Mass eye injury event: The 1917 Halifax Disaster caused 592 people to be have eye injuries, including 249 enucleations by 12 Ophthalmologists, 16 patients had to have both eyes removed. Apparently most of the eye injuries were caused by broken glass. The disaster happened after a ship in the Halifax Harbour loaded with ammunition caught fire and began drifting on the water. After 20 minutes of burning, the ship detonated and killed 1782 people and injured 9000 more. A ton of people were watching the fire through windows in their homes/workplaces and when the ship exploded it shattered all thr glass of the nearby buildings (or just destroyed the building completely) Edit: apparently there were 5900 eye injuries and 41 people with permanent blindness, the 592 above were just the people specifically treated by the 12 Ophthalmologists
@teri24666 ай бұрын
Wow! I knew about this disaster. I didn't know about the eye injuries.
@teri24666 ай бұрын
@@patrickhaarhues2870 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@lainet33796 ай бұрын
@@patrickhaarhues2870 No, Pat. They will be awed at the stupidity of those that chose to deny science, and be fucking idiots. Nice of you to show up on Dr. G's channel to show what an absolute losing fucking jackwad you are.
@whatausernamethisis88936 ай бұрын
I think the two world wars could also be called a mass eye injury events. A lot of soldiers went blind during the wars.
@kacierowlette16646 ай бұрын
The number of eye injuries caused by the disaster later made Halifax a center for innovations in eye injury treatment and after-care, and in helping people with vision loss manage their daily activities and stay integrated in society.
@markmorgan59996 ай бұрын
Cardiologist here. This is the first time I’ve actually paid attention to the sponsor videos.
@lainet33796 ай бұрын
I've asked my primary if they use AI in the office, and was frank that if the answer was "yes," that there were things I would not share.
@Fists916 ай бұрын
Exactly, fuck kidneys, diuretics go brrrrr
@Aeder426 ай бұрын
Optometrist here. I listened to this on my commute to work this morning and had a patient today ask about fake solar eclipse glasses vs real. Luckily I just so happened to have ISO 12312-2 memorized for them. Thanks for that!
@physicistatlarge6 ай бұрын
Skit request: I'm in the hospital with a neurological issue. Please do a skit about your neurologist character, and show how awesome he is at helping people with deadly diseases. Right now the most cantankerous attending at Glaucomflecken General Hospital is saving my life.
@alstuver6 ай бұрын
Astrophysicist here - Your description was great! Thanks for educating about solar viewing safety.
@Alexandra-uk4vr6 ай бұрын
What's it like being smarter than the rest of us? 🥹❤
@theironrhino1106 ай бұрын
I feel like ophthalmologists on April 9th are going to be like that picture of Ben Afleck smoking a cigarette from the amount of calls they're going to get from eclipse related eye damage.
@HappyCat30966 ай бұрын
Day of the Triffids! A major classic.
@kittling54276 ай бұрын
Yes I was waiting for that to come up
@Louis--6 ай бұрын
@@kittling5427Same, I came over from the podcast to add it.
@deborahackerman74186 ай бұрын
Yes I was going to add this, if I didn't see it come up. It is based on a book.
@hantla6 ай бұрын
Congratulations on the eclipse bringing eyes their appropriate “focus”
@kalabakonbitts13626 ай бұрын
Good one 😁
@olddeon6 ай бұрын
Well thats a thumbnail that will haunt my dreams lol
@katwitanruna6 ай бұрын
I have already gotten certified eclipse glasses. Now to listen about how to use them.
@fabrisseterbrugghe85676 ай бұрын
If you have a really leafy tree, you can watch the eclipse on the ground under it. Seriously, I took my paperwork outside and watched the partial eclipse on the sidewalk. It was cool to see the chunk taken out of the sun.
@patti61946 ай бұрын
You can see the shape of the eclipse on all the little leaf shadows, too! Very cool.
@thezaftigwendy6 ай бұрын
Fictional mass blinding - Indiana Jones #1. REQUEST from a high minus glaucomfan: can we have a severe myopia microvision appreciation episode? I can see individual fibers in a strand of yarn, hair follicles, the interlocking octagons on forearm skin, granules of pigment in a freckle... I wouldn't give it up for anything, but it gets no love from people who insist that I should want to see distant things without glasses. Phooey on that.
@annieh13156 ай бұрын
YES!!!!! This! Why does no one mention myopia microvision? Peoples ask me why I won’t do Lasik and this is why!
@thezaftigwendy6 ай бұрын
@@annieh1315 SAME! I don't even want it corrected when I get old and need cataract surgery!
@jonaszkubik65506 ай бұрын
Hi, there is novel "blindness" by José Saramago (literature Nobel prize in 98). It's a story of ophthalmologist that encounter a blindness epidemic. I'd say that this book is not about blindness but human nature and epidemic is just a way to unravel it. Anyways, it was really weird to read that book during COVID. So many similarities. Thank you for your videos, I really like them.
@privacyvalued41346 ай бұрын
"There's no health benefit for your eyes." Looking at the sun even briefly is more likely to trigger a migraine in those who are susceptible to migraines.
@MissingRaptor6 ай бұрын
Good to know! Thanks for the advance warning ⚠️
@AznJsn820916 ай бұрын
Retina clinic is going to skyrocket with all of the new patients who stared at the solar eclipse
@katwitanruna6 ай бұрын
We used to making the viewing boxes ourselves back in the day.
@HappyCat30966 ай бұрын
You can use a colander as a pinhole projector. Last time around I made a pinhole camera out of a cereal box.
@jujear87316 ай бұрын
That voice from ''the pediatrician'' at 15:55😂
@covi29386 ай бұрын
Opthalmology in a nutshel: yea this is a very specialised surgery so we will wait for the retina specialist
@bigredmed6 ай бұрын
I saw totality in 2017 in NW Nebraska. I was wearing eye pro and had a camera with a sun filter. The filter could block out normal light and even bright light (same level as a welder's mask). The sun EVEN IN TOTALITY was punching right through the camera filter and I have a lot of great shots of it. But it was so bright that had I looked at the sun without the eye pro, I would have had eye damage, even then, it was bad. What is more dangerous is the edges of totality. When you are 90% totality either before or after totality you just get blasted.
@DaveBennett6 ай бұрын
The Day of the Triffids!
@suzannetitkemeyernlq6 ай бұрын
I guess last eclipse featured our president looked up like they tell you not to do. Last time I was on a bus going through the mountains of Costa Rica. It was pretty cool, the bus driver stopped the bus on a scenic turn out and the school kids all piled out with their smoked glass and reflectors.
@TattedIrishxxx6 ай бұрын
He did… what a fucking dumbass but we didn’t need a photo of him looking at the sun durning an eclipse to know that. 😂😂😂
@susanjoycesabo84505 ай бұрын
I live in Cleveland, OH and viewed the entire solar eclipse with proper eyewear bought online. It was great.
@WhataMensch6 ай бұрын
Hey doc can you interview some of the doctors coming back from gaza please. And thanks for the tip on the solar eclipse! I saw the last one but I cant get to this one.
@WhataMensch6 ай бұрын
Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, Pediatrician Dr. Irfan Galaria, Reconstructive Surgeon Dr. Mads Gilbert, Anesthesiologist and Head of Emergency Medicine UHNN. Dr. Tariq Haddad, Cardiologist Dr. Ghassan Abu-Sittah, Reconstructive Surgeon those are 5 I think you could talk to doc. Tariq was just on I think MSNBC or CNN cant remember
@JDrapic6 ай бұрын
Haven't seen Blindness in movie form, but I did like the book. Books usually get mutilated to be adapted to film, though. Loved the "the sun is not your friend" tangent lol
@jeridoney76046 ай бұрын
I always learn something new with your videos! Thank you for sharing this with us ⚘
@judithlashbrook46846 ай бұрын
Maybe at some point you could invite some blind youtubers on the podcast. I'd love to hear you and Molly Burke or you and the blind surfer! Edit: how could I forget Paul Castle from paulandmathew!
@Passionatpropagator6 ай бұрын
Also Andrew Leland author of Country of the Blind; Memoir at the End of Sight. All three of these folks have some form of RP. Seriously Dr Glauc makes a pitch at the end of this episode that blind folks can lead happy, fulfilling lives doing all the ordinary things the rest of do. These folks are all doing that. He should get at least one of them on.
@emuophindar81016 ай бұрын
My first youtube comment of my entire life, because I must jump up and down and yell 'Day of the Triffids!' The awesome sci-fi book everybody else stole from. Everyone goes blind from watching an astronomical event, it's the perfect example.
@vetnoiice6 ай бұрын
it might not be "mass casualty incident" enough but a few years ago several students from polish med university were accidentally exposed to UVC light during classes and were admitted to hospital for photokeratitis
@debbyschweighardt58106 ай бұрын
I purchased NASA eclipse watching glasses, for my Aunt, my daughter, my husband, and me. We are from New Jersey.
@57appel6 ай бұрын
Thank you !
@USMCHolo6 ай бұрын
Blindness was a Nobel Prize-winning novel by Jose Saramago before it was a movie. The blindness epidemic and the way humanity responds to it is a metaphor for the fragility of civilization and our base animal nature. I had to read it for my freshman college writing class, and I'd give it a solid recommendation. I can definitely see why ophthalmologists or blind people might object, but again, it's not "real" blindness.
@AileanFearghas5 ай бұрын
The doctor (also ophalmologist) I worked for during my apprenticeship as a medical assistant always said: "Buckle Up, new years is coming. People will probably shoot stuff in their eyes again." That was our emergency day, the 1th of January. Especially dangerous: Champagne bottles. But I wonder, since the sun can increase the likelihood of a cataract, does the solar eclipse increases that likelihood even further? And uff, imagine someone has an iriditis and needs to use eye drops to widen it so it doesn't get worse...and with a widened pupil, they look into the solar eclipse...
@whatausernamethisis88936 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if this would be considered a mass eye injury event, but there is currently an ongoing lawsuit for patients who took a medication called Elmiron because it was found to cause a specific form of macular degeneration that is only seen in people who have taken Elmiron.
@MermaidKiley5 ай бұрын
I had to schedule an eye doctor appointment. It was very stupid of me to call on the day of the eclipse - I was on hold for several hours!
@shoppingstick6 ай бұрын
THIS is the Knock Knock Eye episode I have been waiting for!
@stolenrelic6 ай бұрын
Can we please have an episode on keratoconus? I'm a grad student and I just learned I need to go get checked for this and I'm overwhelmed and scared and I don't know how to find a doctor who specializes in testing for keratoconus.
@patti61946 ай бұрын
That sounds familiar, I think he may have done it already. Check his video list for one on corneas.
@aetherguy8815 ай бұрын
Why would have thought that cataracts had an ever so slight silver lining?
@ColoradoSatellite6 ай бұрын
That sponsor actually sounds like the first useful AI thing on the market. Love your content even though I'm a construction contractor.
@hoytesara6 ай бұрын
Day of the triffids! Mass blinding event due to an astronomical phenomenon! Doubly relevant for this episode. Hopefully not the killer plant part, though
@spudd866 ай бұрын
Day of the Triffids, in addition to the walking killer plants has a mystery meteor shower that blinds everyone who looked at it. The two things aren't connected.
@tonyliu67496 ай бұрын
So funny that 'eyes hurt' got a search spike after the eclipse, god do I love the Yankees
@gilliantohver32256 ай бұрын
Current mass eyesight loss event - happening right now (NOTE: this is not political commentary - this is purely based on data from people who have actually been there): Gaza (this year): multiple Canadian ophthalmologists volunteered to offer humanitarian aid. They recently returned to Canada and said they were haunted from treating dozens of severe eye injuries (and full eye removals) every day for weeks in children. Explosion shrapnel.
@michaelbeglau32526 ай бұрын
⛔❓📵 How much are our screens (cell phone, laptop, tv, even to mention blue-screen) actually harming or rapidly permanently degenerating our eye health ?
@stumpybumpo6 ай бұрын
Blindness is from a book by Saramago! I would guess that is much better than the movie.
@VicunaVicount6 ай бұрын
The Expanse has a book / season on an alien world where a microorganism causes blindness in a group of colonists and researchers.
@elleryrhodes88186 ай бұрын
Can you do an episode on causes of retinal thinning?
@BlackTigr6 ай бұрын
Thankfully I got my glasses a few weeks ago cuz HO! BOY! they are jumping in price now. Good thing they have the right filter. But I actually have a question about that. Cuz while doing my research, I saw one mention how apparently these kinds of glasses "expire" after 3 years. Is that true? Only way I can think of is if maybe the coating wears off? Also, I did see "Blindness". One of those movies I will never see again after it seared itself into my brain. Definitely one of those "humanity will lower itself to the worst of its desires when things go to crap" movies. Could definitely be triggering for some.
@fabrisseterbrugghe85676 ай бұрын
Got mine in September. Going to an Eclipse party!
@BlackTigr6 ай бұрын
@@fabrisseterbrugghe8567 Noice. Sounds like it'll a lot of fun. 🥳
@FangzV5 ай бұрын
I have heard mixed things about the expiration of the glasses. The most believable things I have heard are 1) Most people are unlikely to keep the glasses in good enough condition to be undamaged and guaranteed safe over a long period of time (especially if they were the pair you unpacked and used), so better safe than sorry and advise replacement 2) research and innovation are happening constantly, so standards may update and thus people are encouraged not to cling to old lenses. I've seen conflicting reports on whether they deteriorate (maybe because of different manufacturing?), so it's probably more a matter of not being able to guarantee futureproofed safety.
@BlackTigr5 ай бұрын
@@FangzV I mean one report I've seen since said that the last time these kinds of lenses were updated, was in 2015. So the odds of them suddenly updating after all this time when there hasn't been any, are probably slim. And as long as you make sure they're not damaged in any way, they should still be safe to use. While I would like to use them for next time, I have heard about some organizations that want to collect them to send to South America for the one happening there later this year. If I'm able to find a collector for that near me, then I'd be fine giving them up for that and just buying another new pair for the next one.
@BlackTigr5 ай бұрын
Welp. Cases of eye damage from what I imagine were stubborn people that finally got told by the fed up ones around them, to go to the dang er, are now starting to roll in up here.
@Louis--6 ай бұрын
An interesting case of 'widespread blindness' was 2,4-Dinitrophenol (DNP), which is a very efficacious weight loss drug with very dangerous side effects. It's apparently been linked to thousands of cases of blindness (also many deaths).
@jlk-6256 ай бұрын
Daniel Abraham's Long Price Quartet (a wonderful fantasy novel series) [spoiler alert] has a whole country blinded by magic.
@veronicaholme8036 ай бұрын
Another fictional example of mass vision problems (not loss): In the 3-Body Problem book (and probably the show on Netflix too, but I haven’t seen it yet). A bunch of scientists wake up with a countdown in their visual field that they can’t get rid of. I won’t say why because of spoilers, but the protagonist visits an ophthalmologist who tells him it’s probably floaters (it isn’t).
@melissaglasser47596 ай бұрын
I'd venture a guess that someone who's had cataract surgery with a replacement lens is probably at a similar risk for retinal damage as a younger person.
@SAmaryllis6 ай бұрын
Got kind of a "mass eye" event example, though it's not as dramatic as wars or eclipses - in my environmental science classes, we covered GMO crops called Golden Rice, which were modified to have beta-carotene to help with eyesight-related problems in poorer communities. It's a topic that's a bit outside of the medical ophthalmology field, but it's certainly eyeball-adjacent! :)
@SebastianSanchez-sb6vz6 ай бұрын
Eye get it now.
@CaliberandCamber6 ай бұрын
Great sci-fi vision loss media... "the Expanse, Season 5" or Novel "Cibola Burn" an alien fungus growth that leads to blindness and the hero is the only one not effected bc he's on a high dose of cancer meds, great series!
@ElaEG6 ай бұрын
I was coming here to see if anyone mentioned that one.
@corawinterpaw98876 ай бұрын
I think it's particularly interesting because the fungus doesn't damage the eyes. It just creates a light-scattering obstruction that eventually blocks out vision. The writers really put effort into not making the fungus malicious, and characterizing the blindness as just an unfortunate accident of two incompatible biologies interacting for the first time. Still almost kills everyone because they can't see the neurotoxic slugs, but that's a different problem :)
@Ottilia_Lind6 ай бұрын
There is a short story by G. K. Chesterton called The Eye of Appollo. It is not about mass vision loss, but the plot revolves around sun damage to eyes. Although after this video I realize it is not medically accurate.
@hollish1966 ай бұрын
I would love to know about the effects of autoimmune issues on the eyeball. Nobody discusses this! But you--Mr. Wonderful Eye Doctor--talk about all the eye issues! So please do let us know about which auto immune conditions can damage the eyes. From the very Curious Cat.
@JHabc6 ай бұрын
Look up Graves’ disease
@hollish1966 ай бұрын
@@JHabc Thanks.
@JHabc6 ай бұрын
Also Sjogren’s disease. I just immediately thought of Graves because I have it
@jessgray41076 ай бұрын
Day of the Treffids has mass blindness as a key part of the plot.
@michaelbeglau32526 ай бұрын
❓Thank you for this Doctor, but did I miss it, what about "reflective" solar, like off the hood of your car? ‼️My Dad said when he was a kid (late 1930s) they used to have contests when all his friends would test each other as who could stare at the sun longer than everyone else 🙄🤪🥵 Does this scenario cause early onset glaucoma?
@Gustav.J6 ай бұрын
I'm here for the sleeping pill. It's annoying when things get interesting and I'm trying to sleep. Love your skits, though.
@ryanc4736 ай бұрын
So, expanse spoilers warning but for another mass eye casualty event: During I think season 5 of the expanse (don't hold me to the exact season) everyone except one person goes blind from an extraterrestrial parasite on an alien world. (Big spoiler warning here) Turns out, oncocidal (cancer drugs) are the treatment, and the guy seemingly immune to it was only immune because he was on cancer meds regularly due to a major radiation exposure earlier in the series
@dookiewu5 ай бұрын
He addresses what I’ve been saying: Glaucomflecken is hard to say lmaooo. Dr Joe Corena Dr Eyecarrumba
@kerr97246 ай бұрын
🤣🤣 Listening with sunburn....... the sun wanting to kill me, seems very real right now! 😂🥵☀️😖
@aymala6 ай бұрын
There is a film called Perfect sense. I'm not sure it fits, because people in the film gradually lose all of their senses. And sight, I think, is among the last ones to perish
@randombot4496 ай бұрын
There is this stupid urban legend of people taking LSD and looking at the sun so they became blind 😂
@michaelbelyea52443 ай бұрын
I’m 3 months in. My vision is good. Looked about 10 seconds. I looked away after it felt like laser went through eye to brain in left eye. The pain is insanely horrible. My eyes kill me and headaches. I got OCT after 46 hrs. Fine. Just saw another optometrist today. Not sure his test but it showed retina was ok. No clue what is causing the pain. Help. What’s going on?
@KY_CPA6 ай бұрын
3:04 finally confirmed! Eyes=brain
@mkjirak6 ай бұрын
Not going to have to worry, going to have an abundance of cloud cover for the eclipse 😭
@dacisky6 ай бұрын
I get NASA's feed,so I watch all that spacey stuff from the comfort of my home.
@ferretyluv6 ай бұрын
Hiroshima. Everyone who looked at the bomb either was blinded or got donut-shaped cataracts.
@roor68466 ай бұрын
In the book Dune Messiah there's a nuclear blast and many people's eyes are destroyed/melted
@scallywag17166 ай бұрын
Stare / gaze at sun to get Vitamin D straight to eyeballs very quickly!
@samiraperi4676 ай бұрын
Nah, solar eclipses don't happen many times every year. I wish they did.
@teri24664 ай бұрын
2-5 times a year. So depends on what you call often.
@ChronicallyYoung6 ай бұрын
Don’t girl boss too close to the sun
@stevewagoner98946 ай бұрын
I’m not sure if you answer question from KZbin… I got some coppertone sunblock spray in my eye and it’s been watering for an entire day… is spf 50 enough to look at the eclipse?