First Day of Infectious Disease

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  • čas přidán 12. 01. 2022

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @blw12987
    @blw12987 Před 2 lety +27832

    I work for an Infectious Disease doctor and since I’ve showed him this video, he had me play it for all his students as part of his “orientation “ 😂😂😂😂 he loves you!

  • @EchosTackyTiki
    @EchosTackyTiki Před rokem +4863

    You won't be breaking in to check for pets yourself, you'll be sending Chase, Cameron, and Foreman to do it for you.

    • @bumblebeekatie
      @bumblebeekatie Před rokem +155

      I was looking for this comment!

    • @gore0802
      @gore0802 Před 7 měsíci +236

      Especially Foreman, he just needs to ring up one of the homies!

    • @SKC75757
      @SKC75757 Před 7 měsíci +30

      was waiting for this one 😄

    • @dmf19
      @dmf19 Před 7 měsíci +18

      I LOVE THIS

    • @hayze_ablaze
      @hayze_ablaze Před 6 měsíci +4

      Can someone explain this joke for me? I live under a rock.

  • @jamiemiller7316
    @jamiemiller7316 Před 2 lety +3035

    My husband is in the hospital and thank God for the infectious disease doctor because he's THE ONLY doctor out of a dozen who actually listened to my husband and finally found out what was wrong with him. It was staph on his heart valve and it has to be replaced.

    • @carolynnalvarez
      @carolynnalvarez Před 8 měsíci +107

      Same exact thing is happening to me as we speak. They were the only doctors that listened to me and ran all the necessary tests and found the problem. ❤ hopefully your husband is recovering well

    • @cosmologicalturtle9528
      @cosmologicalturtle9528 Před 8 měsíci +95

      That’s the problem with most doctors. They don’t listen to or care about their patients, that’s why people routinely die from preventable causes.

    • @JhonIdrovo-the-human
      @JhonIdrovo-the-human Před 7 měsíci +41

      Yeah most doctor watch for the common cases and I'd you don't fit in those they dispatch you with painkillers

    • @itsmearia978
      @itsmearia978 Před 7 měsíci +5

      infective endocarditis

    • @rozygcf6611
      @rozygcf6611 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Does your husband use needles??? How the heck did he get staph endocarditis?

  • @ethanbullock2841
    @ethanbullock2841 Před rokem +1335

    I'm dying at all the House M.D. nods. It's so fitting for infectious medicine.

    • @asmerX100
      @asmerX100 Před rokem +72

      its because house is actually a board certified in infectious disease

    • @loeaglelo
      @loeaglelo Před 7 měsíci

      And also because House literally sends his people to break into his patients' homes to look for clues behind their diagnoses...which would never happen IRL lmao@@asmerX100

    • @novelreader1834
      @novelreader1834 Před 4 měsíci +4

      ​@@asmerX100 Certified is one thing, but tresspassing though...

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 2 měsíci

      ​​@@novelreader1834... which is what this short satirizes as well ... Because House is infectionist and he trespasses...🙄

    • @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus
      @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus Před měsícem

      @@novelreader1834 the door was open when I got there

  • @plaggscamembert7465
    @plaggscamembert7465 Před 2 lety +24914

    "My histories take so long, the cultures wait on ME to finish" the way this was said gave me chills 😂😂😂😂

  • @EricBliesener
    @EricBliesener Před 2 lety +5674

    The Apgar score is a quick way for doctors to evaluate the health of all newborns at 1 and 5 minutes after birth and in response to resuscitation. It was originally developed in 1952 by an anesthesiologist at Columbia University, Dr. Virginia Apgar, as way to address the need for a standardized way to evaluate infants shortly after birth.

    • @stephenturner9097
      @stephenturner9097 Před 2 lety +124

      Thanks, I was about to google that!

    • @MrKago1
      @MrKago1 Před 2 lety +35

      thanks for the info!

    • @SophieJackson1993
      @SophieJackson1993 Před 2 lety +230

      Then how did the 90 year old have an Apgar score before Apgar? I’m confused. 😂

    • @DES.REVER.DESIGNS
      @DES.REVER.DESIGNS Před rokem +370

      @@SophieJackson1993 r/woosh that's the joke. It should be impossible which is why it's so damn funny

    • @thetcaseaway4306
      @thetcaseaway4306 Před rokem +32

      @@DES.REVER.DESIGNS r/woosh. She got confused is the joke.

  • @jasminepadgett3883
    @jasminepadgett3883 Před 8 měsíci +712

    So true!! Have to be thorough on infectious disease. 😂 An ID attending told me me he had a pediatric patient that he couldn’t figure out. He kept asking the family if they had any pets at home. He asked them multiple times and they said no. He later discovered that they had a cat home. When he asked about the cat, they responded “Oh she’s not a pet. She’s family.” ☠️

    • @skribulz7
      @skribulz7 Před 6 měsíci +150

      This explains why my doctor asked me if I ever had an abortion after I just told him I had never been pregnant before. At first I was offended by such a stupid question but then I realized some of his other patients are probably idiots.

    • @Zeverinsen
      @Zeverinsen Před 3 měsíci +32

      ​@@skribulz7You'd be surprised what kind of stupid sh*t people say to you when you work with people... 💀

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 2 měsíci +16

      Oh ffs🤦 You would think adults will be less idiotic once their child's health is on the line but noooo....

    • @TheHearingDeaf2006
      @TheHearingDeaf2006 Před 26 dny

      @@skribulz7 as a medical assistant for Pm+R I can tell you that while we DON’T take history’s the same way, patients are just as stupid.
      Why do you ask me the same questions over and over again. Nothing changes. Proceeds to ask questions and then prove to them that their answers changed…..
      You don’t need my med list again, I gave it to you last time! Yeah well I still want you to be able to verify it. Next appointment scheduled as procedure. OH YEAH I forgot about that NEW blood thinner….. 🤦 🤦‍♀️ 🤦‍♂️

    • @teresamcmurrin8672
      @teresamcmurrin8672 Před 19 dny

      ​@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849Trouble is, they don't *know* they are idiotic. They think they are smart.

  • @tasiecabrera2491
    @tasiecabrera2491 Před rokem +271

    one time during my infectious disease rotation, i found myself asking "so you have chickens in your compound? how many are they? do they go inside the house? what are their names?" the last bit was me being half-asleep.

    • @anal3544
      @anal3544 Před 6 měsíci +58

      😂 what are their names lmfao. "That last question is for me, not the chart"

    • @grantmcinnes1176
      @grantmcinnes1176 Před 6 měsíci +65

      Legit question. Chickens with names will have a different physical relationship with the patient.

    • @flymoolahman2763
      @flymoolahman2763 Před 6 měsíci

    • @flymoolahman2763
      @flymoolahman2763 Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@grantmcinnes1176FUAK doctors are a different breed of human

    • @korbindallas4552
      @korbindallas4552 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Their names are Ok, Bok, and BaGOCKKKK

  • @johanedberg6114
    @johanedberg6114 Před 2 lety +18939

    "You won't ask if patients have pets at home, you'll be breaking in and checking for yourself" House M.D. reference? (;

  • @plaggscamembert7465
    @plaggscamembert7465 Před 2 lety +9247

    "Have you ever taken a history so thorough the patient filed a restraining order against you?"
    I died 💀🤣

  • @S_Carol
    @S_Carol Před rokem +673

    On the first appointment I had with the ID doctor, he spent over an hour just taking history. The next visits he still took at least 15min to just take the history since the last visit. I was also keeping symptom diaries (for fever, pain and anything I thought relevant). He had a whole folder on me by the time we figured out what I had. Once, he literally called me at 10pm because he was home revising it and suddenly remembered some disease he needed to check for. Never met such a dedicated doctor, but I think he ended up working himself to exhaustion a few years later.

    • @akaiappears
      @akaiappears Před 8 měsíci +55

      I hope he found balance.

    • @SioxGreyWolf
      @SioxGreyWolf Před 8 měsíci +31

      If I had a doctor that took such through notes on me future generations could theoretically break me down, and built back up a replicas of me that were either perfect or flawless. I would nominate him for any aware I could... and probably drop any potential law suits that might come from being that indepth.

    • @omerelhassan-ru6bc
      @omerelhassan-ru6bc Před 8 měsíci +17

      Support the doctors strikes! People like this need a pay raise

    • @davidgoodnow269
      @davidgoodnow269 Před 7 měsíci +17

      My Primary Care physician was like that; by three years in, I was more worried about her health than my own! She finally had to take a leave and get her health back, and she still works with the same degree of concern but shorter hours.
      I want her to vet all hiring and handle recruiting at my hospital!

    • @S_Carol
      @S_Carol Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@SioxGreyWolf Nah, I don't think that would work for a "flawless replica" 😂 That history held a lot more about my defects and damage than it did about the stuff that was fine.

  • @slc1161
    @slc1161 Před rokem +183

    This is so true. The most thorough ones are from the I.D. docs. They need to know things they've been exposed to, changes in activities, places they've been, and other items. Public Health relies on infectious disease to determine if there are things spreading in communities.

  • @hannahkim9895
    @hannahkim9895 Před 2 lety +1672

    I love reading ID notes as a RN. Found out about my patient's previous 3 lives and what jobs they held! 😂

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Před rokem +93

      Lmao as a radiographer i love getting requests from doctors who tell me in the justification for the request what they do for a living , whether they’re married, how many kids and pets and all of their medical history as if i need to know any of that to perform a chest xray. Seriously - once i got 3 paragraphs of this patient’s gynae history (and it was rather gruesome at that) and then “sudden onset chest pains, worse on exertion. Rule out pathology” lmao

  • @MichiganCrimeTime
    @MichiganCrimeTime Před 2 lety +577

    OMG! I will NEVER forget my rotation in ID. I seriously learned so much, how to be more compassionate, how much I needed to fight for my patients. When I finished I was so exhausted and empty, but had a profound respect for my patients.

    • @WoundedThrivers
      @WoundedThrivers Před rokem +25

      I do want to commend you! Some aren't taught this important lesson and the patient will not trust. Trust helps "cure" and disbelief will probably result in a letter from the Board. I say this "tongue in cheek", but listening is a skill and compassion is part of the treatment! Thanks and best wishes!

    • @BlahblahblahblahblahblahblahFU
      @BlahblahblahblahblahblahblahFU Před rokem +8

      You are so awesome! Healthcare should be a right not a business! And it healthcare workers like you that I admire! Thank you for your service!

    • @Julia4672
      @Julia4672 Před rokem +5

      So true. I love my ID docs so much that I made one of them my dad's PCP and another one my PCP. Had another take care of me in the hospital. And even the other day, I emailed one of them to ask a question about TB. One of many times over the years I had question about tough cases. Always approachable, compassionate, and generally awesome.

  • @rak4294
    @rak4294 Před 8 měsíci +72

    My dad is an ID specialist and this is EXACTLY him. He even corrects his students and interns wordings individually. They’re soooo passionate about histories!

    • @pjt3887
      @pjt3887 Před měsícem +1

      Has somebody with chronic illness battling to get a lupus diagnosis I can tell you it matters. I'm still fighting to get a bunch of erroneous incorrect medical information out of my medical file. They were put there by lazy people who didn't want to take 2 seconds to look at my situation.

  • @sarahb5464
    @sarahb5464 Před rokem +151

    I went on a first date with an ID fellow, and when I said my sister was a 7th grade teacher his response was "Yeah, like your grandpa, right." My grandpa had been dead for 10 years, and I had no idea what grade he'd taught. This guy had pre-screened me so thoroughly that he'd read a 10 year old obituary.

  • @aeri_taylors-version
    @aeri_taylors-version Před 2 lety +5652

    this reminds me of dr.house getting his team to break into his patients’ houses to get their history

  • @LubnaKabir
    @LubnaKabir Před 2 lety +7550

    “I’m gonna break you down and build you back up.” That’s exactly what I feel like medical school is doing to me, and I know it will be worth it. Thanks for inspiring us all with your entertaining videos! 💫

    • @davidabbatematteo7739
      @davidabbatematteo7739 Před 2 lety +21

      It is what it is meant to do.

    • @LordRunty
      @LordRunty Před 2 lety +41

      Narrator: "It was not worth it."
      Seriously though, yeah it's worth it.

    • @vivek27789
      @vivek27789 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davidabbatematteo7739 True.. Very True

    • @TheLoopyTiger
      @TheLoopyTiger Před 2 lety +74

      Nah, they don't bother with the building back up bit, but by the end of your residency you start to get used to being broken.

    • @kreddish8375
      @kreddish8375 Před 2 lety +3

      Good luck!

  • @Eman1900O
    @Eman1900O Před 2 lety +54

    As a former critical care nurse, it was always known ID docs write the BEST notes

  • @melissadunton3534
    @melissadunton3534 Před rokem +18

    My ID doc is gonna get a kick out of this. Can’t wait to show her. 😂❤
    *EDIT*
    So un-ironically I ended up spending two months in the hospital & acute care rehab literally a week after seeing this video. Then another month on home healthcare. And why….pray tell?
    I contracted necrotizing fasciitis in my upper, right thigh. Almost died. Was flown to a trauma center and put on a ventilator…after they drilled a hole into my other leg and inserted an I/O, then I had three operations in three days and spent most of that time unconscious. They removed about 1/2 of my upper thigh and I had a plethora of other procedures to gain access to a central line, to have a catheter inserted, for a pain pump and a few other things that I just cannot even remember right now. Spent 10 days in ICU, 10 days in CCU and 10 days on the med-surg floor, then off to a month of rehabilitation to learn how to walk again (with severe nerve damage) and to build up my strength. You lose a whole lot of strength and muscle when you’re bed bound for 15 days and when you haven’t been able to take in proper sustenance.
    So….I was extremely thankful for how thorough my ID doc was during this entire horrible situation. ✌🏻😊

  • @patriciatoomingtheplantpar2558

    You fill out that form where it says family history, takes you an hour to fill it out and then they ask, with the chart in front of them, any family history of diseases (me, closes eyes, holds breath)

    • @ThatOneCorvusKing
      @ThatOneCorvusKing Před 2 lety +460

      I feel this
      **Writes out all 12 medications I'm on, dosages, and times of day I take them on a chart**
      The nurse that just took my chart: "So, what medications are you taking currently?"

    • @justyouraveragetosser9265
      @justyouraveragetosser9265 Před 2 lety +312

      I understand the frustration but lots of patients tend to forget something till the doctor walks them through

    • @jbaker3381
      @jbaker3381 Před 2 lety +391

      You'd be amazed how often we get two completely different answers, though. To most patients it's annoying, but there's plenty other patients that will suddenly remember something after being directly asked. Just being thorough!

    • @patriciatoomingtheplantpar2558
      @patriciatoomingtheplantpar2558 Před 2 lety +29

      @@jbaker3381 when all it says is "Adopted" like my mother's said, she had no known history, just her own, ONE WORD.
      Here we go "any known history?" WTF!
      It was insult to injury for my mother till she died!
      So when my mother's side of the family history comes up it says "mother adopted" worse was when my Mom died suddenly out of nowhere at 60 they refused to do an autopsy, so I'm still stuck.
      How did she die?
      F'k if I know!

    • @KCCAT5
      @KCCAT5 Před 2 lety +23

      I just go down and the line and clicking no on every box just to get it out of the way I hate those goddamn things

  • @dguerra956
    @dguerra956 Před 2 lety +465

    Working in pharmacy for so many years, I really admire ID. They're the closers.

  • @chellerounds7608
    @chellerounds7608 Před rokem +88

    OMG the realness of this is honestly giving chills... ID saved my daughters life they're no joke!!🤗

  • @Bergen98
    @Bergen98 Před 10 měsíci +42

    We had a morning conference at pediatrics and the night shift said that there is a new patient with some fever and conjunctivitis, among other things
    By chance, a infectious disease was there. Her first question “Does this kid go to a swimming pool?” and then started explaining that some of the symptoms can be explained by some bacteria commonly found in swimming pool
    Room was full of doctors and everyone were just shocked by her knowledge 😅

    • @lizmullaney305
      @lizmullaney305 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Oh we knew that. Summer pedi admissions for mysterious infections skyrocketed every summer for our regional hospital. It all came drone one surrounding town. (Mine btw, and no kid in town was spared)It took me years to convince enough parents to pressure the town to glean it up and do regular testing.

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 2 měsíci

      Целая комната тупых русских, неудивительно. Какие врачи, такая и страна. Тупая 🖕

  • @gerardacronin334
    @gerardacronin334 Před 2 lety +1283

    Dr. Virginia Apgar developed her score in 1952. That’s ….. let’s see …… 70 years ago. So Bill will be a long time looking for that Apgar score on his 90 year old patient! Signed, a neonatologist. 🤣

    • @judithweinknecht4339
      @judithweinknecht4339 Před 2 lety +55

      Same thought, another neonatologist 🤣

    • @breawycker
      @breawycker Před 2 lety +185

      Are you saying that you're not willing to go back in time in order to complete your history? Weak

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 Před 2 lety +11

      @@breawycker History = The Truth. Not willing to make stuff up! 👎

    • @KP_Gem
      @KP_Gem Před 2 lety +5

      Lol I thought the same thing but it still made me giggle 😅

    • @StarsOnHerBrain
      @StarsOnHerBrain Před 2 lety +19

      This made me think of the lady from SNL who explains everything funny until it’s not funny anymore 🤣

  • @autumn3510
    @autumn3510 Před 2 lety +1122

    "My histories take so long that cultures wait on me to finish" LOLOLOL internal medicine here so I can relate LMAO

    • @NorseForse
      @NorseForse Před 2 lety +9

      Knowing that cultures usually take 72 hours minimum... yup! 😁

    • @anaisrosso
      @anaisrosso Před rokem

      😂😂😂

  • @jessicab9271
    @jessicab9271 Před rokem +29

    As a nurse, I LOVE the ID consult notes! They are by far the best source of information on the patient's chart.

  • @lonestar1637
    @lonestar1637 Před rokem +30

    Every ID doc I ever worked with in 30+ years of nursing were always the nicest and kindest people.

  • @kikalcala
    @kikalcala Před 2 lety +390

    "You found the APGAR scores... On a 90 year old" LMAO
    Funny thing is, I don't think even the apgar test is that old, but the joke was worth it xDD

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 Před 2 lety +19

      Yep, it was first introduced in 1953 by Dr. Virginia Apgar.

    • @tracyboaca6687
      @tracyboaca6687 Před 2 lety +35

      I'm fairly certain that WAS the joke.

    • @kikalcala
      @kikalcala Před 2 lety +9

      @@peggedyourdad9560 thank you! I wasn't sure and I forgot to look for it after writting the comment 😅

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 Před 2 lety +6

      @@kikalcala Np, I just got really curious as well and wanted to share the results.

    • @cqt9223
      @cqt9223 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, best not to overthink things and just appreciate the hyperbole of it.

  • @mrfxhnd9680
    @mrfxhnd9680 Před 2 lety +877

    as an ID Fellow, this is hilarious!! 😂
    “the EMR is gonna wish it had a character limit”

  • @AA-pw5ni
    @AA-pw5ni Před 2 lety +28

    Honestly I'd be really happy if a doctor payed that much attention

    • @MaryDunford
      @MaryDunford Před 7 měsíci

      Be careful what you wish for. Lol

  • @thor498
    @thor498 Před 8 měsíci +9

    This is so accurate. People if you have some random illness nobody can figure out get yourself an I D doc. It will take forever but he will figure it out

  • @grumbles
    @grumbles Před 2 lety +342

    "My histories take so long, the cultures wait on ME to finish" is going to be my new catch phrase, but that's just because I'm slow. Slow, but thorough. I do catch things in charts that no one else notices, and sometimes it pays off well. Even as an ER scribe before PA school, I tracked down the insanely in-depth complicated admission that a patient had had a couple months before at a different hospital, which the hospitalist team we were trying to admit her to said she made up because "She gave us the same story a couple weeks ago when we admitted her and we found no such record, she's making the whole thing up, send her home" and refused her admission and called her a liar to her face.
    As a new grad now, I fear that wherever I get a job, they will just want me to see patients faster and faster.

    • @amiesparkle00
      @amiesparkle00 Před 2 lety +1

      But what did you catch? Was she a liar?

    • @grumbles
      @grumbles Před 2 lety +80

      @@amiesparkle00 Basically, she had the name of the hospital she insisted she was admitted to (across the country, where she was visiting) slightly wrong. Everyone was calling her a liar saying "we checked that hospital, they have zero records for her." I believed her though, so I looked up that hospital (she knew the city for sure) and then looked around on Google maps for other hospitals in the area by panning around, and found another one that had a similar name. I asked her if that could be it and she said "Yes, yes, that's right, that's the one, I was saying it wrong!" So we reached out to that one, and 20 minutes later they faxed us a massive pile of the records from her lengthy and very complex admission. So we called the hospitalist team back down, and I told them everything she said was true except she had the name slightly wrong, and handed them the pile, while the ER doc I was with that day had a big smile on his face standing behind them. They begrudgingly admitted her and apologized for not believing her story, including when she was admitted there the week before (but then discharged when they thought she was lying about her issues).

    • @amiesparkle00
      @amiesparkle00 Před 2 lety +40

      @@grumbles wow! She was so lucky to have you on her side!

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Před rokem +20

      @@grumbles we could use your sleuthing skills! We had a patient a few months ago who had a colonic transit study xray on the Wednesday and was supposed to come back on the friday for repeat imaging. The patient insists she attended and was xrayed by a “young girl”, but nowhere is there a record if her being in the hospital, being booked into xray, being on our daylist, no images, no events on any of the machines under her name… we didnt call her a liar or say she made it up but there is literally 0 evidence this woman came that day

    • @csull12
      @csull12 Před rokem +18

      I was the same way as an ER scribe. Slow but thorough. Sometimes too slow but I made it through. Good on you for going the extra mile for the patient!

  • @76Pou
    @76Pou Před 2 lety +28

    Love my infections disease guy! He finally figured out I have RA. My Rheumatoid Factor was 620+ and he was the only one who figured me out and sent me to a rheumatologist before I dropped.
    Love this! 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @anitacrumbly
      @anitacrumbly Před 7 měsíci +1

      taking this as note because something is wrong and it no longer feels like just fibromyalgia sleeping 24-30 hours at a time even with fibromyalgia and adhd still isn't normal i just got out the hospital for sepsis from cellulitis, my bruises don't heal which no one seems alarmed by, i don't drink or do drugs except my take my epilepsy and fibro meds drink nothing but water and eat Huel mostly because i don't have energy to cook i'm 34 and at 27 had shingles and once a RA told me my labs looked good for lupus but that he was sure I didn't have lupus?!?! wtf ugh i just want be able to stay awake longer than 3-4 hours at a time.

  • @funnyusay
    @funnyusay Před rokem +12

    I wish all doctors really worked like this… If you’re really this thorough, then your patients are lucky 😊

  • @Sq517
    @Sq517 Před 2 lety +13

    Omg I can relate to this so much as a research coordinator … I have patients with a chart as thick as a textbook and have to note down every single thing for the studies 😭😭😭

  • @PallasAthene12
    @PallasAthene12 Před 2 lety +54

    I love how even though you play all the parts they still somehow feel like totally different people!

  • @gpgara
    @gpgara Před 2 lety +165

    "Too far." Well, not for Dr. House! Breaking and entering was sort of his MO. Also, his specialty is ID.

    • @malcadorsigilite6120
      @malcadorsigilite6120 Před 2 lety +28

      Though not as well known, he was actually a double specialty; he is also a Nephrologist.

    • @hyperghoul
      @hyperghoul Před 2 lety +9

      @@malcadorsigilite6120 both of them are internal medicine subspecialties

  • @DarJadon
    @DarJadon Před 2 lety +3

    Im laying here with back pain and watching these videos gives me laughs and giggles and relief from the pain. Love your comedy!!!

  • @AriA921
    @AriA921 Před rokem +32

    Breaking in and checking if they have a pet...
    Me: House MD???

    • @dangerszewski9816
      @dangerszewski9816 Před 9 měsíci +1

      it's a trivia fact that house was, on paper, an ID specialist, he just never acted like it.

    • @AriA921
      @AriA921 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@dangerszewski9816he must've been when you think about how he knew about almost every little thing about everything 😂

  • @rainbowzebraunicornpegasus2962

    ID at JHH found my daughter's Adrenal Insufficiency. All the other docs just wanted to pull her port. After the first two times of being septic with bacteremia, we really, really became even more anal about aseptic techniques. So why did she go septic 9 days after stopping antibiotics so many times?! Her body couldn't mount a response because she couldn't respond to any insult to her body at all. ID is who ordered the cortisol levels- which were critical. She gets IV hydrocortisone three times a day now. Now if she can get the use of her legs back...

  • @vianeyalopez
    @vianeyalopez Před 2 lety +25

    I appreciate them being so thorough. They're our last option when we've run out of everything else

  • @samuelenick
    @samuelenick Před rokem +9

    ‘Takes so long that cultures wait on me to finish.’ Maaaaaate

  • @ukitakesephiroth186
    @ukitakesephiroth186 Před rokem +16

    I can totally relate to this hahaha
    The history I had to investigate in ID went as far as to ask the patient how they arrived in France, by which means, what they went through along the way, etc etc never ending I say, but I learned a lot

  • @Yujideluca
    @Yujideluca Před 2 lety +335

    "I am gonna break you down and build you back up" I just wish my teachers were this committed to reaching me. Usually they do the first part due to their arrogance and excess doses of his wife cheating on him, then I proceed to build myself back up, but usually doesn't come out as good as it was before breaking.

    • @pballfan
      @pballfan Před 2 lety +2

      Therapy helps, dude…

    • @Yujideluca
      @Yujideluca Před 2 lety +21

      @@pballfan I do therapy, regular exercise and have great support from family and friends. I am not in a bad spot, but that does not change the lack of responsibility my teachers have towards their students. Their abusive behaviour is an institutional flaw that has no consequence towards them, but perpetuates high suicide rates in my university for decades.

    • @pballfan
      @pballfan Před 2 lety +8

      @@Yujideluca you don’t have to be in a bad spot to see a therapist. People need to understand that mental health should be treated more similarly to physical health (ie: routine checkups).
      Sure, I’m glad you’re showing motivation to keep a healthy head but it sounds like you haven’t quite opened up (no judging, there could be a number of things that could interfere) to your therapist appropriately yet due to the fact that you just shunned therapy as a knee-jerk reaction.
      Either way, good luck!

    • @Yujideluca
      @Yujideluca Před 2 lety +3

      @@pballfan Thanks for the kindness man!

    • @tracyboaca6687
      @tracyboaca6687 Před 2 lety +9

      Just remember nothing builds back up as quickly and easily as it got broken down, but the good thing is that YOU have control of the rebuilding and, therefore, the sky is the limit as to show strong you rebuild yourself. Much like a building that got destroyed from a hurricane, you had no control over the hurricane or its destruction, but you do have control over how you are going to rebuild that building to withstand the force of hurricanes in the future, while also making it beautiful. Hang in there!!!

  • @DocJakeDO
    @DocJakeDO Před 2 lety +129

    Solid “House” throw back with the break in comment.

  • @kellybrowning3150
    @kellybrowning3150 Před rokem +5

    I love ID histories!! They are my first go to for literally any info I need.

  • @mimzy2017
    @mimzy2017 Před 2 měsíci

    Oh. My. God. I laughed sooooo hard at this!!! I have had my own ID doctor for the past year or so. I LOVE him!! He IS so thorough.....the Apgar score cracked me up, because my doc does ask things about way back!! I'm in process of getting a dx, and am so grateful to have him! I feel like he would love this clip too!! I've seen a few of yours, and I laugh out loud every time. Thx for making the world a funnier, lighter, happier place!! ❤

  • @georgesanders5380
    @georgesanders5380 Před 2 lety +133

    I love the APGAR score on a 90 year old, lol!

    • @roninrakehell
      @roninrakehell Před 2 lety +22

      APGAR was created in 1952, so the first baby to get one could only be 70.

    • @got_rats
      @got_rats Před 2 lety +21

      @@roninrakehell he went so deep he made it himself, based on the patient's dormant memories of their own birth.

    • @FenrirWolfganger
      @FenrirWolfganger Před 2 lety +4

      @@got_rats Master, many have commented how old the APGAR system is, You are the one who has shown how it was gotten, Respectful Bow.

  • @janellebutner72
    @janellebutner72 Před 2 lety +208

    It may be weird but I really like taking patient histories and reviewing chart notes from other disciplines before going in to see them. I have coworkers that will go in for an evaluation with barely a glance at their chart which seems too strange to me.
    I also like to write detailed notes. They are probably more detailed than they need to be, however I can't count the times it's saved my butt in down the road. I was able to remember a patient I saw a few years ago because of the little blurb I wrote about him throwing up barium on me. Little things like that can help jog your memory pretty quick. I also received a letter of recognition during chart audits for my detailed notes on the selected patient. So you can believe by the time I'm done with you I've been all up in your past history and will write a lovely detailed note to pass on to the next medical professional.

    • @carbine090909
      @carbine090909 Před 2 lety +24

      I had a doctor ask me about my recent weight gain. I said I haven't gained any weight. She's looking at the laptop, says yes you have, you're 145 up from 130. I said they just took my weight, it's 125. She looks straight at me, says no it's not, you weigh 145 pounds. I say I didn't even hit 145 when I was pregnant, I've never been 145 pounds, I'm 5'1." I raise my arms like, "look at me." She looks at the computer and says, "oh, I'm looking at the wrong chart.".
      Would you write that in your notes? 😇

    • @NorseForse
      @NorseForse Před 2 lety +18

      Me-and my stem cell transplant patient friend and roomie (Multiple Myeloma/ASCT)- would like to THANK YOU for that! And encourage you to continue. 👍 Sometimes there are SO many things going on with one single patient, and so many different providers in different fields on a "team"-that detailed notes make ALL the difference! It's MOST helpful when they read each others' notes BEFORE entering the room. It can easily be the one thing that solves a medical mystery, improves quality of life (for caregivers too ;) ... and can have the added bonus of saving a life on occasion. You GO.👊

    • @spidrawebster
      @spidrawebster Před 2 lety +18

      As a patient, thank you for this. Not everyone has a cut and dried medical issue and the details matter in piecing an eventual accurate diagnosis together and for coordinating care.

    • @bluehorizons8913
      @bluehorizons8913 Před 2 lety +17

      The only reason I have the amazing doctors that have saved my life a few times is by getting rid of doctors who never glanced at my recent history. I have lupus and take blood thinners. I can’t risk another doctor who doesn’t pay attention. It nearly costed my life.

    • @FenrirWolfganger
      @FenrirWolfganger Před 2 lety +16

      Anyone can write anything on the Internet, but the length of your post makes me believe you write detailed notes.

  • @rebeccajacobson372
    @rebeccajacobson372 Před 10 měsíci +1

    The more I watch you the more I keep catching the house MD references thank you for the validation 😂😂

  • @thefireface2272
    @thefireface2272 Před 2 lety +4

    APGAR on a 90 year old killed me.. Man you’re too good. Brilliant.

  • @jo2345
    @jo2345 Před 2 lety +74

    Psych Fellow in AUS here.
    My personal experience with ID team as psych registrar has always been the same whereever I worked.
    A bunch of professional experts with no BS ego.
    But gotta say when I saw their progress notes, I usually skipped them and called them directly.
    They knew I didn't read them but were still nice about it.

    • @tracyboaca6687
      @tracyboaca6687 Před 2 lety +2

      😂
      I'm sure you weren't the only Doc that did that. They were probably used to that call.

  • @uriulrich4918
    @uriulrich4918 Před 2 lety +45

    If someone in the medical field says they're going to teach you something, always accept. In this way you can either learn something, or have a good laugh out of someone who thinks they know your job better than you do. If I'm not asked for my credentials I will not state them (unless someone's life is on the line), this has lead me to multiple situations where someone tried to explain something really basic to me only to be shocked a few minutes later by seeing me perform an advanced procedure, or being greeted like an old friend by a higher up. But please don't be cocky about it, these people usually just want to be accepted in the new environment. I've found this tactic very useful to humble new, cocky, know-it-all people. We don't have those little cards showing our credentials and names over here in Germany. I hope this was understandable as English is not my first language.

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Před rokem +3

      God the arrogant ones… i once had to talk to a doc because she requested an abdo xray for query perf. I told her thats a chest xray and i stood there for ten goddamn minutes while she explained about how the air rises in the abdomen before i was like so… it rises into the chest, yes that is connected to the abdomen, you’re gonna need a chest xray lol

  • @MontyRoyal963
    @MontyRoyal963 Před rokem +9

    Thank God we have professionals like that!

  • @Shmolguy
    @Shmolguy Před 11 měsíci +4

    As an ID patient, the part where you almost called for restraining order to my doctor is real, and then I just realised it was actually their job 😂

  • @DZ-ju7im
    @DZ-ju7im Před 2 lety +33

    “My histories take so long my cultures wait on me to finish” 😂😂

  • @customerreview9853
    @customerreview9853 Před 2 lety +49

    When you see ID come by, you go down on your knees and bow down as they save your patient

  • @thezaftigwendy
    @thezaftigwendy Před 2 lety +4

    I absolutely LOVE doctors who take a GOOD history. Who get me to remember things I never considered a symptom. Only had two like that ever. Out of dozens.

  • @elizabethmayberry3414
    @elizabethmayberry3414 Před 2 lety +7

    I shared this with a I/D friend of mine. He concurred with a smile. He’s damn proud of his HPI skills.

  • @PhoenixRoseYT
    @PhoenixRoseYT Před 2 lety +69

    I remember watching this vid for the first time like a year ago. I want to be an ID doctor so I took it personally, and now when I write SOAPs and don’t have a time limit I make them into novellas 😂

    • @kasai7272
      @kasai7272 Před 2 lety +4

      I could never be a doctor, just as an Emt there’s already too much writing for me lol

  • @KafkameetsPlath
    @KafkameetsPlath Před 2 lety +2

    This is sooooo accurate! OMGH! ID consultant notes are more detailed than the H&P and all the progress notes and the whole bloody record combined

  • @tytrater2136
    @tytrater2136 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I’m not a Dr but I work in a microbiology lab
    “The cultures wait on ME” I felt that in my soul

  • @n.sh.42
    @n.sh.42 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm careful when ask ID for consult. They always give me new info/Hx about my own patient 🥴.

  • @soundbite290
    @soundbite290 Před 2 lety +9

    Doctors in Britain don't normally ask if the patient has pets, but they should, because of toxoplasmosis and other reasons.

  • @megsharp8727
    @megsharp8727 Před měsícem

    Omg I love this!!! It's so true, I'm always so happy when I see an ID consult !

  • @pastramicheesemonster4873

    that was absolutely a House reference at the end 🤣

  • @jacobtaylor161
    @jacobtaylor161 Před 2 lety +7

    “you’ll just break in and see for yourself” Glad Dr. House could make an appearance.

  • @rachelallison6651
    @rachelallison6651 Před 2 lety +10

    This is my favorite one you've ever done. I laugh every time. 😂😂😂

  • @Mommy_Paladin
    @Mommy_Paladin Před 11 měsíci +1

    I'm not a doctor but I find all your videos hilarious and spot on as a mom to a medically dependent daughter😂

  • @sharongammell4111
    @sharongammell4111 Před měsícem

    I was recently in hospital. From the ER to the first rotation of docs, all said that I would be there 2 or 3 days at most. The ID comes in and says, "Oh, I'll be seeing you later this week. 7 days, at least." I loved her! All the docs sent pics to the dermatologist, and I was out the next day with Clobetasol to take home. Except for the pain and itching, it was an amazing experience, and the docs and nurses were fabulous! We all learned so much with my severe contact dermatitis and cellulitis.

  • @butter4934
    @butter4934 Před 2 lety +7

    This is giving me House vibes.
    Dude doesn't quit for nothing.

  • @plaggscamembert7465
    @plaggscamembert7465 Před 2 lety +14

    "I am gonna break you down and build you back up"
    Dude got confused whether he was talking about him or a lego house set 😂

  • @TarynBeeswax
    @TarynBeeswax Před 4 měsíci

    Love the hard line between harrassment and breaking in. Some boundaries are not to be crossed.

  • @normabaker5837
    @normabaker5837 Před rokem +1

    The most knowledgeable colleague I ever worked with was I.D. Also a real gentleman and humanitarian.

  • @cutenerd1177
    @cutenerd1177 Před 2 lety +11

    I lost it when history of patient included apgar scores lol 😂

  • @philyune
    @philyune Před 2 lety +26

    As an ID fellow, I feel flattered and annoyed at the same time when other docs copy and paste my HPI.

  • @rosemarieramsingh8749
    @rosemarieramsingh8749 Před rokem +1

    Hahaha as a physician this takes me back to med school 30 years ago! I love these!!! ❤️

  • @StudyTwenty4Seven
    @StudyTwenty4Seven Před rokem +2

    I cam attest to having to taking histories so thorough it's basically an essay

  • @woshwbdsiashqwed
    @woshwbdsiashqwed Před 2 lety +12

    FYI: APGAR score is given for newborns.

    • @kirstiecampbell3176
      @kirstiecampbell3176 Před 2 lety +8

      I love how, as a non-medical person, the comments sections help me catch all the jokes. Yay!

  • @Newspaper2007
    @Newspaper2007 Před 2 lety +8

    “Cultures wait on ME to finish” is so good

  • @Quin_79
    @Quin_79 Před měsícem

    As a former patient of the CDC I should tell you this is spot on I've literally asked them if they needed my first born child and a pound of flesh I'm not kidding you The amount of information they asked for and needed was insane and trying to gather that was one of the biggest feats of my existence with the help of my husband and trying to nail down my mom and my biological father and getting straight answers out of thin hair and dashed hopes and finding answers in the ether seriously though some of the most amazing staff and the funniest hands down but you have to be and not going to lie saw some of the most funkiest things going on with other patients and I myself was going through some bizarre infection that my oncologist and plastic surgeon introduced during my original double mastectomy during breast cancer that decided to get together and make some random hybrid strain of infection that was eating my flesh from the inside out down to the bone say yes fantastic thank you for making you laugh The trip down memory lane!!!

  • @edzimmerman5591
    @edzimmerman5591 Před rokem

    All of his videos are so spot on. These may the best videos on the idiocy of real life medicine I have seen.

  • @o0Avalon0o
    @o0Avalon0o Před 2 lety +3

    I'm impressed at how well you play "calm confidence" & "doubtful newbie."

  • @averageheightwizard4798
    @averageheightwizard4798 Před 2 lety +5

    "You won't ask if patients have pets at home, you're breaking in and checking for yourself"
    Yup, that's House M.D

  • @c-light7624
    @c-light7624 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The ultimate detectives. Love a thorough doctor!

  • @brtseif
    @brtseif Před rokem +1

    As a clinical lab scientist in microbiology, the “takes so long cultures wait for us to finish” was hilarious 😂

  • @Addieg2008
    @Addieg2008 Před 2 lety +4

    I'd love to see one where the overachiever student knows all the lingo and knowledge

  • @elainechan7155
    @elainechan7155 Před 2 lety +5

    "Dude... Too far..." Hahhaa I'm dying😂

  • @TitanMorsche
    @TitanMorsche Před 14 dny

    Can confirm. The infectious disease consultants in Wichita, KS ran me through a history. They are quite thorough. But really good at their job.

  • @ed81ny
    @ed81ny Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love the House MD reference at the end. 😂

  • @ApparentlyGoogledislikesmyname

    As a incipient hypochondriac, this would be my favourite doctor! I've dictated a Dostoïevski novel to some poor assistants a couple of times, when all they wanted was my temperature, blood pressure and weight.

    • @samanthafox3124
      @samanthafox3124 Před 2 lety +13

      The worst patients 😂

    • @amityislandchum
      @amityislandchum Před 2 lety +5

      Fortunately for them, you will never see an Infectious Disease doctor unless you are actually in the hospital with a serious infection.

    • @tracyboaca6687
      @tracyboaca6687 Před 2 lety +2

      @@amityislandchum it doesn't have to be a serious infection. It can just be an illness that can't be diagnosed and they send in ID after all the other Docs have tried and failed, HAHA! Usually they get the job done and get a proper diagnosis, but sometimes even the mighty Infectious Disease doesn't find the answer....as was my case.

  • @chrislaws4785
    @chrislaws4785 Před 2 lety +3

    I LOVE the "House" reference there. Remember "Everybody lies!".

  • @dustinplatt6882
    @dustinplatt6882 Před rokem +1

    I hate HPI's. I own an Optometrist Practice and we had a patient with at least 16 eye conditions, completing the HPI took about 45 minutes.

  • @danielolson437
    @danielolson437 Před 2 měsíci

    "My histories take so long, cultures wait on ME to finish."
    That's an AWESOME line!

  • @a4tay
    @a4tay Před 2 lety +4

    The end reminded me of House when he (often) has his team break into patients homes trying to find clues or see if they're lying.

  • @freetime7706
    @freetime7706 Před 2 lety +3

    “The EMR is gonna wish it had a character limit” LMAO 😂 as a coder I wish it did!

  • @quinn2014
    @quinn2014 Před 6 měsíci

    The ID docs have saved my life multiple times. I'm immunocompromised and have had quite a few severe infections as well as sepsis 4x. Pulmonary and ID are such cool people.

  • @rjshakalaka5969
    @rjshakalaka5969 Před 11 měsíci

    I LOVE reading our ID docs progress notes. They are always the most entertaining.

  • @chupaxf
    @chupaxf Před 2 lety +3

    For those who don’t know, Dr House was an infectious disease doctor (and a nephrologist). So this checks out. 😅