Go check out Dr. Goodcoff on TikTok, Instagram, and TH-cam for some of the best medical simulation stuff on the platforms. Who here thinks they can handle anything that comes through those emergency room doors???
ER sounds alright, you've just gotta keep the patient alive until the morning then hand them over to the relevant specialist ...and when in doubt, it's always gonna become internal medicine's problem 😂
His house is beautiful. I love how normal he is and still able to enjoy his hobbies outside of medicine. I really enjoyed getting a peak inside his life.
he speaks so well and eloquently, and makes you listen very well to his insights. great video once again, man! really helpful as a (struggling) premed student 😅
Lol just admit you have internalized racism and white worshipping tendencies. As an Asian woman I've seen too many of my sisters freak out and over glamorize very regular white dudes. No dig on Adam at all.
@@lucascooper3613 - Sexualizing HIM. I thought about changing careers and becoming a nurse, I’d be happy to practice in his hospital. Though I don’t think he’d be interested in me.
FINALLY !!!!! ER DOCTOR HERE. I WAS ABOUT TO ASK YOU TO FEAUTURE ME ON YOUR VIDEOS, BUT WE ARE NOT IN THE SAME STATE AND ALSO I AM STILL POOR AND DONT HAVE NICE THINGS TO SHOW TO PEOPLE. JAJAJA STAY SAFE EVERYONE !
I did have one man, 52, presented with chest pain, coded in the lobby. We got him back...he opened his eyes, intubated (couldn't talk), saw my upside down face. We had a 1-way conversation. He came back to the ER a week post discharge to find me. He was looking at everyone upside down...then recognized me. He came up to me and thanked me. We had a nice chat. In 30 years of practice, he was the only one to come back to find us. Yes, I did get several thank-you cards a month. Still, at the end of every day, I knew that I had made a big difference for a lot of people....whose names I don't remember, and who don't remember mine. ("Hi, Mr Jones, I'm Dr Mele. How can I help you today?""You're Dr Who?" My license plate is Dktr Who.
I love how he mentioned the loans suck but you have the ability to fully engage in medicine(or what you love). That’s a good perspective to have if you can’t afford to pay out of pocket which lost cannot. ❤️
Average US medical student graduates with $300,000 debt, and 30 yr loan....the invisible house, as I told my friends. Since most docs don't like math any more than the rest of the world, they underestimate the power of that debt. Fwiw, I'm a retired ER Doc with a master's in Statistics.
Shopping tip for povos: you don't need the copper thing for the ice spheres - you can just buy a silicone ice ball mould for like $2. Use an insulated cup and your drink stays cold for ages.
Great video coming from myself who went to Jefferson Medical College. Also met my husband in medical school. One thing I would recommend, is that u are listening to his answers but not REALLY listening. Seems like u are just thinking about what u r going to say or ask.....instead of really listening to him and what he has to say.
Night shift *is* a whole different experience in emergency medicine! I was a paramedic for 21yrs, and I spent more than half of that on 1900-0700, in addition to my student/field intern time (all nights). In my own experience, we had more patients on days (0700-1900), but the acuity was higher for sure on nights. And I second the CHF exacerbation for testing students, esp. if you throw in the hemodialysis twist 😉
I’m confused on why it makes sense for a second-year resident to be the only physician to handle someone’s care during a night shift. Can you tell me why? Am I correct that attending physician either sees every patient in the morning or has the resident present the case to them directly throughout the patient’s day? So that happens in the morning, presumably it’s needed, so why is it not needed at night? Or am I missing something?
2:00 his point here was similar to a thought I had. One of the reasons I want to study medicine is because I can put all of my focus into mastering this broad interesting subject
Thank you so much for this! I’m in the MD application cycle right now and my goal is to go into emergency medicine, but everyone I mention it to cringes and asks why on earth I would want to do that (maybe it’s partly because I’m female). I find myself bending the truth when people ask me what I want to do as a result 😕 Regardless it’s so inspiring to see people actually enjoying what I want to do!
Throughout my long training I rotated through a lot of ERs, often in very large hospitals. I can tell you that being a female physician has advantages in dealing with many types of patients. However, keep an open mind. You have a long way to go and the process is a real adventure!
Thanks for sharing. This interview was so interesting and I think it would serve as a useful tool for high-school and university students to help them decide if this career choice is a good fit for them.
I have spent my entire career working in the emergency dept, 13 years as a RN and the last 5 as an advanced nurse practitioner. Really interesting to consider the differences between the US and the UK. In the UK (at least in all the hospitals I have worked in) all same day radiology requests beyond plain film X-rays have to be discussed with and approved by a consultant (attending) radiologist, even requests from consultants and you have to argue your case well to get approval! Also how short the post Grad training is, in the uk minimum 8 years in training post (residency) after graduating med school to be a consultant. But I guess that is related to the hours worked in the US, scheduled hours would not exceed 45 hours / week here for any speciality although many doctors will choose to work extra “locum” shifts for additional and higher rates of pay.
The amount of hours they make some specialties work in the US is inhuman, it's insane. I'd definitely rather be in residency for 8 years working a normal work week than 3 years working 80 hours a week. I'm in Canada and like most things in work culture here, we seem to get a blend of US and European standards, I hear some people work ridiculous hours and others not.
@@lucascooper3613 for a consultant (attending) the annual basic starting salary is £85000 and can go up to £115000 with experience, so a lot less than in the US. However they are paid extra ( not a huge amount) for being oncall but can also make a substantial difference (up to an extra £75000)to their salary if they take on extra responsibilities e.g teaching med students/ junior doctors, conducting research, sub specialising (paeds/ sports medicine/ HEMS and prehospital care) and / or taking on management roles such as head of dept or clinical director.
I see 400+ in green or 80+ patients in yellow zone of our emergency department / per shift. Dawgn dude, you guys so lucky to see 20 patient per shift. :/
31:00 im so glad im not the only one who used to listen to fall out boy good charlotte MCR etc and now likes to illenium weeknd ....i miss skrillex bye
the 'immerse yourself in medicine and not have to worry about any other concerns' is pretty far from the truth for a lot of people. Many people feel trapped in medicine very quickly after all the loans start to pile up on you..
No, not at all. Sounds like a system that provides the ability to deliver the highest level of definitive care/triage promptly. My own first 2 years of training were in a major New England teaching hospital where there was no such thing as ER docs. Pts were immediately triaged to medicine or surgery and thereafter were cared for by general IM and/or medical subspecialist residents all overseen by specialty or sub. attending physicians/surgeons depending on the nature of the problem. Cross specialty consultation was only minutes away 24/7. Even then, when we were rotating through the ER, the joke was that we were there to keep everyone alive until the RDs arrived (Real Doctors)! In reality, every pt. who was admitted from the ER was expected to have a precise and accurate diagnosis with initial therapy underway.
Older EM physician here. As nice and polite and positive this physician is, he presents a false presentation of the current state of emergency medicine. Everyone doesn’t get the best care. I have worked in dozens of hospitals all over the US for 40 + years and there are huge problems everywhere. One example that harms people is boarding patients for days in the ED. Another is having to see over 2 dozen patients in a shift and another is excessive wait times. There are many more, and all of these issues can potentially harm patients. I have never worked as few hours as he describes. He is young and still somewhat protected by his program. I wish him the best.
@@ashleykem8052 that’s amazing! I wonder because the same diseases look different on different skin shades. Also, here in the states, African people were often used as guinea pigs when it came to some of these “medical” experiments. And our pain is often ignored because they literally think we feel less pain. It’s weird.
I’m a senior in high school and I’m going to do pre med in college and I already have friends and family asking what’s wrong with them! I don’t know I’ve only taken med term and I’m taking health science theory right now
@@bettysmith4527 I was talking about Dr. Glaucomflecken, his real name is Dr. Will Flanary and he is an ophtamologist but he makes videos under the Dr. G name
Go check out Dr. Goodcoff on TikTok, Instagram, and TH-cam for some of the best medical simulation stuff on the platforms. Who here thinks they can handle anything that comes through those emergency room doors???
ME AS AN ER DOCTOR 😁🚑
Can you interview Dr glacuomflecken on 73 questions to an ophthalmologist
@@Matthew-vl5iv That's one cool idea !
ER sounds alright, you've just gotta keep the patient alive until the morning then hand them over to the relevant specialist ...and when in doubt, it's always gonna become internal medicine's problem 😂
He comes across as one of the most genuine Doctors that you've interviewed. Very impressed.
you gotta be joing
@@biggooba6706 nut rider 🥜🫄
His house is beautiful. I love how normal he is and still able to enjoy his hobbies outside of medicine. I really enjoyed getting a peak inside his life.
Retired EM physician with 35 years of practice behind me. This is a great discussion of what life in the ED is like. Good job!!
How’s the money?
@@manjotsingh6024 I don’t understand your question.
Can you choose weekends off? I don’t want to work Sunday
Super charismatic, eloquent, intelligent, and caring. Any patient would be lucky to have him!
A fellow DO! As a 3rd year DO school wanting to go into emergency medicine, I'm stoked to be following in his footsteps! Very eloquent and inspiring.
Is an ER doctor, celebrates nurses, plays the guitar, does travel photography, can do an infinite wheelie... is there anything this man can't do?!
he speaks so well and eloquently, and makes you listen very well to his insights. great video once again, man! really helpful as a (struggling) premed student 😅
Lol just admit you have internalized racism and white worshipping tendencies. As an Asian woman I've seen too many of my sisters freak out and over glamorize very regular white dudes. No dig on Adam at all.
@@Ewang2727 Seek help!
@@Ewang2727 sister what
@@Ewang2727 Bruh what hahajha
He seems so humble and chill. Cute too!
Of course he does, why would they interview someone who can't put forth that face?
@@Ewang2727 You mad, bro?
Chicago is a tough city. More power to this doctor! I applaud him.
I have a friend that's a critical care NP and he's got the same vibe. Maybe the ED just chills you out...
ER RN here of 5 years. Thank you for the nurse shout out! I can tell you are a doc most of us nurses would enjoy working with! :)
I’m sure this guy has a lot of “experience“ with multiple nurses. :)
@@iMatti00 why do nurses always have to be sexualized?
@@lucascooper3613 - Sexualizing HIM. I thought about changing careers and becoming a nurse, I’d be happy to practice in his hospital. Though I don’t think he’d be interested in me.
FINALLY !!!!! ER DOCTOR HERE. I WAS ABOUT TO ASK YOU TO FEAUTURE ME ON YOUR VIDEOS, BUT WE ARE NOT IN THE SAME STATE AND ALSO I AM STILL POOR AND DONT HAVE NICE THINGS TO SHOW TO PEOPLE. JAJAJA STAY SAFE EVERYONE !
I am subscribe to you already. Very nice videos. More people should really watch your channel man ;?
😂😂😂
😝
😂😂😂😂 ur too funny.
Aspiring EM doctor here (already a 3rd year Med Stud) and this just gave me the boost I needed, especially the last answer!
I did have one man, 52, presented with chest pain, coded in the lobby. We got him back...he opened his eyes, intubated (couldn't talk), saw my upside down face. We had a 1-way conversation.
He came back to the ER a week post discharge to find me. He was looking at everyone upside down...then recognized me. He came up to me and thanked me. We had a nice chat.
In 30 years of practice, he was the only one to come back to find us.
Yes, I did get several thank-you cards a month.
Still, at the end of every day, I knew that I had made a big difference for a lot of people....whose names I don't remember, and who don't remember mine. ("Hi, Mr Jones, I'm Dr Mele. How can I help you today?""You're Dr Who?"
My license plate is Dktr Who.
29:03 - straight up living up to the Dr Glaucomfleckon stereotype of an ER doc - love it! Should've worn his bike helmet for the interview 🤣
Yeah - do you also picture the Dr. Glaucomflecken accessories on all of them? I could picture the bike helmet perfectly
I had just found out about Dr. Goodcoffs channel. What a coincidence. Thank you for this interview!!
happy to bring on some familiar faces for the interviews :)
Ya. It's called the online algorithm. Of course you got linked to this
No biased at all, but ED docs are the best! so well spoken, down to earth, to the point, funny, & went to WVSOM woooho!!
Oh sweet! I just got accepted to West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine!
Congrats dude!
Yay, another future ER physician with EMS experience. Having medical direction that understands what being on an ambulance is like, is priceless!
Yes so excited about this!! Love the long length 73 questions! Emergency Medicine excites me!
Exciting feild of medicine!
I love how he mentioned the loans suck but you have the ability to fully engage in medicine(or what you love). That’s a good perspective to have if you can’t afford to pay out of pocket which lost cannot. ❤️
Average US medical student graduates with $300,000 debt, and 30 yr loan....the invisible house, as I told my friends.
Since most docs don't like math any more than the rest of the world, they underestimate the power of that debt.
Fwiw, I'm a retired ER Doc with a master's in Statistics.
Shopping tip for povos: you don't need the copper thing for the ice spheres - you can just buy a silicone ice ball mould for like $2. Use an insulated cup and your drink stays cold for ages.
We need dr glacuomflecken
He finally did 🎉
You should do a collaboration with Dr. Mike
man if only he would answer my emails lol
Great video coming from myself who went to Jefferson Medical College. Also met my husband in medical school.
One thing I would recommend, is that u are listening to his answers but not REALLY listening. Seems like u are just thinking about what u r going to say or ask.....instead of really listening to him and what he has to say.
Yea thats part of the 73 questions. Otherwise it would just be a long and drawn out interview. We want the facts! No time no time!
Was an EMT, Emergency Medicine doc and loves 2000s PUNK. Soulmate!
Love this series! Could you possibly do 73 questions with a PA?
Yaas
Dear Maria count me in is such a good song 🤣. All time low is so nice
Always love my Sunday videos with you and Cellini!!!
Hahaha I learned my upload schedule from the best
Night shift *is* a whole different experience in emergency medicine! I was a paramedic for 21yrs, and I spent more than half of that on 1900-0700, in addition to my student/field intern time (all nights). In my own experience, we had more patients on days (0700-1900), but the acuity was higher for sure on nights.
And I second the CHF exacerbation for testing students, esp. if you throw in the hemodialysis twist 😉
I’m confused on why it makes sense for a second-year resident to be the only physician to handle someone’s care during a night shift. Can you tell me why? Am I correct that attending physician either sees every patient in the morning or has the resident present the case to them directly throughout the patient’s day? So that happens in the morning, presumably it’s needed, so why is it not needed at night? Or am I missing something?
Would love to see an interview with an intensivist!
Finally. Sat down at 34 minutes Just seems so uncomfortable standing. Great interview.
This series is more like meet all the most handsome doctors ever 🤣🤣
Love the series 😊
I love this series so much! 🙌🏻
hopefully it's helping!
Shaun Andersen in the wild lol
2:00 his point here was similar to a thought I had. One of the reasons I want to study medicine is because I can put all of my focus into mastering this broad interesting subject
Thank you so much for this! I’m in the MD application cycle right now and my goal is to go into emergency medicine, but everyone I mention it to cringes and asks why on earth I would want to do that (maybe it’s partly because I’m female). I find myself bending the truth when people ask me what I want to do as a result 😕 Regardless it’s so inspiring to see people actually enjoying what I want to do!
Throughout my long training I rotated through a lot of ERs, often in very large hospitals. I can tell you that being a female physician has advantages in dealing with many types of patients. However, keep an open mind. You have a long way to go and the process is a real adventure!
Good luck!!! You've got this!!
This guy is so dope! Always wanted to go into EM. Hell ya. I want to go into teaching as well.
I didn’t expect All Time Low! Love it.
Dr Goodcoff, if you ever see this, based on your music answers and as a fellow FOB fan… if you’ve never been to Emo Nite, you gotta go sometime! 🖤
I know I said it before, but please 73 Q with an Endocrinologist? 🙏😄
Incoming WVSOM student! Way to represent!
Do one with a rheumatologist Ft Violin MD
Omg such a good idea, idk if I can do international trips quite yet tho😭maybe in my 4th year when I have more time
Thanks for sharing. This interview was so interesting and I think it would serve as a useful tool for high-school and university students to help them decide if this career choice is a good fit for them.
My obsession with emergency medicine
Dear gosh, if he were my ER doctor I would have a heart attack. I would do every code in the rainbow.
I have spent my entire career working in the emergency dept, 13 years as a RN and the last 5 as an advanced nurse practitioner. Really interesting to consider the differences between the US and the UK.
In the UK (at least in all the hospitals I have worked in) all same day radiology requests beyond plain film X-rays have to be discussed with and approved by a consultant (attending) radiologist, even requests from consultants and you have to argue your case well to get approval! Also how short the post Grad training is, in the uk minimum 8 years in training post (residency) after graduating med school to be a consultant. But I guess that is related to the hours worked in the US, scheduled hours would not exceed 45 hours / week here for any speciality although many doctors will choose to work extra “locum” shifts for additional and higher rates of pay.
The amount of hours they make some specialties work in the US is inhuman, it's insane. I'd definitely rather be in residency for 8 years working a normal work week than 3 years working 80 hours a week. I'm in Canada and like most things in work culture here, we seem to get a blend of US and European standards, I hear some people work ridiculous hours and others not.
What is average salary for an ER doctor in UK? In america its like 200k usd to 300k usd
@@lucascooper3613 for a consultant (attending) the annual basic starting salary is £85000 and can go up to £115000 with experience, so a lot less than in the US.
However they are paid extra ( not a huge amount) for being oncall but can also make a substantial difference (up to an extra £75000)to their salary if they take on extra responsibilities e.g teaching med students/ junior doctors, conducting research, sub specialising (paeds/ sports medicine/ HEMS and prehospital care) and / or taking on management roles such as head of dept or clinical director.
@@lucascooper3613 those working in or around London will also get paid more due the higher cost of living in these areas
he has such introspective responses that i wish he was in psychiatry aka what i hope to get into 😭
Aw, thankyou for the shout out to ED nurses!
can you do one with a rheumatologist
I see 400+ in green or 80+ patients in yellow zone of our emergency department / per shift. Dawgn dude, you guys so lucky to see 20 patient per shift. :/
Love this! Could you please do allied health eg dietitian?
Please please interview an ophthalmology resident too 🙏
a suggestion: better to write the questions on the screen each time u ask, cuz we get lost sometimes
Love these videos, keep up the great work!
73 questions with an ophthalmologist please!!
the best interview so far
We need an episode with a plastic surgeon
Like "everyone is equal in EM - everyone gets the same high quality care"
I loved this interview 😍
nice videos thnks a lot
hey any chance of adding what the pay is like for these videos
difference between those at the free-standing EDs vs Hospital
31:00 im so glad im not the only one who used to listen to fall out boy good charlotte MCR etc and now likes to illenium weeknd ....i miss skrillex bye
been waiting on this one
Have to subscribe after this one.
This would so be my speciality!
I've watched a few of these videos and when asked what they'd change in the medical field its access to care *sigh*
i like this guy
ive been waiting for this video!! thank you sm!
Loved this!!!
the 'immerse yourself in medicine and not have to worry about any other concerns' is pretty far from the truth for a lot of people. Many people feel trapped in medicine very quickly after all the loans start to pile up on you..
I fw this guy
We don’t have the ER or Trauma Specialty in Portugal! The ER has Internal Medicine and General Surgery specialists. Pretty strange huh?
No, not at all. Sounds like a system that provides the ability to deliver the highest level of definitive care/triage promptly. My own first 2 years of training were in a major New England teaching hospital where there was no such thing as ER docs. Pts were immediately triaged to medicine or surgery and thereafter were cared for by general IM and/or medical subspecialist residents all overseen by specialty or sub. attending physicians/surgeons depending on the nature of the problem. Cross specialty consultation was only minutes away 24/7. Even then, when we were rotating through the ER, the joke was that we were there to keep everyone alive until the RDs arrived (Real Doctors)! In reality, every pt. who was admitted from the ER was expected to have a precise and accurate diagnosis with initial therapy underway.
@@wholeNwon oh interesting. Thank you :)
How often and for how long do you have to stay past your shift to be forced to complete documentation
Older EM physician here. As nice and polite and positive this physician is, he presents a false presentation of the current state of emergency medicine. Everyone doesn’t get the best care. I have worked in dozens of hospitals all over the US for 40 + years and there are huge problems everywhere. One example that harms people is boarding patients for days in the ED. Another is having to see over 2 dozen patients in a shift and another is excessive wait times. There are many more, and all of these issues can potentially harm patients. I have never worked as few hours as he describes. He is young and still somewhat protected by his program. I wish him the best.
Lol at the number of times he mentioned imaging studies. No mention of an exam anywhere there.
Dr goodcoff 😍🥰😍🥰😍🥰
Oh he’s a pro
Why is there a mandatory switch in shifts for ER docs?
I’ve waited so long!!!!! 😅😂
Do you ride your bike to work?
Random question: do y’all talk about racial biases in medical school?
Do they look like they do
Got it racist/marxist.
I’m in medical school in the UK and we definitely do. A lot more now than we did in the past though.
Definetly, some schools have entire curriculums along with the science based curriculum both are very important
@@ashleykem8052 that’s amazing! I wonder because the same diseases look different on different skin shades. Also, here in the states, African people were often used as guinea pigs when it came to some of these “medical” experiments. And our pain is often ignored because they literally think we feel less pain. It’s weird.
I’m a senior in high school and I’m going to do pre med in college and I already have friends and family asking what’s wrong with them! I don’t know I’ve only taken med term and I’m taking health science theory right now
omg sushi and coffee ftw~
Emergency medicine physicians have the shortest lifespan in large part due to the constantly rotating schedule.
Future kharmamedic !
Loved it ❤️
Do one with an Ophtalmologist with Dr. G!
Dr. G is a forensic pathologist, not an ophthalmologist!
@@bettysmith4527 I was talking about Dr. Glaucomflecken, his real name is Dr. Will Flanary and he is an ophtamologist but he makes videos under the Dr. G name
@@TheXDannyBoyxx oooooh, sorry my bad!
How does he switch his sleep schedule so much
Damn he's one hell of a hot doc🥵🥵
What were his step scores
I love EM but I don't like the lifestyle 😩
🎉
Aye yo why he so cute 🤔
can we all agree he's hot? more hot residents please
Cute 🥰
Me answering the 5 W’s from watching grey’s anatomy
😍😍
So he's a DO or MD?
DO
Did you fail the GI test?
It’s weird to hear him TALK not whisper from ASMR
is he single?? 😍