon. You have no discharge orders. So innocently say but we don't have any discharge orders. "OH that's OK they will land the spaceship in the parking lot and beam me aboard."
Not the Psychiatry one, sadly! Psychiatrist here. Our clothes is not what stands out about us. He should talk about Haldol for agitation and this shining diamond of a miracle known as an actual lunch hour. PS. the part where we've seen it all, naked and whatever, is very true. There's very little bizarre behaviour that will actually surprise us.
Omg this guy has been entertaining me since this morning I've found him on TH-cam 🤣 he's so funny and I've learned a lot about medical field from his videos. Thank you Doc!!
Pediatrician 0:45 Cardiologist? 1:37 Infectious disease 2:30 Radiologist 3:30 Nephrologist 4:30 Ortho 5:30 Pathology 6:25 Psychiatry 7:20 Labor and Delivery 8:20 Neurology 9:15 Family medicine 10:15 Critical care 11:07 ER 1204 General surgery 13:03
10:06 I have a family member that's a PA-C that works at a local family medicine practice, and the amount of accuracy of fitting a hours worth of work in 30 mins is more realistic than you might think. Oh and also the "We need help here" is also super realistic too. The morning cry thing I can't say anything about but I imagine something similar happens there.
Reminds me of a post I saw: this guy went to the library to study and found some guy crying his eyes out in the corner. Then his phone alarm went off and he went back to studying
When I was a 4th year Med Student in the late 80's I was interviewing for Ophthalmology, but I had quite a few friends interviewing for Family Practice. The FP residency programs would pay for their plane tickets and a hotel, and would take them out to eat, much like an interview for someone who had completed their training. I suspected a trap even then.
My dad's family medicine practice was on an island, so it involved a fair amount of emergency medicine, too. There were days it was so chaotic that I'd walk in and get pressed into service - anything from cleaning up after a cardiac emergency to acting as a makeshift scrub nurse. Interesting times. After he retired, the remaining clinic doesn't even do urgent care, much less emergent.
That med student in the OB setting is totally me. I can hold brains in heads and perform open chest heart massage. Don’t make me deliver a baby. And I’ve worked with EXTREMELY seasoned neurologists that check reflexes with the bell of a stethoscope. I assess for MS pretty regularly. And just a quick note from a crusty ER nurse. Just give us your name and how you want us to contact you. If this is anywhere near July, we’ll call you if we need orders and will tell you what to order. After YEARS of seeing the “new med students” every painful July, I recommend listening to more than your ego.
This was hilarious. I've worked in hospitals with med students, interns and vascular surgeons and this is all so very accurate! 😂 The general surgeon dictating incoherently floored me!! LOL.
I've been seeing your skits for over a year now. I never knew it started off of when you were doing a rotation on all of these different specialties 🤣😅 makes so much sense now! Thank you
The best part of a monthlong hospital stay was when the doctors and nurses forgot that their patients had ears, and talked shop around us. It was fun to hear that stuff.
Internal Medicine was spot on. As an ARNP I worked with 2 internal med/Geriatric docs, one with rheumatology subspecialty as well. The H&Ps were unreal. ..
DUde, you are hilarious. I’ve seen some of these shorts individually, but seeing them all together like this had me rolling!!! They’re all so funny, because they are so close to the reality med school!
I made it into med school years ago and decided on DPT school instead. This video makes me happy I made the decision that I made lol! God bless all of you wacky brilliant folks who chose the wonders of medicine over basic sanity!
The hand-made microscope was so cool!!!! And I finally found the introduction to Jonathan!!!! Also these are all so funny and so creative!!!! I'm a pre-med so I don't have any experience with these things but they're all really interesting!!!
LOL! 8:18 - A med student had to deliver my baby because she came faster than everyone was ready for or even expecting. Even doctor came in, looked at me, said, "I got to do something real quick, I'll be back." Baby came out, doc came back and said, "Let's get this baby out of you." (Crickets chirping as doc sees baby getting cleaned up.) Unfortunately the doc got the credit even though the student delivered my baby with the help of the nurses. I was so happy and thankful to him.
Nurse here. Idk how people become doctors. The schooling just seems so stressful. I've done clinicals and it was stressful but imagine going through all these high specialties while needing to study and work at the same time. Insane.
Doctors are built differently, lol! It's hard work, but it's worth it in the end. :) Every job has a learning curve, and there are challenges that nurses deal with that doctors don't, so in the end, it's about adapting to the circumstances, and having good coping mechanisms when it gets overwhelming.
Medstud here. Its a long exhausting journey for sure. Sometimes i rly wish i have more times to do my hobby. I really appreciate the nurses who helps me along the way.
"Is this your first [x] rotation?" Subtle and spot on, haha. Always hated that. As if these people don't know how MS3 works? Every one is the first... A question asked when the answer is already known is done to belittle!
As a pharmacist, we just got a whole new wave of residents that we'll have to add in to our system over the next couple months. And some of the orders they're putting in are next level crazy.. it's a yearly ritual, I like to use this time to train my interns. 😁
I recalled the time when i met my cardiologist attending, instead of suggesting to use bad stethoscopes, he said we all should use the best stethoscope that money can buy. Because “you still can’t hear shit with the good one, you wont hear anything with a bad one”
"i'll be entertaining myself by asking questions you won't know the answer to" - pretty much any surgeon in the OR w/ a med student.
T.T brb crying
So trueee!! They really love to make us suffer
@@shasha96613 Honestly though I love that idea. Once I do become a surgeon myself, I will do the same to med students 😂. But offcourse I would teach them the answer.
@@josephdahdouh2725 I imagine part of why this would be done is to teach humility, not just the medical knowledge?
@@johnnelson4411I guess. If the answer is obvious than humility is somewhat needed, but tbh I am a really kind person, so I would never make fun of a student over their knowledge. I would just do my job, and hope that the students would learn one thing or two when I become whatever I wish to become
The pathology one is so accurate. They are the most wholesome people in the building
Why is that? I have nothing to do w medicine I just think these vids are funny
I can say with confidence that the pathology one goes beyond the realm of human medicine. The vet tech who taught me the pathology equipment care is like this, and now so am I. The part at the end struck my basophil-loving heart.
@@samdajellybeenie14 It's not a really competitive specialty, not well-compensated and not prestigious. So the kind of people who go into pathology generally aren't the kind of people with big egos. And its lifestyle is really good (9 - 5 kind of job), so the pathologists are not typically over-worked/sleep deprived.
@@BigMikeMcBastard And they don't have to talk to living patients.
My mom was working for a pathologist, dying slides or something, when she met my dad, who assisted with autopsies. Based on what you said, it makes sense that my mom would be in that department, but now I'm curious what my dad's group might've been like. Can you offer any insight?
The labor and delivery is my favorite. I'll never get tired of stories of people freaking out over the reality that is childbirth
As a mental health professional, the calm way the psychiatrist informed his patient that he does in fact need to wear clothing is so accurate...
Mr. Thompson is in fact the attending psychiatrist, the other one just refuses to address him as doctor if he's naked.
...but unfortunately the rest of it is entirely inaccurate 😒 I'm a Canadian psychiatrist. I'd start a skit with something real like, "The first thing you must learn is the PRNs for agitation. Oh, and speaking of Haldol, it used to be known as Vitamin H, back in the old days! Ha-ha! Like, ree-allly old days. Before my time. Speaking of time, we have a miracle called the lunch hour. Yes, an actual lunch hour, can you believe it?"
Psych R.N. here... yep!
That’s so true about the radiologist. I’ve seen them sitting in the dark staring at a bone on the computer screen many times.
WHAT
The bonecave
This guy is impersonating a doctor and asking for donations on his page, please remove him immediately
@@nichellekocourek5104 what are you talking about?
@@nichellekocourek5104 he's an opthalmologist
This was hilarious. I had a rare type of cancer and unusual side effects to some medications, so my doctors bring in medical students a lot. One doctor showed a medical student my scan and said that he would never believe that was my scan after meeting me because of how well I was doing. I kind of laughed. Guess I’m a medical unicorn. I was a nurse’s first heparin shot and another student’s first pelvic exam. I’m doing my part contributing to the future generation of doctors.
I’m so sorry, that seems so hard. But how are you doing now? Im hoping you are at least comfortable
@@Penguinman2.0, I’m doing really well now. Thank you for asking. Pretty much back to normal life except for getting scans and more doctor appointments than most people. I had brain cancer that affected my left side and have weakness on that side from time to time. Physical therapy seems to be helping with that. Whenever I have an appointment with a new doctor and go through a health history, I tell them that other than the brain cancer, I’m pretty boring. I go big or go home.
@@penguinZ85 wow, thats awesome that you bounced back from such a scary incident
being a medical unicorn/zebra for any reason isn't always fun. great to get uncommon things taught to med students but can be infuriating at times. I have rare conditions so even when I'm in hospital or er for a separate issue 5 docs come in asking about things I'm not there for and literally have no significance to what I'm there for. I love spreading awareness even to Drs and soon to be Drs but sometimes it's too much. I hope they didn't get you on the worst days when you were struggling and dealing with that many people learning and holding conversation that really shouldn't be in front of a patient if at all as if you weren't there. but also hope they didn't do that at the same time. you just never know hospital to hospital
3 words about the video, 3 lines about your personal life. The perfect TH-cam comment. Upvoted!
This only reinforces my desire to go into Pathology....I thought the niceness was fake at first then realized pathologists are literal angels who are so excited to teach and show others cool things!
Yeah I was like “Oh it’s a trap” XD
Pathologist here! We love students :))
Its laboratory. With grateful introverts
If I had the grades to get into med school i'd 100% do pathology...but being a medical technologist is close enough
In general, yes, but there are exceptions, of course. But is true that as a Pathologist is not usual to have med students/interns in our offices so it's kinda cool to interact with them even more when they show real interest in what we do.
"We already know what the EKG says"
"It says the patient needs an ECHO"
These 2 lines are extremely accurate 🤣🤣🤣
I lost it at the “my history is so long the cultures wait on me to finish” HAHAHAHHAHA
Gone so deep you found APGAR???🤣🤣
So, you started breathing as soon as you were born, right ?
@@kurtcurtis2730 on a 90 year old 😂😂😂😂😂
Cracks me up everytime
Ikr lol
@@0ussama01 same!! My favorite part 😂😂
0:44 - pediatrics
1:34 - cardiology
2:31 - infectious disease
3:30 - radiology
4:28 - nephrology
5:25 - orthopedic surgery
6:22 - pathology
7:19 - psychiatry
8:16 - labor and delivery
9:10 neurology
10:07 - family medicine
11:04 - ICU
12:03 - emergency medicine
13:00 - general surgery
13:56 - neurosurgery
Thanks! Dr. G you should pin this comment
Thank you very much
I was waiting for exactly this
This needs to be pinned
0:00 medical research
Infectious disease sounds like House
Dude is a comedic genius. I should be working on a grant, a paper and a presentation I’m doing in 3 days. Instead I’ve spent the last 45 minutes watching these videos back to back, lol
I just remembered House in House MD is a double specialist in nephrology and infectious diseases. The breaking in the patient's home part in ID video reminds me so much of the House's and his diagnostic team's M.O. in the show.
And of course he references when house catheterised himself and strapped the bag to his leg.
The most important part of this video is that the title says “Part 1”. The series continues!
Love it. Retired family doctor here. Most of it was true, sadly so. My students werent abused by me but they were surprised that i expected as much as the other specialties did. Hurts to be ignored. Ran into one of my ortho attendings at the symphony and he gave me dollar to get him a Coke at the bar. LOL So who trains us then? the nursing staff.
Retired oncology nurse here (46 years). I have trained so many doctors. Oncology is super difficult. Most wanted all the help they could get. I sure do miss it.
You're hilarious. Not a doctor but I was a biomed tech, (the guy who fixes all your equipment so you can do your job, in case you didn't know) and in my 11 year career I met just about every archetype in this video, amazing work!
What happened to your career?
@@mahmoudharbi3985 I got smart and moved to imaging repair
@@ggamer882 i wish i could do that
@@mahmoudharbi3985 I waiting 11 years to be able to move over. It's all about persistence. Obviously helps to be good at biomed work and to working at some high profile hospitals doesn't hurt lol
@@ggamer882 Wow 11 years. I like that. I hope you keep being smart🧠
This ortho nurse says the ortho doc is perfect. I love them, but they are absolutely the jocks of the hospital. When I was a new nurse I asked one of them about his patients BMP results- he paused, stared at me for a second and said “I’m an orthopedic surgeon, I don’t know what any of that means.” 😂
😂😂
Sounds exactly like the Ortho surgeons I work with lol
How is that possible though. You gotta have some amazing step scores to match into Ortho. Those guys should know that stuff cold
@@smellypatel5272 if you just pretend you’re a hazard to every patients health…then they just don’t have you admit any patients. Genius. 😂
@@jhe9488 I can hear the malpractice lawsuits from here lol
This is too accurate 😂 that’s why as a nurse I’m always nice to the baby docs cuz they’ve got enough to worry about
how old are baby docs ? do you think you have more experience than baby docs?
Love the nurses / they have your back
@@irshviralvideo Hella yes.
Thanks to all the mama nurses who save our asses and look out for us with a kind word or treats.. love them. 🥰🥰
Major Carla-JD vibes from your comment 😊😅
"it's gonna fit we've been doing it for thousands of years"
🤣🤣🤣
"have you done a chart review so hard you got apgar score on a 90 year old"😂😂😂that was epic!!!
I laughed so hard at that one. And it's so true for geriatrics 😂
@@onetwoBias what is a apgar score ?
@@irshviralvideo it's a simple score for detecting asphyxia in neonates directly after birth. They get points for good circulation and breathing as well as movement.
How well a baby was at birth in short.
don't get it, but it sounded hilarious so I loled
Total Genius. Leveraging every single specialty's stereotypes into laugh-out-loud satire. Masterpiece.
As an oncologist, I'm deeply offended that you didn't make fun of us in part 1. Fix this or else I'll start explaining how a 0.9 month survival benefit is statistically significant
Nevermind chemo and side effects eat away 60% of said survival!
Yes! Do it or we'll start using visine
he has the best video on first day on Onc you tiktok :)))
Please - do!
legendary comment
I once maintained a home for a neurosurgeons one of the best in his field
He was so busy he never came home
Beautiful and luxurious home Paid others to caretake it
He was Always at his job
Real shame he was the epitome of “you can’t have your cake and eat it too”
However it was there for him if he ever retired
Probably needs a back surgery after performing too many 10-hour surgeries. They're cranky sometimes, but I would be after spending so much time in the OR
Laughed out loud when you said you’d take the rectal prolapse over the eye. No matter what school you go to ophthalmology gets no coverage.
It's extra funny because in real life he's an ophthalmologist.
@@ikeu6433 That was my take on it.
Apparently even doctors get really leery about eyeballs (and the possiblity of needles in eyes). I mean, give them a gory childbirth or someone vomiting faeces, but leave those eyeballs to the opthalmologist
YES !!!! I would have done the same lol.
@@luciesimpson6437 Truth. I'm an OR nurse. For the circulators, eyeballs are easy on your back/no moving the patient. Once they are set up, it's quick. Set up is the same, meds are predictable. Don't have to run for much.
But...they just SIT there. LOOKING AT YOU. Then, your eyes hurt.
I'll happily do more colorectal cases, thanks. Stirrups and poop? Okay.
You're like a nervous Ryan Reynolds mixed with the actor of Dr. Cox and I absolutely love it
He does look like Dr. Cox
The Pathologist I was taught by in Med School was exactly like that, the wholesome approach helped us learn so much!
Your characters, delivery, poise and emulation are second to none! Genuinely- dr glauc needs a Netflix series with all the characters. A medical ‘the office’ type comedy drama! The intertwine stories and tales are endless!
This is original gold!
It’s been decades since we have seen an original character such as Johnathan!! For me this is on par with ‘fork handles’ from the Ronnies back in the day! Absolute genuine talent!
It could equally be in the style of Breaking Bad or Game of Thrones
My parents are in family medicine. Can confirm that part was totally accurate
8:35
"I wanna be an ophthalmologist"
"Just think of it as a different type of dilation"
Absolutely demolished me.
It’s hilarious! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
The neurology one isn't correct AT ALL because the neurologists at my hospital don't return pages
😂 I’m dying
No sh*t 🤣🤣🤣 Neuro is the worst about returning pages.
Dam yours too
hi, i’m not english native speaker, could somebody explain to me, what does it mean to „return pages”?
@@randycunningham7084 a page is a message basically, they call the device used to send them a pager
Hearing "Do you have any tweed?", but not in the context of a costume shop purchase put an amazing smile on my face. Thanks!
What is a calcified mitral valve if not a heart bone?
Shhh you'll scare the orthopedists!
@@OneMondBand Scare?! No, they'll be trying to figure out a way to ex-fix that valve. . .and trying to make sure they maximize the RVUs.
@@ianpratt9840 just put some nails in there 🙌🏽😎
@@souravmaurya2204 and if there’s nothing, there’s always duct tape
As a veterinarian I must add, that some animals actually have heart bones!
I'm a retired Acute care hospital medical, surgical, and orthopedic floor nurse and these skits have me roaring in laughter! Absolutely LOVE this! 😅
The radiologist is so true, there is only darkness 😳 some times you see a clock and cant even tell if it says 9am or 9pm 😝 when you finally leave the lights so bright you feel like Dracula 🤣
The cardiologist throwing EKGs at you immediately and the ER drs being literal athletes and sending you straight into a room with a patient right away are the most accurate things I’ve seen.
This man is an absolutely brilliant doctor, comedian, writer, and performer. Absolutely brilliant!
Within a few minutes of being in the pediatrics ward I was handed a baby for and I quote " good luck" because I told the pediatrician that I'm not good with kids. I was properly terrified because it was my first time interacting with such an tiny human, I'm still traumatised by most of the staff laughing at how stiffly I was holding the baby.
The neurologist skit is ON TARGET 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣. This neurologist approves.
i discovered only now that what i want to do fits with my personality and lifestyle
“Have you ever done a chart review so deep you found an APGAR score… on a 90 year old.” I literally bent over in histeric laughter! I’m an ICU RN and I feel like that just described me.
As a medical laboratory scientist, my boss will always be a pathologist. Almost all of the ones I met during internship and after getting licensed are so welcoming and answers all our questions (which can be stupid sometimes) always with correlations to our profession (not just showing off), and this include residents.
For me, they're part of the "extremely smart" side of specialties because they need to correlate everything to everything-from history to the slides (*albeit without seeing the patient i guess).
They are part of definitive diagnostics if that's a thing. (i'm not trying to fight the neuros k hahaha)
Also, the lab is always cold because machines and temperature-controlled tests.
In histopathology section, the smell of the formaldehyde is so strong I teared up at the entrance on my first day. Ventilation can only do so much. Kudos to the histotechs that assist our pathologists. I hope your sense of smell is still okay.
Former MLT.
Agreed. Good times and great docs.
Great stuff and so accurate!My family doctor asked what I thought of my orthopedic surgeon. I said he was very self assured. My family doctor said, “Yeah, if he sat at the right hand of God he would tell God how badly he was doing things.” That’s so accurate I choked when he said it.
the cardiologist one is accurate. my cardiologist is an Oracle. he walks into our visits and just knows shit that's happened since our last visit.
😂😂 when I was a MS3, my neurology attending was exactly like this - he was a sarcastic, condescending dick to everyone in the hospital... except to medical students. He was the coolest, chillest attending I had in 3rd year, and he was an amazing teacher.
IM residents *hated* consulting him though. 😂
My daughter in laws grandfather was a cardiologist who taught medical school. He had a theory that the higher in the body the specialty covered, the bigger the ego of the specialist.
“Don’t you trust your kidneys , your loop of henle is on vacation “ 🤣🤣
Radiology dictation is EXACTLY as he portrayed it. I used to be a medical transcriptionist; I speak from experience. Uncanny how he nailed it! 🤣🤣🤣
"My histories takes so long, cultures wait on me to finish" HAHAHAHA I FEEL THIS IN PERSONAL LEVEL CAUSE in internal medicine rotation I gotta ask patient this long list of questions so I don't missed out a thing but when I do that as well in surgery rotation, I got scolded for hours lol
How do you personally (with details) go about taking history during your internal medicine rotation?
lmao when i was a med student i started on IM and then went to surgery. polar opposites in every sense. i got so many tongue lashings it's not even funny.
@@seraphik My favorite general surgery moment in M3 was working in a community hospital so my attending was doing the case and had me running the camera, and some scrub tech helping manipulate organ movement in the 4th port...So 9 hours into the surgery with no breaks yet, and repeated things going wrong, we finally get to the point we want when my attending yells "NO-ONE FUCKING MOVES! STAY! DON'T FUCKING MOVE!". My blood sugar was low, I was holding my breath to not move the camera any, and the poor scrub tech was retracting omentum while standing in an awkward position. Have always joked with him about this every since then, saying I felt like I was in a Venezuelan bank robbery when he yelled that. Good times!
Were you scolded for the same amount of time you spent taking the surgery patient's history then? 😅
It’s all so accurate! The X-ray/CT Scan part is so accurate. I just survived Covid pneumonia and they take you for CTs and X-rays during the night and it’s like an abandoned hospital down there. My nurse even got lost and had to ask where CT was. Even down to the dimly lit room. I went for a chest X-ray one night and we got lost again (Different nurse) and couldn’t find anyone in the X-ray room and all of a sudden he popped up out of nowhere and was like, “Y’all looking for X-ray?”
"Have you ever seen a basophil?"
As someone who's studying hematology to become a lab technologist I have yet to see one 😂
I've seen one! As with many cells, sometimes they don't look quite how you would imagine, and IME, basophils stained way less than I expected them to, so they're both rare and easy to miss
As a researcher and a patient, I can confirm that these are easily missed.
Have I seen a basophil? Probably. Have I recorded it as a small lymphocyte? Almost certainly.
I found one in my own blood sample in my first hematology lab actually!!! The lab assistant even let me do whatever i wanted to do for that session (which i took a look at everyones and found another 4 basophils) My luckiest day everr!!
@@lachyt5247 haha I most likely made that mistake too 😂
Med student: “that was the hardest thing I’ve ever done”
Mother : 🤨
😂🤣😂🤣
"You consulted me because a patient has a brain and you don't understand it."
"It's okay, not everybody paid attention in med school"
SICK BURNNN
The height of humor is self-aware and pulls the audience in. I loved 'mom' responding with a tilt of the head with the look of incredulity. ...life... is a bunch of different experiences. It's worth acknowledging the med's student feeling of discomfort even if the thought of "it's the hardest thing I've ever done" is also tactless in the face of someone else's (the person giving birth) experiences and feelings.
As a student of psychology, the psychiatry portion had me ROTFL HAHAHAHA!!! him reading the DSM5 - hilarious, "Naked Tuesdays are not a thing" - Priceless
As a medstudent from the Netherlands, i can say that it is 100% recognizable to me
I love the casual approach of psychiatry about the craziest situations, it's just like that hahaha! Nothing is unusual in the psych ward. I love this controlled chaotic ambient hahaha!
After everything I became and worked as a psych nurse for over 30 years. Never a dull moment. Especially when your patient tells you her family will be picking h er up and taking g her home that afternoon. You have no discharge orders. So innocently say but we don't have any discharge orders. "OH that's OK they will land the spaceship in the parking lot and beam me aboard."
I’ve never seen a group of stereotypes this accurate. 😂😂
Not the Psychiatry one, sadly! Psychiatrist here. Our clothes is not what stands out about us. He should talk about Haldol for agitation and this shining diamond of a miracle known as an actual lunch hour.
PS. the part where we've seen it all, naked and whatever, is very true. There's very little bizarre behaviour that will actually surprise us.
I’m a retired nurse of 50 years. I cannot stop laughing. I’m coughing now. All the deep breathing you know.
“I wanna be an ophthalmologist” 💀💀💀💀💀💀 I don’t know why it sounded so perfectly funny
“Just think of it as a different kind of dilation” HAHAHAHAHAHAH
I would never be a doctor, but these videos are the best doctor and hospital related content I’ve seen on this website. I love your work.
5:49 "I mean the heart doesn't even have any bones in it." "Not that we know of!" gets me every time.
As a surgical tech for 26 years, this is spot on! Love it!
Do you have muscular legs?
It's refreshing to find a doctor on YT who actually has comedy in their videos.
That “🥺 please?” at the end of the Family Medicine video had me rolling.
🤣
Omg this guy has been entertaining me since this morning I've found him on TH-cam 🤣 he's so funny and I've learned a lot about medical field from his videos. Thank you Doc!!
Pediatrician 0:45
Cardiologist? 1:37
Infectious disease 2:30
Radiologist 3:30
Nephrologist 4:30
Ortho 5:30
Pathology 6:25
Psychiatry 7:20
Labor and Delivery 8:20
Neurology 9:15
Family medicine 10:15
Critical care 11:07
ER 1204
General surgery 13:03
This is awesome! Absolutely hilarious. Pathology was point on. Can't wait for anesthesia, palliative care, ENT, and of course oncology!
Hilarious!! I’m a RN at a teaching hospital and you are spot on. Love your videos!!!
10:06 I have a family member that's a PA-C that works at a local family medicine practice, and the amount of accuracy of fitting a hours worth of work in 30 mins is more realistic than you might think. Oh and also the "We need help here" is also super realistic too. The morning cry thing I can't say anything about but I imagine something similar happens there.
Reminds me of a post I saw: this guy went to the library to study and found some guy crying his eyes out in the corner. Then his phone alarm went off and he went back to studying
When I was a 4th year Med Student in the late 80's I was interviewing for Ophthalmology, but I had quite a few friends interviewing for Family Practice. The FP residency programs would pay for their plane tickets and a hotel, and would take them out to eat, much like an interview for someone who had completed their training. I suspected a trap even then.
My dad's family medicine practice was on an island, so it involved a fair amount of emergency medicine, too. There were days it was so chaotic that I'd walk in and get pressed into service - anything from cleaning up after a cardiac emergency to acting as a makeshift scrub nurse. Interesting times. After he retired, the remaining clinic doesn't even do urgent care, much less emergent.
Laughed sooo hard at the surgeons..
Enjoyed it all..thank you
Laughter is a great medicine.
“They hate us cause they ain’t us”. I guess neurology is for me.
Same, brain gang
Hell yeah
XD gave some real slytherin energy when i saw that
This guy is impersonating a doctor and asking for donations on his page, please remove him immediately
Imo cardio is better
That med student in the OB setting is totally me. I can hold brains in heads and perform open chest heart massage. Don’t make me deliver a baby.
And I’ve worked with EXTREMELY seasoned neurologists that check reflexes with the bell of a stethoscope. I assess for MS pretty regularly.
And just a quick note from a crusty ER nurse. Just give us your name and how you want us to contact you. If this is anywhere near July, we’ll call you if we need orders and will tell you what to order. After YEARS of seeing the “new med students” every painful July, I recommend listening to more than your ego.
This was hilarious. I've worked in hospitals with med students, interns and vascular surgeons and this is all so very accurate! 😂 The general surgeon dictating incoherently floored me!! LOL.
His videos are so accurate. He even wears a double barrel stethoscope during the cardiology skit.
As a med student currently in my cardio block, the cardiologist one is absolutely hilarious
I've been seeing your skits for over a year now. I never knew it started off of when you were doing a rotation on all of these different specialties 🤣😅 makes so much sense now! Thank you
I love your videos. I work as non-medical staff in the ER and particularly love your ER portrayal. We have 2 docs that ride to work! LOL
You nailed each specialty & the personalities associated with them. Thanks for making me laugh!
The best part of a monthlong hospital stay was when the doctors and nurses forgot that their patients had ears, and talked shop around us. It was fun to hear that stuff.
Even rewatching them for the fourth or fifth time, they're killing me.
Internal Medicine was spot on. As an ARNP I worked with 2 internal med/Geriatric docs, one with rheumatology subspecialty as well. The H&Ps were unreal. ..
Acho que essa série merece um prêmio, incrível!!! Amei! Obrigada, indo pra segunda parte
DUde, you are hilarious. I’ve seen some of these shorts individually, but seeing them all together like this had me rolling!!!
They’re all so funny, because they are so close to the reality med school!
I made it into med school years ago and decided on DPT school instead. This video makes me happy I made the decision that I made lol! God bless all of you wacky brilliant folks who chose the wonders of medicine over basic sanity!
The hand-made microscope was so cool!!!! And I finally found the introduction to Jonathan!!!! Also these are all so funny and so creative!!!! I'm a pre-med so I don't have any experience with these things but they're all really interesting!!!
"Anything with elbow patches?...well I have an extra houndstooth in my car..."
Yes to all of this video.
Neurology and Neurosurgery are spot on! Make me laugh the hardest. Great videos!
Love, love,love, this. Retired OR nurse. Can't stop looking @ these.
LOL! 8:18 - A med student had to deliver my baby because she came faster than everyone was ready for or even expecting. Even doctor came in, looked at me, said, "I got to do something real quick, I'll be back." Baby came out, doc came back and said, "Let's get this baby out of you." (Crickets chirping as doc sees baby getting cleaned up.)
Unfortunately the doc got the credit even though the student delivered my baby with the help of the nurses. I was so happy and thankful to him.
Nurse here. Idk how people become doctors. The schooling just seems so stressful. I've done clinicals and it was stressful but imagine going through all these high specialties while needing to study and work at the same time. Insane.
Doctors are built differently, lol! It's hard work, but it's worth it in the end. :) Every job has a learning curve, and there are challenges that nurses deal with that doctors don't, so in the end, it's about adapting to the circumstances, and having good coping mechanisms when it gets overwhelming.
Medstud here. Its a long exhausting journey for sure. Sometimes i rly wish i have more times to do my hobby. I really appreciate the nurses who helps me along the way.
his voice is so soothing it's borderline asmr - amazing
Love your Stuff. And you better start flooding the channel with the rest of your Videos now. I will rewatch them all!!
"Is this your first [x] rotation?" Subtle and spot on, haha. Always hated that. As if these people don't know how MS3 works? Every one is the first... A question asked when the answer is already known is done to belittle!
As a pharmacist, we just got a whole new wave of residents that we'll have to add in to our system over the next couple months. And some of the orders they're putting in are next level crazy.. it's a yearly ritual, I like to use this time to train my interns. 😁
this is just what i needed to motivate me for the last couple weeks before step and rotations lmao
The whole skit starting around 2:37 is literally everything I loved about House M.D.
Let’s go!! Finally a TH-cam channel for longer versions of what we all love! Thanks, Dr. G!
"You don't know the first thing about history" is the favorite line of every senior doc, no matter the speciality.
This compilation is GOLD... you are a genius Dr. G
As a Neuro surgeon who went from a surgical residency to a neurosurgical residency, I still love it
Hi! Can you mentor me? I'm 17 and possess great aspiration to pursue Neurosurgery :)
@@jonathanmendezm.d.1775 Just realised that i got a reply here, i doubt i ll be able tp help you much considering im from India
I recalled the time when i met my cardiologist attending, instead of suggesting to use bad stethoscopes, he said we all should use the best stethoscope that money can buy. Because “you still can’t hear shit with the good one, you wont hear anything with a bad one”
man, my man Tim is in every specialty. respect
I'm just an EMTB, but your videos are hilarious!! Gives me some joy of what I glimpse at the hospitals we transport to.