Modern Medical Practices We Need To Stop

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • I'll teach you how to become the media's go-to expert in your field. Enroll in The Professional's Media Academy now: www.professionalsmediaacademy...
    Listen to my podcast, @DoctorMikeCheckup, here:
    Spotify: go.doctormikemedia.com/spotif...
    Apple Podcasts: go.doctormikemedia.com/applep...
    Help us continue the fight against medical misinformation and change the world through charity by becoming a Doctor Mike Resident on Patreon where every month I donate 100% of the proceeds to the charity, organization, or cause of your choice! Residents get access to bonus content, an exclusive discord community, and many other perks for just $10 a month. Become a Resident today:
    / doctormike
    Let’s connect:
    IG: go.doctormikemedia.com/instag...
    Twitter: go.doctormikemedia.com/twitte...
    FB: go.doctormikemedia.com/facebo...
    TikTok: go.doctormikemedia.com/tiktok...
    Reddit: go.doctormikemedia.com/reddit...
    Contact Email: DoctorMikeMedia@Gmail.com
    Executive Producer: Doctor Mike
    Production Director and Editor: Dan Owens
    Managing Editor and Producer: Sam Bowers
    Editor and Designer: Caroline Weigum
    Editor: Juan Carlos Zuniga
    * Select photos/videos provided by Getty Images *
    ** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional **

Komentáře • 6K

  • @Notimp0rtant523
    @Notimp0rtant523 Před 11 měsíci +6737

    “By the time we figure out what specific virus is making you sick, you’ll either be better or dead” -actual words from my doctor who I still trust

    • @cameronno6039
      @cameronno6039 Před 11 měsíci +168

      Depends on the virus and where. Generally, this is probably good enough.

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Před 11 měsíci +384

      But when we are talking about antibiotics, I hope by now everyone KNOWS, that those ONLY work against bacterial infections and never against infections, caused by a virus.

    • @zagrizena
      @zagrizena Před 11 měsíci +90

      Well, we had a situation with our kids, that could have been significantly improved, had the dr bothered to test for a specific virus. Kids ended up contracting oral herpes virus and at the infection their mouths were covered in painful ulcers, to the point it was an issue getting them to swallow anything and they needed hospitalisation. The oldest showed symptoms first and was subsequently hospitalised. As he was being discharged from the hospital, the young one developed very similar symptoms, but not yet being able to speak and still nursing part time, doctors were convinced it was simply trush. They insisted even after I pointed out son's recent infection and similarity in symptoms and even directly asked for the test, since she could maybe be given anti-virus medication to lessen the outbreak. She ended hospitalised a day and a half later and was poked for IV canals to at least stave off dehydration and some pain.

    • @manishgoyal7677
      @manishgoyal7677 Před 11 měsíci +78

      ​@@zagrizena The sheer absence of common sense of some doctors really surprises me.

    • @HercadosP
      @HercadosP Před 11 měsíci +16

      ​@@zagrizenabut how else would the poor hospital be earning money? /s how much were the hospitalisations? 140k per day?

  • @beachnap
    @beachnap Před 11 měsíci +2100

    The fact that insurance companies still deny or limit coverage for physical therapy even though it is often more effective than surgery is so frustrating. These insurance companies are dictating patient treatment, not the doctors and not the evidence-based medicine. We need to legislate to radically reform the medical system to get these companies out before they ruin the whole industry and bankrupt our nation.

    • @lordblazer
      @lordblazer Před 11 měsíci +84

      It'll never happen because it would help people qhich is a evil thing to do in America and God hates when you help folks and not the rich.

    • @Oktokolo
      @Oktokolo Před 11 měsíci +6

      Maybe, operations are cheaper than physical therapy.

    • @walterroux291
      @walterroux291 Před 11 měsíci +98

      ​@@Oktokoloabsolutely not. The amount of high paying specialists required for general surgery is INFINITELY higher than that of physical therapy. But that's THE POINT, Insurance can charge through the roof.

    • @AnnoyingNewsletters
      @AnnoyingNewsletters Před 11 měsíci +28

      Before they ruin it ⁉️ 😂
      Isn't America the only country that allows this to happen?

    • @user-mc6dg6qe8l
      @user-mc6dg6qe8l Před 11 měsíci +21

      Or and hear me out please, we make medical coverage affordable for the average person so that they can say "lol then I'm not buying your insurance anymore ill just pay for it myself."

  • @frankenstein6677
    @frankenstein6677 Před 9 měsíci +718

    My family's always tried to push me off of my habit of just letting small fevers alone. Glad to see my line of thought of "if my body is causing it, maybe there's a reason for it" isn't as far off as people have been trying to convince me.

    • @Theunicorn2012
      @Theunicorn2012 Před 9 měsíci +3

      My family's always tried to push me off of my habit of just letting small fevers alone. Glad to see my line of thought of "if my body is causing it, mabye there's a reason for it" isn't as far off as people have been trying to convince me.

    • @loreyxillumina
      @loreyxillumina Před 8 měsíci +27

      ​@@Theunicorn2012why copy?

    • @nahbruh419
      @nahbruh419 Před 8 měsíci +21

      ​@@loreyxilluminaI'm honestly convinced she's a bot

    • @loreyxillumina
      @loreyxillumina Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@nahbruh419 yeah they prob are, looking through her comments on other vids

    • @Zoroaster4
      @Zoroaster4 Před 4 měsíci

      I had an elementary school teacher that explained this to me. A bit of a tangent, but he was the best teacher I've ever had. He made learning interesting and taught kids all sorts of facts and stuff that he definitely wasn't required to by any means but was definitely way more helpful than just sticking with state requirements. Hope he's doing well in his old age.

  • @ZigbertD
    @ZigbertD Před 16 dny +14

    When I was a teenager, I injured my lower back and for years afterward I had periodic flareups that left me in severe pain and unable to really move around. Every time I consulted a doctor they just said rest and stay off my feet, and maybe prescribed a muscle relaxer. Finally, a doctor told me that I should be exercising (not when I was having a flareup) to strengthen my core muscles. He recommended riding a bicycle as one exercise that would help. Since I started doing that, for a couple of decades now, I've never had a serious flareup like that and rarely have even a minor one. Cycling is now a major part of my daily routine for fitness and recreation, and I even commute to and from work on my bike.

  • @tattd_snw_wht
    @tattd_snw_wht Před 11 měsíci +6970

    As a nurse, I scratch my head on why doctors immediately throw antibiotics at a patient only to require a culture later on. This prolongs the patient’s hospital stay and the process to narrow down what kind of bacteria is actually causing the problem. Antibiotics should be the last resort because as useful as they are, they often create more issues when overprescribed.

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap Před 11 měsíci +145

      the only time ive ever been overprescribed medication is when i had a pretty bad case of hay fever one summer when i was 17. i had a bloody nose every time i went outside and couldnt work. i took one look at the side effects of the antihistamines and they included bloody nose, besides a bunch of other stuff. so i said no thanks. ten years later, sometimes i have to sneeze a bunch in early spring or get a runny nose, but most years i dont even notice. its really a problem doctors are willing to throw heavy meds at small problems. if i did take those meds, i likely would never have adapted to the situation.

    • @puglover7985
      @puglover7985 Před 11 měsíci +246

      Longer stay = more money... Duh..

    • @avenger5339
      @avenger5339 Před 11 měsíci +47

      What about some patients losing consciousness sometimes even their hearing or vision when their temperature goes way up how can u guarantee that the temperature would stay at a safe level

    • @Joshua-wc5oz
      @Joshua-wc5oz Před 11 měsíci +82

      @tatted_snw_wht what you said is definitely right and it should be what's actually done. But take a moment and think of it from the patients perspective. A culture takes a couple of days to show results. Especially with the cost of healthcare in the us, no one wants to spend a single moment more than necessary in hospitals. If for certain diseases, we wait for the culture results, and then begin an antibiotic afterwards, the whole process gets extended by 4-5 days. While prescription of antibiotics for everything is definitely discouraged, in some cases it becomes necessary to prescribe antibiotics for the most common organism, wait for the culture reports and then modify the treatment accordingly.

    • @TheNewbie78
      @TheNewbie78 Před 11 měsíci

      Those doctors care about money only so the patient can pay it

  • @TheLycanthrope09
    @TheLycanthrope09 Před 11 měsíci +1605

    Here's something really messed up: I once went to a doctor that wanted a pelvic exam to renew my prescription for anxiety medication. Not birth control, anxiety medication. I told her (truthfully) that I've never been sexually active, and she said "no, you're old enough that you have." I reported her and never went back, but good God.

    • @missouriprideusa6241
      @missouriprideusa6241 Před 11 měsíci +111

      So what was the outcome? Did she get fired or written up? Sounds like she got her specialists confused. A psychiatrist or a GP prescribes anti-anxiety drugs and a gynecologist dies or your GP does a pelvic exam.
      I'm really sorry you had to go through that.

    • @lexinicole4317
      @lexinicole4317 Před 11 měsíci +47

      Err, this sounds made up… A psychiatrist (which is who should be prescribing anxiety medication) wouldn’t even have the tools needed to do a pelvic exam.

    • @TheLycanthrope09
      @TheLycanthrope09 Před 11 měsíci +327

      @@lexinicole4317 Err, your reading comprehension is a little lacking here. It was a GP (family doctor/general practice) who wanted the pelvic exam, not the psychiatrist. I left that doctor (didn't let her do that exam) and found the psychiatrist afterward. The psychiatrist is awesome and has never caused any issues for me.

    • @zzzzx3
      @zzzzx3 Před 11 měsíci +167

      @@lexinicole4317
      You put way too much energy to die on this hill 😂

    • @TheLycanthrope09
      @TheLycanthrope09 Před 11 měsíci +73

      @@lexinicole4317 I did clarify all of that in my second comment, which was before you commented on this. You just didn't read the whole thread before commenting.

  • @hannahsalb4905
    @hannahsalb4905 Před 8 měsíci +65

    My Appalachian mother used to have us sit in front of the fireplace to sweat out the flu. We were better in just 2-3 days when all the other neighborhood kids were out of school for nearly two weeks.

    • @UchihaKuriso
      @UchihaKuriso Před 10 dny +4

      Same! We'd get wrapped up in a ton of blankets to sweat it out as well. Always over in a couple days as well.

    • @MessageViolation
      @MessageViolation Před 5 dny +4

      My mom would blanket us up and make us sweat, it worked for a few of us, but never for me. She used to dip me in an ice cold bath to shock my system because my fever would get dangerously high. It worked because the virus can't survive in too cold of temperature either. It was the only thing that worked for me. Decades later, I was in the hospital with a fever and viral infection almost near brain death and they tried to sweat me out. I ended up telling them what my mom did. The nurse put ice on me and I stabilized. I wonder why hot method never worked for me. The human body is so unique.

    • @Weberkooks
      @Weberkooks Před 3 dny

      @@MessageViolationwell actually when you dump your entire body in an ice bath it causes a hyperthermic shock response. Raising core body temperature drastically, Not exactly a good choice for reducing fever. this is why heatstroke is dealt with by putting ice on the palms of the hands and solws of the feet. NOT the core. Because applying ice there raises core body temperature.

  • @rampartranger7749
    @rampartranger7749 Před 9 dny +15

    I’m an old guy, in my 1950’s childhood, my parents, (and most parents) didn’t get upset until it was pushing 104. “Drink more water,” they said. I never went to the doctor until the mandatory physical exam to participate in high school athletics. Same for MOST kids. Now the parents run to the doc every six weeks! Crazy!

  • @gracieliznorris
    @gracieliznorris Před 11 měsíci +2195

    I’m a labor and delivery nurse, and my BIGGEST pet peeve is not letting people eat during labor. The risk for aspiration is SO incredibly low. It is not evidence based at all and can actually be harmful.

    • @saschamayer4050
      @saschamayer4050 Před 11 měsíci +306

      Yeah. And some hospitals even forbid drinking during labour. Drinking anything. So no water for hours. 😱

    • @triciabakker3308
      @triciabakker3308 Před 11 měsíci +231

      Thank you! Not being able to drink or eat in water made me dehydrated and weak. It was awful.

    • @lexinicole4317
      @lexinicole4317 Před 11 měsíci +224

      It’s so ridiculously stupid to me. Unless the PLAN is a c-section, or it’s VERY much expected, there is no reason we should be refusing patients food or drink on the basis of “well, you COULD need a surgery, if an emergency happens.” That’s the case for literally all things! We don’t tell people not to eat anything in case they’re in a car accident or fall down the stairs and require emergency surgery. We are just extra careful when an emergency surgery needs to be done and we know the patient has eaten recently. C-sections should NOT be treated like an inevitability for all labor and deliveries so much so that we don’t allow patients to eat. It’s insane.

    • @Leviatiemily
      @Leviatiemily Před 11 měsíci +28

      Yeeeaaaah. I'd just drink like...an Atkins shakes or something. Idk if I could eat solids before giving birth but I gotta keep my blood sugar up.

    • @gracieliznorris
      @gracieliznorris Před 11 měsíci +79

      @@saschamayer4050 where i work, once patients get an epidural, they can only have ice chips. At that point, we start IV fluids anyway, so dehydration is not likely. However, not allowing food or drink is STILL not evidence based in this scenario :(

  • @Abandonedmaul
    @Abandonedmaul Před 11 měsíci +886

    I’m so happy you talked about pelvic exams. Just a year ago I had a horrible experience with a medical prof insisted I have a pelvic exam before she would prescribe my birth control that I’d been taking for years. I refused because I felt uncomfortable and her continuing to pressure me into an exam was alarming. She also came out while I was checking out to sign some refusal paper and in front of everyone read it out loud. I haven’t cried so much after a dr visit in years. Do not let anyone touch you if you feel uncomfortable!! That is your choice!

    • @v3ru586
      @v3ru586 Před 11 měsíci +114

      I was raised to think the opposite, the doctor's job is to make you healthy, not comfortable. It's probably the reason why I did endured lots of bs without realising the harm it did to my mental health.

    • @ghyslainabel
      @ghyslainabel Před 11 měsíci +165

      @@v3ru586 the origin of the "healthy, not comfortable" was probably about some procedures that are just unpleasant, like receiving a vaccine (a received a vaccine in 4th grade that hurt for hours). Unfortunately, it become understood as "doctors should not have bedside manners".
      Doctors should take care of the whole health of a person, physical and mental. That means that while some tests and procedure can be unpleasant, doctors should put us at ease before doing them.

    • @illbetherejk3212
      @illbetherejk3212 Před 11 měsíci +131

      If they read my private and personal healthcafe information aloud in public, and youvlove in the USA, i probably would have taken them to court. There are laws against this.....

    • @Nefville
      @Nefville Před 11 měsíci +122

      @@illbetherejk3212 absolute HIPAA violation. I worked in health information mgmt for years, aka medical records, we were required to take a number of courses for certification in regards to private health information. It also can get the facility a HUGE fine. Big no no.

    • @Sisterlisk
      @Sisterlisk Před 11 měsíci +33

      My new doctor (years ago, she's retired now) wouldn't prescribe me BC until I'd done an exam because I was in my mid 20s and had never been examined (pap smear) before. Despite only wanting the BC for reasons besides birth control, I agreed. That pap smear was soooo horrible. I had to resist the urge to scream and kick.

  • @katiefrancis6067
    @katiefrancis6067 Před 9 měsíci +40

    I get not wanting to over-prescribe antibiotics, but as someone who has needed them for an illness that wasn't getting better after weeks and every doctor saying no to antibiotics except the last one, it cost me a lot of money and extra time with the illness. I started getting better within two days after starting antibiotics. Usually a virus doesn't mean always, i wish there was better testing to figure it out earlier.

  • @ABC-rk3rx
    @ABC-rk3rx Před měsícem +10

    I’ve always avoided lowering my fever when sick unless dangerously high, and when I told GP’s this they said I was medically wrong. Turns out I may be right!

    • @jnharton
      @jnharton Před 10 dny +2

      It's important to know what's normal for you when you get sick and to actually check your body temperature properly.
      And it's aways good if someone else is around to keep an eye on you, because fever can spike into a dangerous range without much warning.
      P.S.
      If you become delirious you will probably be unable to reason correctly and make good decision.

    • @abukitty
      @abukitty Před 8 dny

      I don't take analgesics till my body temperature reaches 104°F. Taking bath in room temperature water and cold sponging helps a lot
      People think it's crazy because taking analgesics is the norm of the 21st century

  • @aileenliu6611
    @aileenliu6611 Před 9 měsíci +1383

    as a kid, my mom always had us “sweat out” fevers by making us drink a lot of water and piling on the blankets (given that our temperature was in a safe range ofc). always thought it was kinda funky that western medicine/culture typically encourages the opposite

    • @nicolad8822
      @nicolad8822 Před 9 měsíci +46

      That’s quite Victorian, even then they gave them willow bark tea.

    • @Yamaazaka
      @Yamaazaka Před 9 měsíci +56

      Yeah it really works well in my fam too. Someone would make sure they had a cold towel for the forehead and monitored the inner ear temp.

    • @naolucillerandom5280
      @naolucillerandom5280 Před 9 měsíci +11

      I'm about to do that because I don't have a thermometer but I just can't handle a fever that doesn't sweat 😂

    • @crying2emoji5
      @crying2emoji5 Před 9 měsíci +55

      I had a boyfriend who would literally hallucinate every time his fever went over 101. The first time it happened I was TERRIFIED. After he recovered he explained to me what happened and told me if it happens again, to cover his body in blankets and put ice packs on and around his head and neck. Worked like a charm.

    • @ogi22
      @ogi22 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@nicolad8822 I'm really glad at my home we used a lot of "home medicine". And that combo of aspirin and a lot of fluids, combined with a good blanket cocoon was normal to me. In fact i just do it now beacuse of legionella.
      I'll try without aspirin tonight, because last night my core temp was allover from 37,5 to 39,5 (measurements separated by just couple hours) and i didn't want to get under blankets like that. I like my brain raw ;)
      6:30am, a change of sheets and blankets, light sleeping clothes were about 1kg heavier;) Morning temp 37,5

  • @Official_Rz
    @Official_Rz Před 11 měsíci +907

    I can't reiterate how important it is for many of these outdated medical practices to be scrutinized publicly by both professionals and the general population. This is how change happens, not by letting it fester under the surface to create more problems later on, as times change.

    • @johnfrancis1925
      @johnfrancis1925 Před 11 měsíci +10

      And if it's festering, don't put leeches on it.

    • @natevisuals4120
      @natevisuals4120 Před 11 měsíci +5

      This can be said for things far beyond medicine as well lol

    • @natevisuals4120
      @natevisuals4120 Před 11 měsíci +2

      This can be said for things far beyond medicine as well lol

    • @girlsdrinkfeck
      @girlsdrinkfeck Před 11 měsíci +3

      Sex change is now outdated

    • @heartminer5487
      @heartminer5487 Před 11 měsíci +3

      sometimes you just need to use a bit of scientific common sense to know what to do

  • @seanwright1264
    @seanwright1264 Před 8 měsíci +39

    Very cool, man. I've been frustrated by these myths for years. Thanks for standing up for medical evidence.

  • @lunaa764
    @lunaa764 Před 7 měsíci +35

    my highest fever was when i had covid, it was 102. while i get it’s my body’s natural response to fight off the infection, i felt so awful and disoriented that i reached for the tylenol immediately. feeling dizzy and like i was going to black out wasn’t fun either.

  • @GreenPenguin82
    @GreenPenguin82 Před 11 měsíci +648

    This is why I stopped giving my daughter meds with a fever unless it's really high (and her Dr has directed me to give her something). A fever is a sign the body is doing it's job. As long as she's acting fine and eating and drinking normally, I let her body do it's job.

    • @kirashields7383
      @kirashields7383 Před 11 měsíci +40

      Exactly. I had gastroenteritis a few months ago, never thrown up so much in a short space of time I swear, 30+ times, and was delirious with a high fever for about two days, barely slept, but after that, it broke, I started sweating it out and slowly recovered. First two days were the worst though. Never want to get that again. Fevers, unless like you said, they're really high, are just something you've got to bear with and get through, and then it gets better. It's just doing its job, getting your body to fight off and kill the infection/whatever made you unwell.

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap Před 11 měsíci +33

      when i was a kid and i had a fever my mom made me chicken soup. im not even 30. is this like a weird american thing where you overmedicate every minor issue?

    • @vxlcarxhitexts4472
      @vxlcarxhitexts4472 Před 11 měsíci +6

      You worded this exactly like my AP Biology teacher.

    • @crystalh450
      @crystalh450 Před 11 měsíci +18

      ​@@TheSuperappelflapno, but some random people are more neurotic than others.

    • @ashleysmith5001
      @ashleysmith5001 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@crystalh450 I agree there are a lot of parents and adults who immediately turn to Tylenol, and go to the doctor and get antibiotics or sometimes have some left over and take them.

  • @jiaswan22
    @jiaswan22 Před 11 měsíci +389

    I had a doctor insisting that I needed a pelvic exam for birth control. I needed birth control for pmdd symptoms (I was nearly suicidal once a month), and was not sexually active at all. Explained all of this and asked her what she was looking for, she brushed me off and said she had to do it anyway. I persuaded her to give the prescription then, but she said she wouldn’t refill the prescription again without a pelvic. I sought a new doctor who told me the first doctor’s behavior was not good ir appropriate.

    • @bunhelsingslegacy3549
      @bunhelsingslegacy3549 Před 11 měsíci +45

      That was standard when I was a teenager and not yet sexually active, and thanks to my doctor at the time, I have medical trauma about pelvic exams.

    • @Charlie-ib2ef
      @Charlie-ib2ef Před 11 měsíci +38

      exactly what happened to me (i live in germany). The most hilarious thing that the doctor said to me (a 15 year old) was: „Are you sexuell activ?“ Isaid no. Her answer was: „Really??? Not at all???“

    • @joshbull623
      @joshbull623 Před 11 měsíci +6

      I am not in any way arguing that you were not in the right. But in the last two decades especially, reproductive coercion and abuse has spiked significantly. Also, usually more common in opioids, but no medication is off limits if it has value on the streets, people come in all the time demanding medication without evidence, examination, and follow up to use as a substance abuse issue or to sell for money and most medical professionals are advised and taught to look out for such behavior.
      Point is, I don't believe the doctor was being obstructive, just cautious and likely consistent with their medical facilities policies which she probably has no choice but to follow whether she agrees or not and only has a little leeway with it which she seemed to offer you. Dr. Mike said it himself, old practices are hard to phase out even with rapid new discovery, could just be a stupid policy or standard. I could be wrong, just going off what was said and what I have found to be the case in similar situations.

    • @yazdhenab.
      @yazdhenab. Před 11 měsíci +2

      I'm 38 and Ive pcos (discovered 15 years ago) and the first doctor I've seen for that send me to the ob/gy and she asked me that too, I've replied no, I'm not sexually active (and don't want it ever) and she didn't insist, only use the ultrasound and it works perfectly

    • @yazdhenab.
      @yazdhenab. Před 11 měsíci +17

      @@joshbull623 usually, birth control can't turn into dependance, so I don't even know why we need a prescription for that, it's not deadly if you took too much (i've often took two pills one day because i've forgot the last one) and never got sick or even delayed the next month

  • @KathiEOSp
    @KathiEOSp Před 6 měsíci +17

    1:56
    My dad told me recently that he was born very premature and, for the first however many weeks of his life, was kept completely isolated from the outside world. My dad’s also allergic to A LOT of things - he basically has a constant allergy attack - and he’s often wondered if the isolation he endured so young contributed to this.

  • @alricfremanosrs1509
    @alricfremanosrs1509 Před 8 měsíci +21

    This made me feel pretty good about my rather infrequent visits to the doctor. I have friends who think I avoid them too much, but I always just ask myself "is it pretty likely that they are just going to tell me to take it easy for a couple of days and maybe prescribe some high strength Tylenol?" And the answer is usually yes so I just do that myself.

    • @jonesnori
      @jonesnori Před 8 měsíci +4

      Yes! When I had a cold, people at work used to always ask me, "Did you go to the doctor?" I'm like, "What for? They can't do anything for a cold." (Though I think what they really meant was, "Why are you still staying home instead of being miserable at the office and infecting the rest of the staff?")

    • @MNkno
      @MNkno Před 4 měsíci

      I also visit my local doctor as infrequently as possible... but I track my temperature, food intake, etc. from the time I start to feel ill until just before I leave to go to the doctor's, taking a neat graph of the data and notes with me when I do visit. I'm not at my best, verbally, when I'm ill, and this can make the best use of everyone's time & intelligence.

    • @Psilomuscimol
      @Psilomuscimol Před 4 měsíci

      I never need the doctor anymore. Not even the psych doctor for a while. I been using kratom, which is addictive but my mental health has been great for years on it.

    • @Psilomuscimol
      @Psilomuscimol Před 4 měsíci

      It's good because it affects serotonin and also dopamine and norepinephrine* (I'm pretty sure)

    • @debraduhon958
      @debraduhon958 Před 5 dny

      Same. My doctor know if I make an appointment it's something that I can't fix by myself. Pulled muscle for a week, need a bit more than ibuprofen and epsom salt soaks, for example

  • @elizabethhazel2012
    @elizabethhazel2012 Před 11 měsíci +313

    I went to the ER after falling and hitting my head on ice (blacked out) and the ER doctor said I had pink eye because my eyes were red and messed up. I went to sleep on that concussion and tried to go to work the next day - the nurse I work with sent me to the emergency room. I ended up losing some vision in my eyes and was told by the optometrist if I hit my head again I could go blind. I should have never listened to the ER doctor (he didn’t even do an eye exam) and should have got a second opinion. Crazy how some doctors are so careless.

    • @chapenriley317
      @chapenriley317 Před 10 měsíci +19

      so many questions I have for you regarding this lol. either you didn’t tell the doc why you were really there, or the doc suffered from mental retardation…

    • @user-oy3ok5vr4q
      @user-oy3ok5vr4q Před 10 měsíci

      @@chapenriley317 emergency medicine doctors will a lot of the times work too many hours and see too many patients

    • @thegingerrunner9448
      @thegingerrunner9448 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@aleksadupuyWhat is "didth opinion "?

    • @tylarjackson7928
      @tylarjackson7928 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@thegingerrunner9448You know, didth, as in "I had a didth opinion"

    • @weasleman9603
      @weasleman9603 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@thegingerrunner9448d is next to f on the keyboard so he probably meant fifth

  • @bout3fiddy
    @bout3fiddy Před 11 měsíci +187

    I'm a pharm tech and we usually give the "just monitor and manage symptoms, don't treat the fever" advice. The exception was a guy who asked what his son, who had a "mild fever", should take. We asked him what the mild fever was.
    "Like, 104, 103. But he didn't start crying about it until a few hours ago "
    Our pharmacist told him to give his son a trip to the ER.

    • @deawinter
      @deawinter Před 11 měsíci +60

      LMAO. My parents had a “just sweat it out” approach, but they didn’t make a habit of monitoring my temperature. (They were the “just pray about it” brand of Christians.) Worked just fine my whole childhood, until one day I got sick enough that I was hallucinating, crying and barely conscious for almost a full day. My dad finally called his mom, a long-time nurse, and she told him in no uncertain terms that I needed to be hospitalized immediately or I could die.
      Not sure how to phrase the lesson here, except that if it seems like something is seriously wrong, it probably is.

    • @elliotgillum
      @elliotgillum Před 11 měsíci +15

      ​@@deawinterYou must of had a hell of a fever.

    • @deawinter
      @deawinter Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@elliotgillum is this a Christian joke. Because if so I approve

    • @fourcatsandagarden
      @fourcatsandagarden Před 11 měsíci +16

      geezus what does he think severe is if that's 'mild'

    • @Raptorknight17
      @Raptorknight17 Před 11 měsíci +7

      ​@@fourcatsandagardenthey have caught on fire

  • @keksentdecker
    @keksentdecker Před 8 měsíci +10

    Usually without fever reducers and painkillers a common cold lasts about five days for me, but recently I had to study for an exam and so I just threw in those babies multiple times a day to keep cramming and the cold lasted an additional two weeks longer, I also had the feeling that it was “deeper” than usual like not in the nose but more in the throat

  • @s.stinnett3972
    @s.stinnett3972 Před 2 měsíci +2

    As a C.O.A. (Certified Ophthalmic Assistant) I’m SO glad you covered the clearance topic! I’ve worked with so many Ophthalmologists that insist their patients get cardiac clearance…when anesthesia is drops or a block. Never made sense to me. 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @scottnufer3632
    @scottnufer3632 Před 11 měsíci +427

    As a Doctor of Physical Therapy...thank you. Just... Thank you. The knee surgery, the back aches, the non symptomatic flat foot...these are some of my major soap boxes

    • @mikacakes
      @mikacakes Před 11 měsíci +20

      As a patient who regularly needs physical therapy (due to hEDS) thank you! The amount of times patients like me get pushed towards unnecessary bs procedures or aids and end up in way more pain with less mobility is sad. Almost everyone Ive ever spoken to who got knee surgery or started using a mobility walker/scooter or wheel chair ended up worse off than those who adhere to the PT long term. Everyone wants a quick fix but there is no shortcut to strong muscles and healthy ligaments.

    • @michele0324
      @michele0324 Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@mikacakesThis 🦓 with hEDS agrees. :)

    • @adhdhamster
      @adhdhamster Před 11 měsíci +5

      Also a hEDS 🦓 here and I third this 😂

    • @psyche8187
      @psyche8187 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Tell me more about the knee surgery soapbox. Because I just busted my knee…

    • @papayafun7226
      @papayafun7226 Před 11 měsíci +10

      My knee was messed up after a car accident when I was young. I suffered from the pain for years and doctors had a negative outlook. I was nevertheless determined to let it heal without surgery...and what do you know...after obtaining my physical therapy exercises and slowly getting back into sports...I can walk 15 miles a day without a problem. I will only feel the pain when I walk for miles on sandals with no arch support, which is a small price to pay. Thank God I was stubborn.

  • @amyscott9381
    @amyscott9381 Před 10 měsíci +439

    My father was required to have a physical before cataract operation. His gp discovered he had an aortic aneurysm. It could have burst at any time and killed him instantly. The surgeon who repaired it said it was the biggest aneurysm he had ever seen. We are very grateful for this preoperative clearance that saved his life.

    • @nicko7238
      @nicko7238 Před 9 měsíci +51

      The GP should have ordered that test as a proactive measure anyway at the time of the yearly physical exam -assuming your father is relatively old, hence needed cataract surgery. It really has nothing to do with the actual surgery itself, it was just a lucky finding, so try to not to miss the point here.

    • @amyscott9381
      @amyscott9381 Před 9 měsíci +26

      It was a physical exam that detected it, followed by an ultrasound to confirm. So yes, it would have been detected at his next checkup. It was indeed a lucky thing.

    • @guciolini123
      @guciolini123 Před 9 měsíci +19

      And my neighbor was ordered by his eye doctor to do the preoperative exam. On the way home he almost got hit by a truck, but he managed to survive. There is no real connection to cataract, but it is a nice story. It is exactly es relevant as your is. If possible people over 35 years old (specially men) should be screened for aortic aneurysm and it still has nothing to do with the cataract surgery.

    • @allym7059
      @allym7059 Před 9 měsíci +12

      ​@@nicko7238Understand also that not all cataract patients are old. My family tends to require cataract surgery in their thirties, and it seems it's possible to have congenital ( born with) cataracts.

    • @nicko7238
      @nicko7238 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@allym7059 also understand how much rarer those cases are. no reason to be a smartass on a youtube comment smh

  • @linhasxoc4546
    @linhasxoc4546 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I remember back in like 2011 or 2012, reading that knee injuries in the NFL have gotten easier to recover from because doctors have learned not every injury requires surgery

  • @ChalfantMT
    @ChalfantMT Před 8 měsíci +6

    I’m glad you’re saying all this!
    Thank you! 🙏
    People need more medical literacy.

  • @chrislords_dpt
    @chrislords_dpt Před 11 měsíci +448

    As a physical therapist, I really appreciate you using your platform to call out these outdated practices… especially regarding meniscus tears and back pain!

  • @doctorandrew04
    @doctorandrew04 Před 11 měsíci +424

    I'm a physical therapist and I truly appreciate what you said about meniscus surgery and what to do about back pain. Too many people run to surgery to try to fix their problem and don't try PT, when in reality what these patients really need, is to strengthen their muscles, stretch, and learn how to move properly. Everyone could benefit from physical therapy.

    • @darladay4766
      @darladay4766 Před 11 měsíci +8

      If I could find a physical therapist with late hours, I probably wouldn't have a still swelling ankle and foot arthritis 10 years later. It's definitely not a quick fix (like surgery claims to be) and is time, energy, and cost (if you need to be working during those hours) consuming.
      Most people just have surgery and end up having more issues later on

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Před 11 měsíci +3

      I did have surgery for my wrist, but we tried less intervention first.
      That it was healing at the wrong angle was what prompted surgery.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Now PT is restricted to care paths only. So my neck pain from an old disc injury causing me a new 6week headache doesn't fit into anyone carepath for PT! This is new. So this is why people end up at chiropractors, I won't though since one caused a stroke last time I saw one.

    • @applepie6268
      @applepie6268 Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​@@joywebster2678Chiropractors are not physical therapists. In fact, Chiropracty is a Pseudoscience whereas, PT is an allied healthcare service. Moreover, chiropractors may not be licensed but a PT comes with a licence, as well as the required training and knowledge to know their patients and their conditions.

    • @whiteshadow7584
      @whiteshadow7584 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@applepie6268 pretty sure the person you're responding to knows that. They're just saying some people end up going to chiropractors because PT is not very accessible.

  • @denisegaylord382
    @denisegaylord382 Před 9 měsíci +18

    The study you cited for legal cramps specifically used magnesium oxide, a compound that we know is not easily absorbed by the body. Instead, try magnesium citrate, or other formulations that we know are absorbed. I personally combine magnesium breakthrough with a potassium citrate supplement. Works wonders.

    • @eileenhetherington3704
      @eileenhetherington3704 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Yes. This is what I use. No more leg cramps.

    • @jenniferhenn2327
      @jenniferhenn2327 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I use magnesium cream, it works fast. But I also need to up my hydration during the day.

    • @Psilomuscimol
      @Psilomuscimol Před 4 měsíci

      There's one kind that crosses the bbb well and is the only kind I think I'd buy. Forget what it's called. Think it starts with an f?

    • @drbell26
      @drbell26 Před 12 dny +1

      As a Chiropractor I agree with all he mentioned, however I have seen great benefit with patients with chronic cramping and spams. I came to comment when I saw your post. I have always recommended magnesium citrate, or glycinate for bowel issues.

  • @kingscroach
    @kingscroach Před 9 měsíci +2

    I always just bundled up when sick and sweat that sickness out, never been a fan of medications for things my body could handle fine.

  • @NaitomeIya
    @NaitomeIya Před 10 měsíci +333

    Lol the back pain thing reminds me of something that my aging dad realized. He noticed that there's a thing such as resting too much, because he used to have back pains in the first few years of his retirement. However, ever since he began to deliberately put himself in situations where he must walk, he no longer got back problems.

    • @guciolini123
      @guciolini123 Před 9 měsíci +20

      You can't rest if you are not tired and if you are tired rest is beneficial. Your father found out that being lazy is bad for health witch sounds much less surprising.

    • @tylarjackson7928
      @tylarjackson7928 Před 9 měsíci +14

      He probably has age-related arthritis. I've got arthritis (only 29, but I've got a disease that causes arthritis near age of puberty), and I've found that you have to alternate between rest and activity. Too much of either causes pain.

    • @beverlyarcher3744
      @beverlyarcher3744 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I only lay flat because my back comes from inflammation and sitting makes it worse so does standing I mean if I could sit or stand I would happily do it but it causes so much pain ik I really need to get it checked out but no insurance someone said it could be my discs

    • @beverlyarcher3744
      @beverlyarcher3744 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@tylarjackson7928I have arthritis in my left foot where I broke it and I'm 32 luckily for me it's one of the few pains I can easily walk off but my back is another story someone told me once it might be my discs I hurt it back when I was in school felt like something moved really should have gotten it checked out back then

    • @curtisss
      @curtisss Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@beverlyarcher3744if it's your disks, do as much stretching as is comfortable. What helped me was hanging from a pull up bar, don't push yourself too much though if course

  • @mattb1293
    @mattb1293 Před 11 měsíci +644

    0:23 Reducing fever
    1:57 Avoiding food allergens to prevent development of allergies
    2:48 Knee surgery
    3:29 Pelvic exam for birth control
    4:21 Rest for back pain
    5:21 Magnesium for leg cramps
    5:53 Antibiotics for pink eye
    7:12 Custom orthotics
    8:02 Excessive pre-op clearance
    9:32 Viral panel testing for upper respiratory infections

  • @cindytrimblr
    @cindytrimblr Před 8 měsíci +6

    This was very informative, thank you for sharing your opinions and research on these matters. A few days ago I had some kind of infection that was causing a mild fever but only at 100.5 so I decided not to take medication since my stomach is sensitive to NSAIDs anyway and I was hardly eating due to the nausea. Anyway I got extremely hot in the middle of the night and the next day I felt better. I think its important to treat each instance on a case by case basis like you said.

  • @Tomiply
    @Tomiply Před měsícem +4

    5:40 Huh, that is so interesting. I was struggling with leg cramps for ages. I did not understand why they happened, as I didn't do any sports or jogging. I started taking magnesium and the cramps went away. They haven't come back since.

    • @Eierscheisse
      @Eierscheisse Před 9 dny

      Because this study has been done with MgOxide which is not being absorbed easily by the intestines and not being used as mg supplement. It is known ti be used as a stool softener. You probably have used another form of Mg such as Mg Citrate or Mg Glycinate etc

  • @chikaegbuna
    @chikaegbuna Před 11 měsíci +235

    I'm Nigerian and it is unheard of to have a peanut/soy allergy in Nigeria. This is because by the time we are about six months old or even younger, it's already introduced into our diet. Soya and groundnuts are roasted, ground into powder and added to baby foods for nutrition.

    • @FirstLast-tp8bm
      @FirstLast-tp8bm Před 11 měsíci +23

      I was going to say the same thing. International aid workers in Africa do not worry about giving peanut based nutrition to children because people in Africa actually know how to feed children real food...

    • @adamtrout7711
      @adamtrout7711 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@FirstLast-tp8bm I mean... they dont

    • @lintunoo1394
      @lintunoo1394 Před 11 měsíci +6

      It's also not common in Myanmar.

    • @HenyMustikasari
      @HenyMustikasari Před 11 měsíci +22

      I am from Indonesia, peanuts (many kinda of them) is culture and parts of our food. Never heard of anyone with peanut allergy. Then I moved to Canada, and can’t pack lunch with any food containing peanuts for my daughter to bring to school. I think we are lucky to not have any allergy.

    • @aewtx
      @aewtx Před 11 měsíci +12

      That's not why it happens. I used to be able to eat soy products, then out of the blue one day I couldn't. A lot of allergies have sudden onsets too.

  • @wandervoltz
    @wandervoltz Před 11 měsíci +156

    Thanks for bringing up pelvic exams and birth control. I was prescribed birth control for my debilitating periods when I was 15, and they would not allow me the medication without a pelvic exam. I was not sexually active yet, and the entire experience was incredibly traumatic. That was 20 years ago. 😔

  • @bobbiemason7912
    @bobbiemason7912 Před měsícem +3

    As somebody with cancer one of my side effects is high temperatures, I take medication the second I think I have a higher temperature because it gets so high I will throw up and if I throw up I always end up in hospital because I get dehydrated.

    • @reniefuwa
      @reniefuwa Před měsícem

      Sounds like you're one of the exceptions (similar to those described by Doctor Mike)

  • @KaritaGR
    @KaritaGR Před měsícem +1

    I got a fever of 103.7 with a swollen kidney and 9mm kidney stone. I was dying. The chills body aches was so horrible. Tylenol and ibuprofen were my friends

  • @NCO1426
    @NCO1426 Před 11 měsíci +164

    I get sick a lot, and I’ve recently stopped taking so much medicine when I’m sick and I’ve noticed if you just simply drink water and sleep a lot you build a lot more immunity AND get better faster. Sometimes you need medicine but the more I’ve tried to just work through it naturally the more it’s helped me

    • @Imbatmn57
      @Imbatmn57 Před 11 měsíci +15

      Im terrified of overdosing on pain medication so i try not to take it unless i cant function.

    • @cristiep7377
      @cristiep7377 Před 11 měsíci +7

      ​@@Imbatmn57as long as you take it as directed you should be fine, just don't armchair pharmacist your dosing on your own, that's what gets you in trouble.

    • @ThomasDdm
      @ThomasDdm Před 11 měsíci +2

      Since I started eating a wide variety of foods and working out I don't get sick as often. Also when sick I used to not eat because I didn't have an appetite and sit a lot, I started eating by force and moving more and I get better sooner.

    • @Legendary_Starlight
      @Legendary_Starlight Před 11 měsíci +3

      lol whenever I get sick, I do NOTHING about it, and it goes away on its own :>

    • @hotpinkkt
      @hotpinkkt Před 11 měsíci +10

      Microbiologist/immunologist/virologist here: drinking water, and sleeping when you are sick WON'T make your immune system "better". You may get better faster sure but once you're sick, doesn't matter what you do, your immunity will be the same. When your body comes into contact with the antigen and you start showing symptoms your body is already making those memory T and B cells to help fight off the next time you get sick with that same pathogen. There's no such thing of "better" immunity. You either have immunity to a specific pathogen or you don't. Partial immunity happens when the pathogen is of the same species but different genus so you'll have SOME immunity if you have immunity to a similar pathogen but other than that, what you said is very false.

  • @izzyd4940
    @izzyd4940 Před 11 měsíci +205

    The OBGYN I saw when I was under 18 tried to convince me to do a pelvic exam for my birth control. She knew my history and why I couldn’t get one, and I wasn’t sexually active. She said once I turn 18 she’s not prescribing it to me anymore until I get a pelvic. Ended up leaving right before my 18th birthday and the next Dr had no problem prescribing it without one. And that was a children’s hospital! One of the best in the nation.

    • @emmaab888
      @emmaab888 Před 11 měsíci

      So messed up but anyway we were lied to about how "safe" and miraculous birth control is, I used to take it but I realised in my late teens that it can't possibly be good for me cause I'm just always skeptical about everything, 10 years later we're seeing a surge of gynae problems and even women coming off it and can't get pregnant naturally, there's no official research yet that I know of that actually shows the potential negative outcomes of being on birth control since tweens, or atleast any I've seen. I'm in no way telling anyone not to take birth control pills, it's just obvious though in my opinion that popping hormone meds for decades leads to an imbalance down the line. Your body needs to do its thing, and ceasing/altering any of the bodies' processes I believe will prove to be detrimental in the future just as all these things that were previously recommended turned out to be bullshit, simple as that.

    • @adamcorfman573
      @adamcorfman573 Před 11 měsíci +13

      I'm assuming the OBGYN who knew your history was most likely religiously biased and letting her bias interfere with her care for patients.

    • @downhomesunset
      @downhomesunset Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@adamcorfman573I have that problem. It’s been 12 years since I finally escaped my physically, mentally, sexually abusive husband. I have never gone on a date since and have no desire to. But my catholic dr won’t prescribe birth control! I have to see another dr in the clinic for it!
      He’s also suggested that a prayer group would help with my chronic pain condition!

    • @hdmaad
      @hdmaad Před 11 měsíci +7

      That's so sad to see that no matter the country, many women and girls end up being raped during their gynecology consultation, either with unwanted pelvic exam or vaginal exam. All of that 'for the sake of the patient' BS. If there are parent reading, one advice : never let your child alone during a obgyn consultation, better safe than sorry

    • @mushu_beardie2556
      @mushu_beardie2556 Před 11 měsíci +3

      I'm 20, I've been on birth control since I was 16, not because I was sexually active, but to keep my PMDD (like PMS, but more severe and starts a week earlier) under control. I've never had a pelvic exam. The fact that your OBGYN said you would need one for birth control knowing you couldn't get one is insane.
      Edit: apparently the recommendation is to start pelvic exams is at age 21, although the American College of Physicians disagrees that they are even necessary because they can do more harm than good and aren't even good at detecting cancer. Although most organizations recommend PAP smears every 3-5 years starting at age 21 so they can catch cervical cancer early.

  • @ThisIsMyYoutubeName1
    @ThisIsMyYoutubeName1 Před měsícem +1

    I don’t treat a temperature until it reaches 103. I brought my daughter to the acute care facility to see why she was sick and I was told I was I would be charged for not reducing a temperature of 100.6. My kids rarely get sick and when they do, I allow the fever to do it’s job and they are typically fine the next day

  • @live.earthy
    @live.earthy Před 7 měsíci +1

    this is pure gold and so much value... thanks for making this!

  • @OrdinaryEXP
    @OrdinaryEXP Před 11 měsíci +243

    I was an undergraduate in biology; once I learnt that high body temperature makes immune system works more effectively, I let myself sweat overnight when I get a fever (sometimes with the help of a blanket), and it has been years since I adopted this strategy. Now I feel vindicated.😎

    • @nefertitimontoya
      @nefertitimontoya Před 11 měsíci +3

      Oh wait is this why people get more sick in the cold? Or is that unrelated/not a thing?

    • @Broockle
      @Broockle Před 11 měsíci +12

      Baffles me how this isn't common knowledge in some places 😨

    • @electrowave114
      @electrowave114 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@nefertitimontoya If you get hypothermic (mild hypothermia is when shivering sets in, moderate hypothermia is when the shivering stops and confusion sets in), then that can weaken the immune system.
      But usually, people get more sick in "flu season" and the like because of the fluctuating temperatures, rather than the cold on its own - if your body is constantly exposed to temperature ups and downs, it isn't being given enough time to adjust to one or the other.
      In short, your immune system is at its best when you're at a good core temperature and the temperatures you expose yourself to are consistent ones, instead of constantly changing.

    • @tic857
      @tic857 Před 11 měsíci +14

      Same I remember reading it and I actually had went to school with a bad cold, twas a Friday. Went home threw all my blankets onto my bed climbed into that nest and stayed there for the weekend. Its worked every time I have been sick. The one time I was really sick with infection I had to be hospitalize and I was freezing the entire time and the docs and nurses were like "Not improving" and I'm just laying there, "can I please put on a sweatshirt or pants, I'm so cold how am I suppose to fight an infection when all my energy is going to shivering???????? I also need warm drinks" Dont know who the doc was, but it was a younger one and he was like "....good point, give more blankets and what kind of warm drink?" "Just hot water like you get from the cafe." I had never been so thankful in my life.

    • @michele0324
      @michele0324 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@Broockle I'd genuinely like to know why you think this is common knowledge. Where do people learn this and at what age?

  • @Apoplectic_Spock
    @Apoplectic_Spock Před 11 měsíci +199

    I've always suspected fevers need to be left alone to play out unless they become genuinely life-threatening. Thanks for the confirmation!

    • @panda4247
      @panda4247 Před 11 měsíci +13

      yep. hot tea, lot of sleep, and get better in a some two days or so.

    • @Ironica82
      @Ironica82 Před 11 měsíci +9

      I have heard that unless it gets up around 102, you just make yourself comfy and let it burn it off. I learned quite early that for flu and colds (basically, common RNA viruses), the meds dont fight the illness but just reduces the side effects of said illness.

    • @alyssazuerchertritch5285
      @alyssazuerchertritch5285 Před 11 měsíci +6

      Same! I always wondered why we tried to stop the natural healing process when the fever isn’t out of control

    • @katscratchfever3506
      @katscratchfever3506 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Ironica82even at 102, it’s relatively harmless! Tho I will say that most are pretty uncomfortable by this point so treating the discomfort (which will also lower the fever) is recommended.

    • @watersk2013
      @watersk2013 Před 10 měsíci

      Same. I don't feel feverish often. If I do feel feverish, I climb in bed and sleep for hours on end. I wake up drenched in sweat wondering what year it is, but I get rid of the fever naturally. :)

  • @PeterDB90
    @PeterDB90 Před měsícem +1

    As soon as I learned that fever is not just a response but a tool my body uses to fight off illnesses, I stopped reducing fever. I still watch it in case it climbs too high (like 104, 105 or something) and only then try to reduce it, otherwise I just get under thick blankets (because I feel so cold when I have fever) and I "sweat it out". Normally one day/night of high fever like that, then I get something to eat and drink and I feel loads better - if not completely well, then at least well enough to function until I'm completely well.

  • @benjaminbaumgardner7620
    @benjaminbaumgardner7620 Před 4 měsíci

    Mike as a doctor of PT I appreciate your MSK approach greatly. Wish more MDs were up to date like you

  • @mrs.williams6758
    @mrs.williams6758 Před 11 měsíci +760

    On the fever topic, my dad lost most of his hearing from a high fever as a child. Nerve damage in his ears. So I always take a fever seriously. My son was prone to high fevers as a kid, 105+. I explained the family history to one of his doctors and he said he had never heard of that, and was dismissive about it.
    At the end of the day, know your family's medical history and use your best judgment.

    • @totallyfrozen
      @totallyfrozen Před 11 měsíci +269

      Yes, but you’ll also notice the doctor in this video spoke of low-grade fevers (approx. 100°). He also mentioned that high fevers can be dangerous. The point is that all fevers are not equal. Tough out a low-grade, but if you get to the 102+ take it seriously.

    • @thomasallen531
      @thomasallen531 Před 11 měsíci +74

      Usually at my household we let fevers run their course if it stays below 101.5 once it gets close to or exceeds 102 we start fever reducers.

    • @siggyincr7447
      @siggyincr7447 Před 11 měsíci +39

      My mom used to just keep an eye on whether or not we could keep a normal conversation going. If we started getting loopy it was time to lower the fever. Seemed to work well for us but of course that's just anecdotal. As an adult, I've found that if I get a slight fever I will get better faster if I bundle up and sweat it out, i.e. keep my fever elevated.

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 Před 11 měsíci +29

      yeah if ur fever hits 103, you seriously shold consider some cooling.

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@siggyincr7447 Me too, its how I beat covid in 2020 as a 4o something smoker with zero medical intervention.
      It was hell.

  • @morganbertolino
    @morganbertolino Před 11 měsíci +259

    I had pretty severe case of the flu on study abroad in Italy and another girl in my apartment got conjunctivitis and consistently blamed me for giving it to her because I “wasn’t washing the doorhandles” and everything I touched. No matter how much I explained that wasn’t possible, she still HATED me for “giving” her an eye infection. Like my passion was infectious diseases, and I was the ONLY science major on this trip with art and history majors and they all kept telling me I was wrong about how diseases are transferred. Absolutely never again will I entertain that bs. I had a fever so bad I was hallucinating and got lost in Venice crying my eyes out because I had no idea where I was and had NO friends because they all thought I was making them sick. Will never trust anyone like that again

    • @anadd6195
      @anadd6195 Před 9 měsíci +17

      OMG that is insane. I am so sorry you went through that!

    • @Gireza64
      @Gireza64 Před 9 měsíci

      What do you mean ? You can give people the flu. Ok for the eye infection but you could have made them sick by giving them the flu. Anyway it's not great to leave someone alone in the street if they are sick. Not nice friends indeed.

    • @lvcifxr
      @lvcifxr Před 9 měsíci +6

      That's such bs, I hope you're doing well now

    • @justjoe1071
      @justjoe1071 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Sounds like a wicked movie.

    • @ShoaibAsghar
      @ShoaibAsghar Před 8 měsíci +5

      hope you ditched those friends, and people constantly tell them "what you think is art, isnt art".

  • @bobbihancock5012
    @bobbihancock5012 Před měsícem +1

    Dr. Mike , I would love to ask a couple of basic questions because you seem like you are honest. But I won’t because that is not what your channel is for. I will say you have answered some of my other questions with your videos So Thank You! For providing that public service

  • @Nu_Merick
    @Nu_Merick Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very insightful, I subbed!

  • @user-px9zy2pw5z
    @user-px9zy2pw5z Před 11 měsíci +247

    To add onto the fever one I think that it is more than just being uncomfortable. Society has been pushing us through idea of no days off, so taking the meds might decrease the feeling so you can work (even though you are infecting everyone else).

    • @v3ru586
      @v3ru586 Před 11 měsíci +36

      Growing up, fewer was the only symptom that couldn't be dismissed. Pain, dizziness etc, I'm always told to srop pretending, but when a thermometer shows 38 °C, it got accepted.
      As a result, fewer is the only symptom the broken, emotional part of my brain can accept as definitely real.

    • @user-px9zy2pw5z
      @user-px9zy2pw5z Před 11 měsíci +24

      @@v3ru586 which is really problematic to us and everyone around us. Plus even if In had a fever my mom would whoop me into next week if I missed school. I think the only time I missed school was when there was no school.

    • @isabellatheresemateo3961
      @isabellatheresemateo3961 Před 11 měsíci +30

      Was just looking for this comment on fever meds... so true that most people take it so they can keep up with their demands and tasks because they cant afford to miss work/school and that they haven't got any beneficial rest due to those demands; hence supplement with meds, to which prolongs recovery :

    • @Cmyers16
      @Cmyers16 Před 11 měsíci +2

      The only time I’ve ever missed work for a fever was during COVID due to work protocol. And I’m not saying going to work sick is good- but you’re not necessarily infecting anyone unless it’s a contagious issue. I’m not making out or sharing bodily fluids with my co workers. Plus going to work usually distracts me from how gross I feel versus sitting at home miserable. But I don’t take fever reducing medications I just let my body sweat it out.

    • @jennyh4025
      @jennyh4025 Před 11 měsíci +26

      Reading this, I am so glad I live in Germany, can have pretty much unlimited paid sick days (with doctors note) and my boss tells me to stay at home and not infect the rest of the staff whenever I have a cold or any other infectious disease.

  • @bradbywater2907
    @bradbywater2907 Před 11 měsíci +367

    From an eye doctor, I’d like to thank Dr. Mike for speaking the truth about pink eye and antibiotics. I can’t count the number of times I’ve had patients come in after going to urgent care and been given antibiotics for pink eye when the problem is NOT bacterial! Most cases of conjunctivitis are viral, allergic, or inflammatory. Many cases aren’t even conjunctivitis at all, but really other inflammatory conditions such as iritis, keratitis, or dry eye syndrome. When anything happens to the eye, it gets red and inflamed. This does not mean it’s pink eye (conjunctivitis). Go see an eye doctor and get a proper diagnosis and treatment, and stop the spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Please!

    • @Shtikface
      @Shtikface Před 11 měsíci +5

      lol usually i just wash my eyes with water and hope it will be gone the next day

    • @user-sj3yv7hj2n
      @user-sj3yv7hj2n Před 11 měsíci

      Very interesting noticed

    • @Spencer-wc6ew
      @Spencer-wc6ew Před 11 měsíci +2

      I think it would be more ethical to just give people sugar pills in these cases.
      At least then you're giving them placebos with no side affects instead of placebos with potentially long lasting side affects.

    • @WriterOnTheEdge
      @WriterOnTheEdge Před 11 měsíci +1

      I didn’t even know there were such things as antibiotics for conjunctivitis. I usually flush my eyes with saltwater or use allergy eye drops to stop the itch.

    • @julieannanderson2228
      @julieannanderson2228 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @writerontheedge7322 Yes there is. I've had pink eye twice. Once as a child and once as an adult (was working with three year olds). The doctor both times gave eyedrops to probably get rid of it before I spread it furthur

  • @AestheticWaif
    @AestheticWaif Před 6 měsíci

    Welcome back Dr Mike! This video has your inherent energy; awesome to see!

  • @datmanydocris
    @datmanydocris Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have never reduced my fever when i get sick. I have always wrapped myself up in a blanket and try to keep myself warm as possible and this seemingly has always led to me getting better much quicker than my family who don't do the same.

  • @kw7931
    @kw7931 Před 10 měsíci +106

    I actually thought that I had pink eye in middle school because my eye was so itchy and it was swelling up. My mom took me to the hospital to get it checked out. We said we thought that it was pink eye and told them my symptoms. They immediately prescribed me eye drops to treat it without doing actual examining of my eye under a light or anything(it was dark in the room they had me in). I was using the eye drops as suggested but to my dismay my eye actually got WORSE!! It almost completely closed up and it was so itchy I would cry constantly. So we went back to the doctor and told them what was happening…….for them to finally examine my eye and tell me that I never actually had pink eye in the first place, that it was a bad eczema flare up around my eye, and I was actually allergic to the eye drops…….

  • @tiarabrown9291
    @tiarabrown9291 Před 11 měsíci +152

    Maybe others have mentioned this, but the reason people lower their fever with meds is probably because they have to keep it moving (go to work) and/or keep taking care of kids (who may also be sick), and it just helps you to have the energy to do so. I'm guilty of it myself (though I rarely get fevers), but I think a lot of people use it to cope with the fact that they can't take time off.

    • @martinajurickova5750
      @martinajurickova5750 Před 11 měsíci +19

      Also, with small kids it is very dangerous because it can skyrocket very quickly and may cause seizures which most parents are unable / uneducated to handle.

    • @llamasugar5478
      @llamasugar5478 Před 11 měsíci +33

      Another reason: most schools have a policy that says students with a fever over ___F (it’s not the same everywhere) have to stay home until they’re below that temp for 24 hours.
      If I had a dollar for every time a kid was dosed with Tylenol, then sent to school only to have their fever return, I’d have enough to buy the supplies our classroom needs.

    • @tiarabrown9291
      @tiarabrown9291 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@martinajurickova5750 My kids haven't ever had a febrile seizure, but I think it would terrify me if it happened.

    • @tiarabrown9291
      @tiarabrown9291 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @llamasugar5478 That is very true. I think it is 100.9 or something like that for my daycare. It becomes a real pain when the kid seems fine and is acting normal, but their fever remains. It just turns into a nightmare for parents. I have a ton of flexibility in the summer (as a teacher), but during the school year (when kids actually get sick because it's colder), that flexibility is not there.

    • @catherinespark
      @catherinespark Před 11 měsíci +2

      Technically, that's top-down society being structured around a blanket obligation on people to abuse the intended purpose of antipyretic drugs.

  • @jasonhawkins2717
    @jasonhawkins2717 Před 4 měsíci

    Yes! thank you for setting the record straight on these, especially the fever one

  • @Manny_126
    @Manny_126 Před měsícem +1

    I remember the first time I got the flu and they told me to not wear my jacket so my fever would go down. It's one of the reasons for why I don't want to go to the hospital cause it's cold and it pisses me off.

  • @MrMighty147
    @MrMighty147 Před 11 měsíci +74

    As a physiotherapist: Yes just laying down when you have injured yourself isn't a good solution, but don't just ignore the pain and "work through it". A good physiotherapist will guide you on how to increase your mobility and resilience safely.

  • @kendrabeck3022
    @kendrabeck3022 Před 11 měsíci +65

    I have a bad back and the amount of times I've been told to just rest is unreal. I listened to the doctors advice and I would always feel stiff and in even more pain. I've now just been exercising and doing exercises specially for back pain and my back pain now is almost non-existent

  • @kamo7293
    @kamo7293 Před 19 dny

    a few years ago, when I was visiting my late grandmother after she was sent to the hospital after a stroke, I saw signs in the elderly ward that said things like "don't bed rest" and "if you can, try to move around" which was good
    my family comes from a country that, until very recently, had doctors prescribing full bed rest for everything. and my parents have seen through their lifetime how this has negatively affected their siblings, cousins, and elder relatives. these days they have it less but in remote areas this thinking is still there.

  • @MetalManiak93
    @MetalManiak93 Před 13 dny

    This was pretty helpful. Thanks Mike

  • @orphious885
    @orphious885 Před 10 měsíci +469

    I'm glad that you qualified "not reducing fevers" to those of 100.5°F or 101°F. I'd heard that sustained fevers of 103°F can cause brain damage. Heat is also indicative of swelling, and swelling inside the cranium is never a good thing.

    • @DavidD03820
      @DavidD03820 Před 9 měsíci +54

      This Friday I was sent to Emergency by ambulance and found out I had 39.7°C. I couldn't even stand up, I was confused but I knew I needed an ambulance. Yes I am glad he specified a set temp, as 39.7°C is 103.5°F and requires meds immediately to lower your temperature. (the visit wasn't billed because I live in Canada but I pay over 50% taxes by the time it's all said and done)

    • @Drmikaeru
      @Drmikaeru Před 9 měsíci

      @@DavidD03820103.5 is getting up there. Proteins don’t start denaturing until 105 IIRC. so 103 is usually a safe temp. The body is just going hard at the virus. I think getting medical advice once you hit 103 is a good idea across the board tho. 😊

    • @MrStarwulf
      @MrStarwulf Před 9 měsíci +22

      I once had a fever that topped at 104 degres F before it broke and I was done with it. sure it was uncomfortable but well worth it as I avoided all chemicals and allowed my body to fight off the virus on its own. sure i know that's a high temperature but I didn't over react, i wasn't affraid to allow my body to what it needed to bring me back to homeostasis. if you haven't free of chemical medicine for years this will not work for you. I encouraged the fever by bundling up in bed and when I did wake up i drank only water. i was cured by lack of food and a temperature not enjoyed by viruses. today, years later, viruses I encounter don't stand a chance and my body wipes them out quickly without making me sick, 24-48 hours.
      we have the worst healthcare in the world becuse doctors know less than doctors in the 70s and before. today it is all about chemicals. it use to be about letting the body heal itself.

    • @kristianfagerstrom7011
      @kristianfagerstrom7011 Před 9 měsíci +36

      In Sweden we usually say that anything below 40/104 isn't worth getting worried over, but at that benchmark, contact a hospital/medical clinic

    • @LlyleHunter
      @LlyleHunter Před 9 měsíci +7

      In the US we say 102* is when to start lowering

  • @S0FIATH3CL0WN
    @S0FIATH3CL0WN Před 11 měsíci +144

    I’m glad doctors are able to admit some practices could be better

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis376 Před 3 měsíci

    A lot of this hit my experiences. For example, I have some old injuries to my knees and ankles, but I refuse to stop moving (despite the fact that I'm currently sitting at my desk at home). I have a physical job, and the more I move, the better I feel. I also get leg cramps often. I don't take any supplements to decrease it. My doctor suggested that I drink more water to make sure my muscles are hydrated, almost eliminating sodas, and reducing alcohol intake. That has had a pretty good outcome for me, and has also reduced the symptoms of neuropathy.

  • @user-HellcatHemi
    @user-HellcatHemi Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for these much needed video's especially since I have Spinal Stenosis & Narcolepsy w Cataplexy becoming fully disabled last yr before my 45th Bday & feel 5:17 he's completely rght about this & my pain is centered in BOTH calves that hurt more in bed, can't stand or sit in the same place & it's been a struggle finding a happy medium.

  • @Ellie-jl3vk
    @Ellie-jl3vk Před 11 měsíci +160

    I was so fortunate that my first OBGYN provider was a nurse practitioner who followed modern medicine. When I went for birth control she said an exam isn't necessary unless I wanted STD testing or had a specific concern like pain or unexpected bleeding - and this was 10 years ago! I felt so safe and comfortable going to her. Meanwhile my friends' doctor required an exam to get BC pills, she was petrified and almost backed out of it. It seems like a lot of providers withhold your BC so you'll be forced to get an exam.

    • @ghostratsarah
      @ghostratsarah Před 11 měsíci +18

      I asked a pediatrician to give me birth control for PMS symptoms (I was 15, not diagnosed), and while he didn't believe that was my only goal, he handed me the prescription within seconds. He probably would have given me a thumbs up if it were appropriate. Got a very 'go spread your wings, blossoming young woman' vibe. He was an amazing doctor. Saved my life a few times, when no one else would listen to me, even though he wasn't my primary. Literally once had to call me an ambulance from the clinic.

    • @cour2knee
      @cour2knee Před 11 měsíci +1

      There are serious conditions and things Docs need to look for that birth control could exasperate.

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@cour2kneeand are these things that a patient would not notice or otherwise need an exam to identify?
      My guess is that it’s mostly about padding billing with the charge for the exam because American medical payment systems are ridiculous and doctors are a business.

    • @cour2knee
      @cour2knee Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@Justanotherconsumer Yes padding a bill is a very real thing but cervical cancer causing HPV, fibroids, growths, and some infections have NO symptoms.
      Birth control can worsen infections, encourage growth development and a so much more.
      We have been lead to believe birth control is basically harmless/ has little to no side affects when this couldn’t be further from the truth!

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Před 11 měsíci

      @@cour2knee seems like these are things that should be screened for anyway on a schedule determined by their own importance rather than using birth control as an excuse to justify screening.
      Can you point to specific research that identifies a causal link between worse outcomes and (presumably hormonal specifically) birth control from a non-hack source?
      Obviously there are political groups with a vested interest in pushing false narratives about brith control so a certain cynicism is warranted. It’s a topic just generally where the cultural issues make practicing medicine harder.

  • @somerandomparrot5101
    @somerandomparrot5101 Před 9 měsíci +159

    When I got covid, I got the chills and a fever, so I stayed under blankets most of the first day and tolerated the heat as long as i could, and soon after, I started feeling somewhat better until the fever went away
    the immune response worked

    • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
      @marshallsweatherhiking1820 Před 8 měsíci +6

      I think fever itself is the most uncomfortable when its going up. That’s when the chills and pains are at their worst. If you feel hot your temperature is likely already going down. It makes sense to speed the process by getting warm intentionally.
      When I’m above 101.5 though I start to toss and turn really bad and feel restless and its hard to put up with that for more than a few hours at night. I don’t know if sacrificing good sleep for more than 24 hours straight is always beneficial.

    • @somerandomparrot5101
      @somerandomparrot5101 Před 8 měsíci

      @marshallsweatherhiking1820 In my case, I stayed in bed during most of the day, and by the time it was night, the chills had gone away.

    • @flamee23312
      @flamee23312 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@marshallsweatherhiking1820For me by far the absolute WORST part about being sick or having a fever are the fever dreams. I can deal with the uncomfort of being extremely hot because I can just sleep it off or lay in bed and just watch movies all day. But when I sleep and in my dreams I feel like I’m being thrown around like a basketball it is by far the WORST part of being sick.

    • @ariellev9185
      @ariellev9185 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I got Covid recently and had a fever of 104. I wanted to stay warm so bad but it’s incredibly dangerous when it’s that high 😭 it also lasted several days. So bad.

    • @MangindDerous
      @MangindDerous Před 3 měsíci

      I live in Australia and unless my temp gets to 39-40C/102-104F I don't even bother going to my GP, I just wrap myself up in blankets and clothes, turn the heater on, have a couple of 1-2L water bottles within reach and let my body and my immune system do its job and i'll deal with the temporary uncomfortable state it needs to be in, now on the small number of occasions i've hit 41C/105.8F or higher I've always gone straight to Emergency because that's getting too high but lower than that let your immune system do its job.

  • @daniellemeeks3862
    @daniellemeeks3862 Před měsícem +5

    The reason why they do a pelvic exam is because they are looking for cancer. Hormonal based contraception can make those cancers worse. Thoughts?

    • @buttermepancake3613
      @buttermepancake3613 Před měsícem +1

      Yes they can however, to do one for initially getting on contraceptives is invasive and unnecessary unless the person expressed a concern or have a family history of cervical or ovarian cancer.

  • @scrubs4everr
    @scrubs4everr Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for spreading truth!!

  • @SamLee-tm6jn
    @SamLee-tm6jn Před 11 měsíci +67

    As a Physical Therapist, I greatly appreciated the info and shoutouts this vid. People are usually amazed how much progress they can have with PT for a huge variety of issues. It also helps weed out those individuals who truly are good candidates for surgery. Plus REGAEDLESS, doing PT in anticipation of a surgery has been shown to speed up recovery times after the surgery.

    • @TheWawa85
      @TheWawa85 Před 11 měsíci +1

      100% agree. I’m a Massage and Lymphoedema Therapist and advocate for my clients to do Physiotherapy when they have an injury or surgery.
      Previously I was a Hospital Social Worker and I remember when I first started in that industry TKR patients would spend the first few days flat on their back after surgery and now they are out of bed walking around either the day of their surgery or the morning after and have much better recoveries and a quicker recovery time. Likewise with hip replacements and hip fractures.

  • @autumnatic
    @autumnatic Před 11 měsíci +660

    As a teen and young woman in the Bible Belt, they always held birth control hostage behind pelvic exams. The medication was recommended to me before I was sexually active to regulate hormone problems, but those exams can be so scary, uncomfortable, and painful at times. I was raised believing that's not a place for strangers I've never met before to enter unless I really want them to, only for a special partner I love and trust my life with. So I found it extremely violating, and would sob profusely and shake through it every time. I tried not to because my rational brain knew they're professionals who mean me no harm, but I wasn't mentally ready for that. A couple of times they even asked if I'd been assaulted by someone else based on my reaction, but it was just them doing the procedure that made me feel that way. Imagine that... girls would rather not be penetrated with a cold metal object in a cold room by a cold stranger, under blinding lights, in a humiliating position wearing a humiliating fragile paper vest UNLESS IT'S ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY.

    • @ksenia5199
      @ksenia5199 Před 11 měsíci

      If you decide to have kids, you’ll get over this quickly. Like, a dozen people will look at and stick fingers into your vagina.

    • @scholasticbookfair.
      @scholasticbookfair. Před 11 měsíci +14

      ​@@ksenia5199she's probably over child bearing age seeing as she said "as a teen and young woman" in past tense.

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 Před 11 měsíci +17

      Yeah that whole not having sex thing is just impossible. The original brith control free and available to all, no exam required.

    • @Serena-or7sl
      @Serena-or7sl Před 11 měsíci +108

      @@jhoughjr1 doesn't work to control HORMONE PROBLEMS. Read the post again.

    • @phueal
      @phueal Před 11 měsíci +76

      Can anyone here answer why these pelvic exams are supposedly necessary for prescribing birth control? I’m from outside the US, but I’ve never heard of anyone performing that kind of procedure just to issue a prescription.

  • @Spikeba11
    @Spikeba11 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I've asked doctors about the benifit of fever reducers before and they didn't have answers. I even pointed out that fevers were part of the body's natural defenses.

  • @EmergencyL0tion
    @EmergencyL0tion Před dnem

    0:47 I was giving Tylenol to a patient who had a fever and I stopped for a second and asked myself “if the bodies natural response is to raise the core temperature to cook off and kill bacteria why do we give Tylenol to lower the temperature” and then I was like nah there must be a good reason and continued on with life. I’m glad you acknowledged that

  • @LauraTrauth
    @LauraTrauth Před 11 měsíci +31

    Back around 1996 or so I sprained an ankle and the doc prescribed tracing the alphabet with my foot right off the bat. Healed quickly. In 2019, tore (re-tore) a meniscus. Had OA in the knee as well. My ortho said he wasn't going to even think about operating because it had a as much chance of not helping as helping. Prescribed PT. I added weight loss to his prescription and lost about 1/2 my body weight. Now at nearly 60 yrs old, I run 10k a day and have done 1/2 marathons and will do my first 25k run next month. Aiming for my first marathon before I turn 61. Thank you Dr. Mike for disputing these out-of-date treatments!

    • @penultimania4295
      @penultimania4295 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Seriously stop. While movement and exercise is of course good for you, long distance running is not.

  • @amghinistar4582
    @amghinistar4582 Před 11 měsíci +208

    My mother got all kinds of criticism by the doctor and others in the 90s because she fed us peanut butter and other allergen foods as babies/toddlers. So glad she stuck to her gut, and fed us them anyways, think it really did help us not develop as many severe food allergies.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Před 11 měsíci +22

      Also, kids need to eat a little dirt and (their own!) boogers early on.
      If you never build a foundation of antibodies, you're going to have a miserable life, and your laundry list of allergies will limit what you can do and where you can eat.

    • @rabbit_scribe
      @rabbit_scribe Před 11 měsíci +13

      When I was growing up half the kids in the school cafeteria were eating PB&J for lunch. And I knew exactly one kid who had a food allergy. over my entire school career, from kindergarten through college.

    • @darladay4766
      @darladay4766 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Just like building an immune system early... but now I have celiacs and autoimmune

    • @KnightNave
      @KnightNave Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah. Had minor reactions to peanuts when fed it as a baby, but I played it safe and am close to being cleared.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Yeah but my mother made me eat fish and shellfish with the family as a small kid even though I'd vomit severely after eating it. She assumed I was being naughty so they made me have bologna when they ate seafood, I felt way better. Limited allergy testing back then. As an adult i became a RN and got tested, yes I am allergic to shellfish, and very sensitive to fish. How many vacations to the shore I spent with a baloney sandwich while they ate lobster and snails. Could have gotten me an occasional burger!

  • @NichHustler
    @NichHustler Před 8 měsíci +9

    The magnesium one is hard for me, I was having the nightly or more accurately stretching when waking up cramps, started taking magnesium tablets. It's been four months of no leg cramps since. Could be placebo or correlation but it's been helpful. It also reduced a different problem in my legs, I was having an issue where when I take off my socks after a day of work there was a huge indent where the socks were. Like I had little skinny ankles and stark line and then fat calves. That reduced massively after my first month of magnesium. Could all be correlation, I trust that what Dr Mike said is true. But here I am. I'm gonna stay on the mag pills for now.

    • @SDaulton
      @SDaulton Před 8 měsíci +3

      Agree

    • @iriswaldenburger2315
      @iriswaldenburger2315 Před 8 měsíci

      And I have had the opposite effect… took magnesium for YEARS and no improvement or change in the cramps… stopped taking magnesium and also no change

    • @NichHustler
      @NichHustler Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@iriswaldenburger2315 our bodies are so weird. They're all so similar and then so intricately different.

    • @Tomiply
      @Tomiply Před měsícem +1

      Same here, and I don't feel like placebo could work for years. Placebo usually only works in the "honeymoon" phase when you first start taking something, and maybe not even then. I also stopped having cramps when starting magnesium.

    • @Gommez7
      @Gommez7 Před měsícem

      The implications in the video that magnesium supplementation is "proven not to work" is misleading.
      Another commenter pointed out that the type of magnesium used in the study wasn't the best / most easily- absorbed form.
      Muscle cramps can happen due to low magnesium or imbalance of other electrolytes.
      There may be other causes as well.

  • @justinwalsman6355
    @justinwalsman6355 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think I can add to the meniscus trend. I tore my meniscus and my doctor said I can choose to have surgery or not. I didn’t get surgery. I instead wore a good knee brace for weeks and I was able to return to normal physical activities. Who knows if this will have long term effects but for now my knee is fine.

  • @My2kittiesCG
    @My2kittiesCG Před 11 měsíci +63

    When I was in high school I had an incredibly swollen lymph node and a really really sore throat. I was extremely tired, and had very similar symptoms to strep. Before testing me for strep, I was given amoxicillin. A day later, my entire body was covered in red spots like a bunch of small welts. Turns out all my tests came back and I had mono, and the amoxicillin prescribed caused the rash I got because if you have mono, amoxicillin will actually cause an awful reaction like what happened to me!

    • @manastalksessions
      @manastalksessions Před 11 měsíci +3

      Omg! Same EXACT THING HAPPENED TO MY SON!!!!!!!!!!

    • @manastalksessions
      @manastalksessions Před 11 měsíci +5

      I'm was beyond pissed! Because the Dr just said strep and he didn't even do a strep test. My sons entire body was covered and those marks last for months! Come to fond out when we called the Dr she says that's a reaction to the steroids for mono. This is what happens when mono is treated as strep. It will go away on its own! Are you kidding me?! A different Dr had to tell us this! Hospital initially gave him the amoxicilllian. I thought my baby was allergic to the meds turns out he was allergic to the treatment! He's had amoxi since then no issues.

    • @KattoTang
      @KattoTang Před 11 měsíci +8

      What the hell? The test for strep only takes like 10 minutes! Just test for it!

    • @misssissivoss
      @misssissivoss Před 11 měsíci +1

      I'm baffeld 😳
      I had a soar throat to the point I almost couldn't swallow. Get Amoxoclin and get a rash everywhere + I didn't help. My tonsils were covered in white like a winter wonderland because of a soar which had now place to spread additionally.

  • @ixchelssong
    @ixchelssong Před 11 měsíci +66

    I have MS, and for many people (including me) who have it, heat causes a lot of problems. In our case, reducing fever is very important. (This is an example of when to reduce a fever.) 🙃

    • @metro121482
      @metro121482 Před 10 měsíci +7

      Yes, there are always exceptions. Doctor Mike usually gives general advice, so if you have a condition where even a low fever can be harmful, then by all means, reduce away!

    • @ixchelssong
      @ixchelssong Před 10 měsíci +2

      @metro121482 Yes, I know. He even mentioned something about exceptions, if I remember correctly. 🙂

  • @happyhippoeaters4261
    @happyhippoeaters4261 Před 7 dny +1

    I always interpreted take it easy as simply not exerting myself as hard as I was, maybe taking a small break if it's bad enough, but generally I try to get moving quickly, resting as needed.
    Maybe it's just me though.

  • @sandyhenderson441
    @sandyhenderson441 Před 10 dny

    Thank you so much Dr. Mike!! I've been trying to stop routine fever destruction since ~1980 when I learned what fever actually does. But medical and nursing staff continue reflexively to destroy fevers which can be lifesaving in serious infections. As fewer antibiotics remain useful healthcare must learn how to maximise the body's own defences - and a fever increases all of these.
    I collect medicine/nursing textbooks published before 1945. Prior to 1860s, fever was welcomed as a sign the body was fighting back (true), and care was aimed at maximising comfort during the fever.
    From 1860s, salicylic acid and later acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) were on sale (UK), initially as analgesics, but the antipyretic effect was noticed in use. For the first time, humans could affect fever. The textbooks of 1860s+ now taught to "treat" fever with regular aspirin, tepid sponging (NEVER do this, it doesn't work & it's dangerous), fanning a patient, cold drinks,.
    So, when we couldn't affect fever, it was good to be hot, but as soon as we could treat it, fever became an undesirable change to be removed. If you feel a need to rant at "Big Pharma" then rant at those who push you to buy their fever reducing drugs, even though the benefits of fever are known & proven. But feverish people haven't spent their money on anti-fever drugs, profits will drop, so lets get those ads out...and they work.
    If you're feverish, don't take acetaminophen and/or ibuprofen, your fever is helping you and speeding up other defences e.g. white blood cell mobility and antibody production. There are few categories of sick people who wont benefit from having a fever, the large majority are safer being hot.

  • @redkingrauri3769
    @redkingrauri3769 Před 11 měsíci +40

    Funny story about back pain:
    At university I took a parkour course and I did a 10 foot jump that I landed badly on. I didn't notice it at first but my lower back gradually started getting worse and worse to the point I couldn't move. They sent me to the physical therapy students and they had me do what a mounted to isometric leg lifts and a quick stretch and suddenly I could touch my toes again. Felt like magic.

  • @thegoodfootdoctor
    @thegoodfootdoctor Před 11 měsíci +81

    I'm a Podiatrist and the insole argument was well put sir. I never over prescribe orthotics unless they are really required.

  • @sherrelynn5240
    @sherrelynn5240 Před 8 měsíci

    Great content 🎉very in and helpful

  • @big-gorram-hero5165
    @big-gorram-hero5165 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Hi Dr. Mike!! i work at a Opthmologist office that performs cataract surgery. just a heads up at least with us, its the anesthesiologist that requires the Clearance / EKG not our office. since we contract through the surgical center we have to acquire the testing for them to move forward with the procedure.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Před 11 měsíci +141

    We appreciate Dr Mike. He genuinely stays true to himself.

  • @_SweetJane_
    @_SweetJane_ Před 11 měsíci +36

    I understand why it's not always necessary to lower a fever, but personally I was actually recommended by a doctor to lower my fever but for a good reason: I sleepwalk whenever I go to bed with a fever. One time I sleepwalked into my bathroom and fainted and fell onto the floor. It was scary. But this is a very specific reason to lower a fever haha

    • @rebeccahicks2392
      @rebeccahicks2392 Před 11 měsíci +16

      yes, that's a perfect example of why, in the end, medical advice has to be individualized.

  • @talon24
    @talon24 Před 14 dny

    I quit taking fever reducers when sick like 20 years ago, never got a secondary infection again.

  • @skyelindsey687
    @skyelindsey687 Před 9 měsíci

    Last year after thanksgiving I got a viral respiratory infection that had me laid out all Black Friday weekend and then some. Only reason I knew what it was was because my brother had the exact same thing and had to get tested for his work to make sure it wasn’t Covid, also the at home Covid test was negative. Tried going into work BF and got all the way down there when I decided I was not gonna make it through my shift. Got back home and my fever was 103-104F. Funny thing is I felt way worse with the respiratory infection than I did when I got Covid in July that year.

  • @karenpolansky9097
    @karenpolansky9097 Před 11 měsíci +37

    When I learned in nursing school (back in the 80’s) how bacteria thrive in lower/normal body temperature, I stopped treating my family’s fevers, unless they were getting uncomfortably high. Glad to see you mention it here.

  • @Suki-Tawdry
    @Suki-Tawdry Před 11 měsíci +47

    Introducing allergens…my OBGYN and Immunologist both suggested the same thing. They also suggested being around pets (specifically dogs/cats).

  • @godloves9163
    @godloves9163 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Regarding a fever. I usually feel so unwell with the fever that I can’t stand it therefore I take something to reduce it. At a certain point it’s probably not the best to leave it go as you can be not hungry and feel like I need to eat but too sick to do so. Then reduce the fever eat and feel better afterwards.

  • @misscutie847
    @misscutie847 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks for this factual video.

  • @Emily-hd9sm
    @Emily-hd9sm Před 11 měsíci +59

    Thanks for acknowledging that "medical inertia" exists. It's important because I've seen people use this to market scams. Statements like "big medicine is outdated (in some ways true, as this video points out) so buy my supplements/course/etc (which is not evidence based at all 🙃)." So having medical professionals acknowledge this and get accurate information out to the public is soooo important!

  • @kaylee8315
    @kaylee8315 Před 11 měsíci +142

    My mother is an epidemiologist. Whenever I had a high fever due to the flu or something, she used to PILE blankets on me. I mean, she will not stop until I tell her that I'm not feeling cold anymore. For parents, please do this!! It makes the kid feel more comfortable and it actually helps the body fight whatever is going on because of the increase in high temperature. Win-win!

    • @adhdhamster
      @adhdhamster Před 11 měsíci +12

      My mother did this too and I LOVED it lol it was the only upside to being sick 😂 now weighted blankets exist which is amazing but I just loved all the weight. It was so comforting

    • @Lili_1992
      @Lili_1992 Před 11 měsíci +6

      What temperature should be lowered? 101 F (38 C) is fine, but my son was having 39.5 recently, I didn't risk to leave it like that

    • @rebeccacarter3016
      @rebeccacarter3016 Před 11 měsíci +6

      My whole family had the flu and my son spiked to 106. I threw the covers off to get the temp down (and, no, I couldn't take him to the ER because my whole family was sick and I couldn't drive like that!)

    • @VioletEmerald
      @VioletEmerald Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​​@Lily-gt7gr MayoClinic says for Adults, Call your health care provider if your temperature is 103 F (39.4 C) or higher. Children are at higher risk of fever induced seizures but idk the temperature point of that.

    • @Monika-mb6jh
      @Monika-mb6jh Před 11 měsíci +6

      My parents used to do this except it would be to the point where I’d be uncomfortably hot and they’re like no! You have to sweat it out to fight off your illness! 🤦‍♀️ I guess it makes sense, but not to the point that I’m super uncomfortably hot!

  • @buttermepancake3613
    @buttermepancake3613 Před měsícem +2

    I'm a transgender indivisual. I NEVER got an exam before being prescribed birth control.

  • @crazy_elise
    @crazy_elise Před 7 měsíci +5

    I was literally just today told by my doctor to take magnesium for my leg cramps. They are so bad that I can't walk for a few hours after that. If they are not for the lack of magnesium, then I have no idea how to convince my doctor to find some other cause for this and what it could even be.

    • @kindyesweakno
      @kindyesweakno Před 6 měsíci +3

      I tore my calf muscle and was prone to leg cramps afterwards. I could get one just walking off a curb when crossing the street. Magnesium glycinate, BCAA’s and foam rolling pretty much eliminated them to once in a blue moon. I also snack on bananas for the potassium.

    • @TeaAddict
      @TeaAddict Před 4 měsíci +1

      Double your hydration if you can x

    • @Tomiply
      @Tomiply Před měsícem +1

      It helped for my leg cramps. Went completely away after I started taking magnesium, and I kept having them for a long time too.