"Is That Where She Bit You?" | House M.D.
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- čas přidán 13. 04. 2022
- The doctors work together to figure out the symptoms, as well as the undisclosed identity, of a disobliging homeless woman.
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From ''Histories'' (Season 1, Episode 10): Dr. Foreman believes an uncooperative homeless woman is faking seizures to get a 'meal ticket' at the teaching hospital. But Dr. Wilson grows determined to keep her from falling between the cracks. Her worsening symptoms prove to be a complex mystery, but the mystery of her identity and medical history may hold the answers to saving her life. Just as the team suspects she has contagious meningitis, the woman goes missing, only to be tasered by the police who bring her back. But House deduces that the taser may have proven yet another diagnosis, with dire results.
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If I had a nickel for every time Forman contracted a lethal condition from one of their patients, I'd have 2 nickels. Which isn't a lot but it's still weird that it happened twice, right?
Especially since he didn't die either time, which is especially especially impressive because both of the patients he got it from died (I take it the other being the one with the dude who got whatever from the pigeon poop and was quarentined)
@@ameliarose47 I mean rabies isn’t lethal when you get treated for it before it’s too late.
Goes to show. Black don't crack
@@frenchfriedbagel7035 that's kind of the thing though, no treatable lethal condition is lethal if it gets treated in time. Which in both cases, Forman barely made the window and was lucky the conditions were treatable at all.
Rabies isnt funny. Its a horrible way to die!
Forman in my opinion is way to chill for having found out he likely just got bitten by someone that has rabies, and already has localized numbness like her.
Foreman on the happiest day of his life: O_O
Saddest day of his life: O_O
Bitten by a rabid patient: O_O
@@edamommy 🤣
Sure he knew what needed to be done for it not are worsen by taking some shots
the vaccine rabies are really effective agains it, thats why he has no worries
To be fair he's educated enough to know it isnt too late for him.
I talked about this scene to my sister once and months later she remembered that rabies causes localized numbness and told me that's what's happening to her after a stray dog scratched her. It literally saved her life.
How on Earth did she live? You can't treat rabies after symptoms begin. The best you can hope for is that you find a doctor willing to try either the Milwaukee or Recife Protocol.
@@alexisvandom8037 no she didn't start showing symptoms. She was scratched by a rabid dog and then told me that her arm felt numb in that area. She mentioned that because I told her that if a rabid animal bites/scratches you, the site goes numb. I used to tell her often because she has a habit of petting stray animals. She got scratched around 5 am. Told me it feels kinda numb by 3 pm. We were getting her arv by 6 pm and the doctor who did the diagnostic test confirmed that my sister and her friend who was bitten by the same dog, were in fact showing signs of rabies exposure. I thank my luck because we live in different cities and I was visiting, had I not been there, she wouldn't have mentioned that on the phone. She didn't understand the gravity of the situation even after getting her vaccine and was confused why I was having a mental breakdown over that. I had to show her videos of patients in the last stage to scare her into not missing the following doses because I won't be there.
@@alexisvandom8037 before watching this episode I didn't consider that rabid humans bite and infect too, so I mentioned what exactly happened to Foreman during one of my re-runs of House MD. I didn't think she would remember or even pay attention. But she remembered that and all of my other warnings about rabid strays.
@Moonflower wow, I'm glad it all worked out.
@@_samuelajayi Thanks! Me too.
We should all be thankful that rabies isn't airborne. That would truly be how we end up with the zombie apocalypse
It's technically airborne with all those bats
I remember a story of how a bat entered the room of a kid and bit him in his sleep
Didn't noticed the bite and died soon after
@@xenophacilus5895 Wouldn't that be an airborne delivery system? The virus doesn't float around on its own because it requires it's environment to be a certain temperature, and dies in open air.
The symptoms of rabies are, for the most part, a bit overstated in TV for dramatic purposes.
Not to mention that the mechanics of the rabies infection pretty much precludes the possibility of it being an airborne disease and remaining as zombie-like as it feels.
However... yeah... an airborne rabies-like disease would be fucking terrifying
Please dont give the chinese ideas.
I am legend was a good adaptation of that theory
You know it's season 1 not because Wilson looks younger than Chase but because FOREMAN HAS HAIR 😂
And Cameron still had brown hair 😅
@@assassinbmf2475 brown hair made her look hotter
Hair is over rated !
I've never understood why all black men shave their heads or cut their hair very short. Baldness?
@@johnwt7333 Craig Robinson doesn't cut his hair short and hasn't shaved his head and he's black. So obviously not all black men do anything in particular.
why does that turtleneck suddenly make him look undeniably british omg. every other time i can see house only but here all I can see is Mr Fancypants Hugh Laurie even despite the american accent
@D Sullivan I never would’ve guessed that he was British wth
@D Sullivan Damian Lewis for Band of Brothers (I'm sure there were others, but I'm not aware of them).
@D Sullivan tom Holland also is a Brit speaking in an American accent in his movies
@D Sullivan every single brit or aussie or non US actor. Like.. the rest of the world who wants to be in the movies.
Lol "fancy pants" isn't quite right for an actor with The Blackadder in his résumé.
In 2004 three people got organs from what was presumed to be a drug overdose victim. The donor actually died of rabies which he caught from bats in the house he was squatting in. All three of the recipients died of rabies shortly after their organ transplant surgery.
wasnt there also a scrubs plot in one episode that was more or less exactly this?
@@Gnarfendorf yeah, the scrubs case was based on the real case. One of the best scrubs episodes ever.
Yep, and it happened again in 2013. Though in that case only 1 of the 4 recipients died.
OMG
Monsters Inside Me covered that case.
I remember this episode. That poor lady: her life was destroyed when she lost her family in a car accident and she couldn't cope with the loss. She didn't survive: it was already far too late by the time that she got there
If this was real lif foreman would have been dead aswell. Symptoms = already too late.
@@stephenponnet462 In real life House would've lost his license long ago🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
@@WarGrowlmon18
No kidding.
But it wasn’t real life was it.
The rule with Rabies is, if they have symptoms, its too late. foreman's numbness, is the result of the virus invading the nerves, from there it would spread to the brain.
The problem is there is no cure for rabies.
Once it reaches the brain it's game over. However the virus actually spreads through the body so slowly that when you get bitten you can get the vaccine and the immune system builds up anti bodies over the next couple days to kill the virus before it reaches the brain.
I found that hilarious and also frightening that he just stabbed foreman to prove a point.
With a contaminated needle from a dying woman, no less.
It was also another way of testing
Probaba si tenía insensibilidad . House cuando la mujer no reaccionó a los pinchazos,ya sabía que era.Por eso hizo el hisopado.Y Chase no sabía que no hay tratamiento,es médico.
What I find hilarious is that Forman was only slightly annoyed when he discovered he was stabbed with an injection needle
With the same syringe he just stabbed the lady with, mind you...
My favorite Season 1 Episode! She was the first patient (disregarding the newborns from the pandemic) the team lost and her backstory was very touching!
Yep. They knew not to kill off patients left and right. To only use death in moments that it would really fit.
My "favorite" ie the one that was the saddest for me is probably the woman with the crushed leg in the crane accident.
House and her interactions were amazing, he truly cared for her and boom she's gone.
@@NyxHunter That’s the woman right before House and Cuddy actually get together? That was devastating!! Most esp’ly bc he doesn’t like to put himself in positions where he himself will be open to emotional pain. Still and all, I thought the episode where they mixed up the bombing patients: the one who lived and the one they thought had died was esp’ly horrific. To find out after days of suffering over the pain your spouse is feeling that they actually died instead is beyond dreadful, and I actually thought I might be ill from that show. And considering all the different diseases they deal with, to think that that episode is the one that made me nauseous is extremely revealing… 😢
The weird thing is, when they started listing the symptoms, the first thing that came out of my mouth was 'rabies'. I think I missed my calling...
Yo same. As a kid I was OBSESSED with everything rabies (blame Cujo for that) so when I saw her bite him I was like rabies, when I saw the bats I screamed rabies rabies rabies how do y'all not see it's rabies? XD
never too late ^_^
Never too late, but there's also a reason why 'horses not zebras' is a popular adage
I've been addictively watching these House clips and I find I can guess the right diseases in a whole bunch of them. Just before I hang out my shingle, I remember that I own the series and have been through it at least twice, in addition to watching it religiously when it was first run.
Dean... the symptoms for rabies are the most commonly known of almost any disease among general public. Due to it being a romanticized disease in pop culture and media. You most certainly aren't anything special for thinking of rabies when the literal symptoms of rabies are read out to you in order. :')
my mom when I was a kid was in collage and had to do a paper about rabies and the stuff she showed me proved how awful a thing it is, basically turns you into a zombie if not treated fast enough.
Yep. Interesting enough , it doesn’t erase the person or creature entirely. Most people are safe ti work around and family pets have shown an aversion to biting family but not strangers. Shits interesting. Horrible way to go.
Base form rabis functionally immortal due to having such a hypnotic attack on binary or quandary monocular diseases, its descendants are understandable and defeatable, but even if we did manage to get rid of rabis...we be trading one tiny-tyrant for another!
It depends on the species though to. There are two forms of Rabies: aggressive or dumb form. Rabies infects different areas of the brain depending on the species. In more herbivore type animals it typically causes the dumb form- the animals have trouble moving, facial paralysis, and may die of starvation and dehydration first. The aggressive form tends to happen more in carnivores so think your classic rabid dog. But there are always exceptions. Rabies can mimic a lot of CNS diseases unfortunately. For example in horses it can look like choke which is a life threatening condition in horses where food is stuck deeper in the esophagus typically, they can normally breathe fine, but it leads to colic, metabolic acidosis and more. Rabid horses can look like their choking so a vet starts to investigate the mouth and maybe not put gloves on and they get rabies, it was a big issues back in the day.
When I was a child, I watched parts of the movie Cujo. I spent the rest of my childhood terrified of big dogs, thinking that at any time one might snap like the St Bernard in the movie. As an adult, I watched it in its entirety. During the beginning of the movie, it shows the dog chasing a bat into a hole in the ground. With his snout in the hole, the bat bit him on the nose, presumably infecting him with rabies. The infection fully explains every bit about how the dog responded and acted throughout the remainder of the movie.
There is a reason why a lot of zombie viruses are based on rabies.
This episode imo ranks as one of the most tragic. They found out after confirming the diagnosis this lady used to have a home and a family- a husband and a baby boy. The rave in the abandoned house she went to at the beginning turned out to once be her home. Her husband and son were both killed in a car accident where she was driving the car. She blamed herself, was unable to cope, ended up homeless and basically spent her final days suffering horribly from her illness, ane even more so from extreme guilt and regret. The only thing that helped her go more peacefully was when she was so delirious, she thought Foreman was her son. He told her he was her husband and that he came to forgive her, and that instantly lifted a heavy and undeserved burden off her shoulders. It was basically the final thing they could possibly do to end her suffering before she was actually dead. Very sad 💔
The look on Cameron's face when she sees the test results says it all
It’s weird how I found house clips comforting, even when they end with the conclusion that someone is dying
Context is what matters. That womans life was hell after she lost her family in car accident. Death was an end to her suffering.
When someone’s life is in danger, you present them with all the information possible. Even if you feel at fault it’s important to put that person’s well-being first.
Thank you for the PSA mother Teresa
I seem to recall at least one case where a young girl who was presenting rabies symptoms was put into a medically induced coma and survived. Of course, not without a need for some serious rehab, but she did live.
She is now married with children.
@@lechatel and she is the ONLY person on record to survive rabies.
@@hyfy-tr2jy There have been more since! 14 known by 2016, and more since then. :) Though given that almost 60k die of rabies every year globally, that's still remarkably low odds - even in nations with access to care.
The first known human survivor of a symptomatic rabies infection was a 6 year old boy (Matthew Winkler) in 1971, who became symptomatic despite having the shots - which weren't as effective then as now, and were administered a little late). He nevertheless survived, due to some level of protection afforded by the shots. He still became ill enough to need a tracheotomy for respiratory support.
Jeanna Giese was remarkable for having had *no* prophylactic shots before becoming symptomatic. Before her, all known survivors had received either partial or late (as with M Winkler) post-exposure shots. But since then there have been a few others like Jeanna.
While it's still nearly 100% lethal, there have been a handful of survivors in the last few years thanks to the Milwaukee Protocol. They induce a coma and keep the patient near death for weeks, slowing the disease's progression and buying as much time as possible for an immune response, which would otherwise take too long.
Milwaukee Protocol
In the middle of the most morbid drama , house comes out with that line that has you shocked for a second until you burst out laughing... "If you don't get a shot in the next three hours I'll have to make another affirmative action hire". Wow, what a brilliant jerk.
It's nonsense. Rabies takes days to weeks to reach the brain.
@@Kalenz1234 but how long is the window of opportunity for treatment after exposure?
@@bulletsizednuke1100 There is no treatment for rabies. What we do have is a vaccine. And the virus spreads through the body so slowly that we can be given the vaccine AFTER being infected and the body learns to kill the virus before it reaches the brain.
From what I heard a bite in the hand/leg can take months to years to reach the brain.
Of course you shouldn't take chances and take the shot asap but for house to say he has to get the shot in 3 hours is just nonsense.
A bite near the head would be another story.
@@bulletsizednuke1100 They say 24 hours as the recommended but some doctors say as long as you get it within 72 you will "probably" be fine so I am guessing the window is somewhere between the two probably also has a sizeable variation depending on the individual person and also other factors like how much virus was actually transmitted into the body.
@@bulletsizednuke1100 Until the onset of symptoms. Days, weeks, months, years. The sooner the better, though, since they usually show within a couple days.
Wilson being a bro at the end
The fact foreman got a tetanus shot instead of rabies immediately after being bitten by a homeless person really makes me question everyone on their team's judgement.
Yeah when they mentioned that she was HIV negative after he was bitten i was like... Okay it's totally gonna be something infectious that he's gonna get. Felt very validated when it was rabies
"instead of rabies". The chance an American is rabid is extremely remote, as they said. No one would get a rabies shot for being bit by a human.
@@Laura-kl7vishe was displaying rabies symptoms though
@@cateering But they didn't think of rabies until House noticed her and Foreman's numbness, otherwise the episode would have been much shorter.
Police Officer's tasers keep a complete history of every use. It records the time, date, duration etc. of every use. The data is uploaded every battery charge. In other words, there is no way an officer can hide a taser deployment.
Curious, did they do that 15+ yrs ago when this aired? I know nothing about them so just asking.
@@Crittergirl81 Not a problem, thanks for the comment. I cannot answer for all police agencies but I am not aware of any agency that carries tasers that does not have an on-board digital log of their usage. I have been a police officer for almost 20 years and carried a taser for about 15 of them. To me this story line does not make any sense. The "officer" in this episode would have a far easier time explaining why he tased the woman as opposed to explaining why he did not report a taser deployment. Besides, the doctor would have no problem finding the marks left by the taser probes. You can't hide that. I just hate when people believe this hollywood garbage.
considering how many police have killed people and ended up getting away with it it seems logical to believe a cop would easily be able to hide a tazer deployment lol
@@breckfoster767 What are you referring to?? What police officer got away with killing people unjustified?? Just another product of the media with no facts to back up your comment.
@@boy2cuda do you think over 15 years ago when this aired the makers of this show would have been aware of that or could have easily found that out?
When Foreman said hang in there.... My heart broke... You could see he ment it 🤗
Maybe but he was just an complete jerk in this episode. He really only started to care once he was told that she was really sick and needed help. He 1st only saw someone looking for a free meal ticket. He prejudiced to this woman just because she was homeless. I feel that karma came for Foremen in such a way knowing that he was treating someone the same way someone would treat him just because of his skin color. (I don't hate foremen only just in this episode)
He only said hang in there because if she doesn't, that means his chances don't look too good either.
When House tells Foremen to go get his shots within 3 hours or else he's going to have to start interviewing for another Affirmative Action hire, Foreman didn't even flinch
And it wasn't because he was numb from rabies.
He loves House, that's why
I'm just going to assume he used a different needle to poke his colleague
You can see the needle hub color is green instead of pink. Different guaged needles in addition to being different needles.
I FIND HER LAYING ON THE GRASS 😂😂😂
picks up the 100
i found her laying on the grass!
ACAB
*lying
@@smurfyday really? THAT'S the one you go after, and not "I 'find' her?"
@@ajdominguez1002 Good catch but yes, because I've found so many people genuinely not understanding the differences between lay and lie, which shouldn't be surprising since it's one of the top mistakes people make. Find and found, that's most likely carelessness.
the end of this episode had me in tears. did not expect this episode to hit that hard in the feels
This was one of the saddest house episodes 😢
Wilson's heart is definitely still first though
@@fogpivvl8341 Idk, Victoria lost her husband and child, basically all her life. It was really more heavy than Wilson's lost.
@@Mitsuoxx objectively, sure. But the show didn't follow her story. We weren't anywhere near as attached to her
The great thing about this show was telling short but touching stories in only 40 minutes
how is house content still posted? legendary show
The posts are the equivalent of commercials. You won’t find it on the net or TV/radio. CZcams is free so they get free ads.
house just goated like that
I believe you answered your own question
Peacock/FOX posts these as a way to say it's on Peacock and you can watch it there.
It took this clip for me to realize that vampirism is probably just what people thought rabies was a few hundred years ago.
indeed. I forgot I knew that. I think lol.
There is also a disease, phyrrhea? Spelling. Anyway, it mimics the sensitivity to light, anemia thing attributed to vampirism. And TB or pernicious anemia were often referred to as "wastng away". Sometimes a vampire was suspected.
@@elenachristian9860 Porphyria
I remember Porphyria coming up a number of times as a final diagnosis in the series. So I looked it up. In non-chronological order: (1) There was House's ex, Stacy's husband, Mark, who had the intermittent kind of porphyria. (2) There was that fitness instructor who used to be fat and got thin via a gastric bypass instead of the exercising she claimed to her students, whose diagnosis of porphyria was discovered after she was given a piece of cake. (3) There was that little girl whose parents were always fighting and House twice went to a judge to appoint one or the other as her health proxy so he could get his way, and Cuddy ended up her health proxy, and just before they amputated her leg Chase came up with the diagnosis of the extreme photosensitivity version of porphyria. (4) Finally, there was the counsellor and kid from that training camp for juvenile offenders, and when Masters discovered the camp counsellor was the kid's father, the hereditary factor led House to once again diagnose porphyria, that terrible genetic disease. Still, it's a way better diagnosis than rabies!
“Don’t listen to me, listen to Benjamin Franklin”
“Sir I am placing you under arrest for conspiracy to bribe a law enforcement officer”
i think its not a conspiracy but an attempt
"Your honor, he tried to get me to tell the truth!"
Ben better bring along a whole bunch of his friends or we're going downtown
Miss Leslie. Thank you for your performance in this episode. Of all the House performances by a Guest Artist, you win the coveted "Casa de Magnifico" award. The perfect talent for an amazing script.
House in that turtleneck… how have I never seen this before
Rabies was cured once after symptoms presented. The UK girl was left with severe brain damage. When the technic was duplicated for a man in Asian. He did not survive. As I’m aware, it has not been attempted again.
The results are less than ideal, and the cost is astronomical!
I think only around 29 people have ever been recorded to have recovered from Rabies. A small fraction had the Milwaukee Protocol the others fought it off in intensive care.
@@DJCallidus I would absolutely love to read about the cases of them living through it without intervention if you have it available? If not could you point me in the right direction?
@@danieleoswald4971 It won't let me share an outside link.
I googled "how many people have survived rabies?" It was one of the first results for me. Details to the cases.
IT has been attempted and been successful at least twice in the US, once was a young girl who completely recovered. This is as of 2023
@@Laura-kl7vi that’s awesome! I’m glad we are beginning to develop a cure, for after the symptoms present.
I know we still have a long way to go. But ever tiny step, gets us closer to the goal!
This was an interesting episode because it was one of the few where foreman and house felt very strongly about a patient. Usually one does and the other tries to blow it off, but from the get go, both were concerned.
Foreman didn't even believe her. He thought she was faking so she could get a place to sleep. They fought with wilson because he advocated for her but foreman wanted her discharged. The only reason House took the case is because he saw how much Wilson cared. He even asked foreman what he had against homeless people. You must be taking about another episode.
Real life doctors should just listen to the dramatic music. Way easier to diagnose good and bad things that way.
That has to be terrifying. You already showing some of the same symptoms a person with rabies is showing. I would freak tf out.
Numbness is still caused by local nerves being infected. Only when the virus gets to the brain does the disease become untreatable.
As some who has been bitten by a possibly rabid animal, I'm shocked foreman didn't go get a rabies shot immediately after being bitten by a woman found in the wilderness. Seems doctors give those things out like candy.
Lol of course they do. Rabies is 100% fatal unless you find a doctor willing to put you in a medically-induced coma and fill you up to the eyeballs with medicine. Even then, your chances aren't good. Any potential exposure has to be taken seriously.
It was a rave
@@alexisvandom8037 by "not good" we're talking single or low double digit numbers of people. rabies is functionally fatal if treatment is delayed.
@@alexisvandom8037nd if survive the coma, your nervous system is shot to the point where you need to learn to walk and write with a pencil again
Again, in the US there are about 10 cases of rabies in people in a year. Being bit by a human with rabies is astonishingly remote, you just don't get a rabies shot when a human in the wilderness, or anywhere, bites you. It's not medical protocol.
Absolutely heartbreaking episode.
I love season 1 House. He had a sarcastic wit, but he was an excellent mentor and didn’t always play mind games. He knew when to get serious and when it was ok to joke around.
i love how foreman wasn't phased by the news that he had rabies, but was devastated that it was too late for her 😭
Great episode. The ending is incredibly sad.
The best teacher i have ever seen
I've never watched an episode of house in my life, but somehow I'm early to this.
Brian Dooley more like Brian Doodoo
As if one has anything to do with the other 👌.
Reminds me of the Scrubs episode “My Lunch” when an assumed overdose dies and they use her organs. Then they find out that she had rabies and now all the transplant patients do too!
That's what i try to tell myself every time i start watching House again
Huh, me too. ^5
One of the best shows ever!
her story make me cry like a bi**
She lived a simple, happy life with her husband and child. Tragically, she lost her family in a car accident, breaking her arm while her husband and child passed away. She frequently visited her old home, paying to enter. She lived as a homeless woman, being extremely harsh on herself. Overwhelmed by a deep sense of guilt, Mother Nature afflicted her with rabies, one of the most dreadful viruses known to humanity. I wish we could embrace these people and help them start anew.
thank you house MD for this piece of art.
Takes the hundred: I found her lying on the grass.
I love this show, learn something every episode
As always, S/O to whoever is running this channel!
The moment House said 'Hydrophobia' , I knew it was rabies.
Rabies is treatable before the symptoms show up. Once the patient become symptomatic, especially if hydrophobia sets in , it becomes fatal , no treatment can help.
Truly among worst of the worst diseases , good thing its method of transfer is limited to bites from infected organisms only. I can't imagine what it would be like if it was airborne.
Not just bites.
It can also be passed by saliva ( drooling ) from the animal.
Also, if the animals have any bleeding or leakages from wounds, rabies can be contracted.
@@katherineirving7189 Indeed , thanks for the additional information.
The lesson in this video is that MONEY TALKS even when threats and cajoling won't work !
the one liners in this show were ahead of their time
hugh looks so good in that blue jumper
The bribe was unnecessary, btw. Tasers have tons of little pieces of “confetti” designed to pop out when they’re fired. They have a unique ID number on them so you know what taser was fired in a particular location. As long as you know where the officer “found her lying on the grass” (a detail which should be in the report he told House to read), they should be able to go there (LEGALLY, unlike the tasing, lying, and home checks) and find either tons of the stuff or none at all.
I love how the nurse watching the monitor just happened to be holding 1mg adenosine, ready to push through her line lmao
I love House but the way things happen at this hospital is so funny, especially as a chronically ill person. Nobody cares to figure out the mystery, they tell you you’re anxious and to gtfo
No kidding. "Groin pull," they all told me, never one of them listening all the way through my description of symptoms and events. Finally, after 6 months of MY persistence, a high contrast MRI reveals both small pelvic bones broken in the left front and back, the front bone shattered with a hernia on top of the break. "Take two a day and don't bother us." Modern medicine at its most ignorant pill-pushing failure level ever.
Most crash trollies have 1mg adenosine prefilled syringes so you’re not having to waste time and an experienced nurse would probably preempt the need for it
@@gorillazfan1981 That's a crash cart in the USA.
@@asc_missions3080 😂 almost got it right, we call them resus trollies in the uk
@@gorillazfan1981 Meds aren’t just sitting in loose syringes though lol. An accessible vial/syringe or prefilled and packed syringe, sure.
Also I didn’t even realise that was a crash cart?? But you’re right. Just chilling in the trauma bay, with no other equipment in sight but a heart monitor and a half used box of gloves? (They should be in most rooms, but they’re definitely not. At least here.) Maybe there’s drawers when watching full screen on tv but 😂 jesus. I’ve never seen one that isn’t color-coded either, but maybe that’s not universal either
They’re also very lucky it was an RN standing right there and not a medical student or like, an ophthalmologist who was floated down and hadn’t touched a line in years. House is genuinely one of my favorite shows, this stuff just cracks me up. I wish real hospitals ran this smoothly.
Well Ben Franklin does solve a lot of problems
Just watched this episode on Amazon Prime and--whew--it is a sad one.
imagine how much house the guy who makes these videos has seen
At first I thought it was lupus.
it's never lupus
That's the scary thing about rabies, it's only curable when you aren't showing symptoms. The second you do start showing symptoms, it's too late
Taser barbs would have left marks, but her skin was fine where House pointed out.
Hey @House M.D. uploader, could you upload the conclusion of the Bi-polar writer episode, pretty please? 'I couldn't tackle the bear!'
best tv series bar none.
Lol how many times has Foreman come close to dying.
Okay to be fair, my experience is with animals, but I can't think of a reason why humans would be different - I would love to know if that is somehow the case - but with animals, my understanding is that examination of the brain tissue of a deceased animal under a microscope is the only way to confirm rabies, the incubation period is ten days from exposure to symptom onset, and once symptomatic the disease has already progressed past the point of successful medical intervention.
You know, this episode starts with this woman going to a house party where another woman kisses her. Meaning that other woman is also likely infected with rabies and has no idea.
It’s very rare that it is contracted that way unless she had a cold soar or a cut on her mouth as it rarely effects people unless it’s gotten directly into their bloodstream via I bite or scratch.
That's the thing about illness and statistics. You can't exactly know how many die of a rare disease as they don't test when the person is already dead. In Germany for example you have to pay for the obduction a couple thousand euros. Can't even imagine how expensive it would be in the US
I lol @ can't be angry if you didn't feel it
2:38 "The cop taz-ed her." 😂
finally they say the condition i had lol svt caused by a extra nerve to the heart when activated can casue weakness and low bp which heartrate is in the 280s for me
had the surgery twice by 16
How did they not suspect Rabies sooner? There were bats in her sleeping box (the most common source of rabies in humans) and she had all of the classic symptoms. High fever, confusion, neurological symptoms, and hydrophobia.
This episode hurt...
I like when people throw he attitude back at him, I think he needs that sometimes
I found her lying on the grass
😂😂😂😂
Lmao the needle stick
“What the hell!!” 🤣🤣
I love the Actor House!☆
always great story...afraid of these bills...specialised team...gonna cost ya...
This episode was very very emotional ... stretched forman to his emotional limits
Foreman: This IS my happy face'!
same scenario happened couple weeks ago in iraq , someone got bitten by a street dog then he bit his younger brother and sisters , he and his family did not develop a symptoms during this period , week after bitten his family , the big brother passed away from rabies , and his younger brother followed him .
the family live in rural area and they never get vaccinated
at least the title had me thinking of Wizard of Oz
"Another Affirmative Action hire"
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Rabies is still out there, we had a rabid raccoon on the property where I worked. We were told to avoid it as it walked in a slow circle in the parking lot for several days before dying. Then a worker took care of the body...it was considered cheaper than paying wildlife management 200 dollars to get rid of it.
Well I’m 99% sure that was illegal and unethical and highly dangerous. Pretty sure if someone had gotten bit or contracted rabies from it they could have sued since you knew it was rabid and out there. Not to mention the worker probably didn’t know how to properly dispose of the body which potentially put them at risk themselves. I’m pretty sure you guys qualify for several lawsuits just based on this.
@@DawnzeenaMcGill Probably but since when is this a just world? Worker is fine...yeah he probably didn't dispose of it properly. On the other hand how to prove that is a bit of a trick. Also your talking about a billion dollar manufacturing company. You think they can't pay a fine? Yes they should have done this that and the other thing....but in a world where most of the environmental law jobs consist of helping companies figure how to pay the most profitable amount of fines, this is small potatoes.
@@michaelharris8598 never said it was either. That’s the problem big companies and people with lots of money get off to easy. They pay the fine because to them it’s just chump change and feel free to do whatever they like. There’s no real consequences for them. It’s sad but honestly I really hope someday this comes back to bite them. Hard.
When will you be back in Amazon Prime? I recently started watching, suddenly find it unavailable. Already missing! T_T
Some patients can be very crazy when they are really sick.
After all these years, I thought this show ended for good o.0
I remember the time i had to go to the er by ambulance. I got really sick and lost about 9 pounds in a week (this was around the time covid started). They thought it was meningitis and when i was released 3 days later they thought it was just a flu... everyone was scared to deal with me
in case you didn't realize, *he found her lying on the grass.*
Rabies is one of the most terrifying ways to die
“Rabies!” I Called it before house!
After house offered the birbe and then it cut straight to the patient I thought house got bashed by the cops lol
This was the saddest episode in the whole series
That girl she kissed at the rave surely got infected with rabies.
It's rare that it transmits this way.
@@Ildarioon Isn't rabies famously transmitted through oral fluids? I think that's why you should get vaccinated after bites from wild mammals and why the virus causes hypersalivation along with an impossibility to swallow so that the saliva will accumulate along with aggression so that the infected animal will be more likely to bite. Also, the virus breeds in the salivary glands. So I don't get why you're claiming the fact that kissed some other girl exchanging saliva won't infect that other girl as well.
@@charlesferdinand422 "and why the virus causes hypersalivation along with an impossibility to swallow so that the saliva will accumulate along with aggression so that the infected animal will be more likely to bite." The phrasing makes it seem like there is a purpose in the effect of the virus which is a bad way to see it. If viruses had multiplying as a purpose, no virus would be fatal.
As for the main point, there is a big difference between saliva on a mucous membrane and saliva directly in the bloodstream.
@@Ildarioon Not by much, viral units are small enough to be readily absorbed through mucous membranes.
@@charlesferdinand422 You really want to die on this hill, or would you rather look up the real world transmission vectors for rabies?
If your assumption was true, rabies wouldn't be "rare in humans" and human to human transmission wouldn't be "nearly unheard of".
I definitely would not be calmly sitting waiting for House to double check that it was rabies. I'd be sprinting down to the ER as fast as I could.
Symptoms to come on that fast and once they come on, it's pretty much 100% deadly. There's only a couple of cases where someone has survived.
Fun fact, the first case of that was in my town.sjebwas scratched by a bat. We also had a bat infestation at that time.
I just saw Billy Kennedy from neighbours is in it.
lol he said theyll have to make an affirmative action hire.
Congrats you watched the vid
Just imagining a patient in real life, just passed out, has no illness, just passed out, and just suddenly COMA, dies in a week, 168 hours from when they put the IV in, just for no reason, then bam Lazarus pit, person has amnesia and insomnia, they become the true self when they are sleep walking
House is too tame in this clip. Too composed, too....human....
Porque House en casos como este es así
Es el House real,se saca la máscara.
I got attacked by a feral cat. I was in a Mormon controlled town so they tried to talk me out of getting rabies shots. Then, apparently a white guy got attacked too. They gave my meds to him and made me wait 14 hours in the ER instead.