Thank you all once again for being here! You’re the reason I can do what I love most and that's crafting these videos! However, I’ve seen a lot of comments pointing out that nothing can move faster than the speed of light. That’s true-but only in a vacuum. In materials like water or other liquids, light actually slows down, which is why I mentioned the surrounding medium. Particles like electrons can travel faster than this slower speed, creating a blue glow known as Cherenkov radiation. This doesn’t break any laws of physics.
@infamouszxnickyАй бұрын
thanks for clearing that up. also love the vids, great job 👏🏽 🙂
@pitdog75Ай бұрын
Ouchi was not radioactive. He was irradiated.
@user-zh7lh5kn5h4Ай бұрын
Ouch -i lol
@SweellyyАй бұрын
your vids are one of the best ive seen. they’re interesting, built up really well, storytelling is on point and all the information shared is valid. everything just goes smoothly. keep up the work.
@Storified1Ай бұрын
@@Sweellyy Thank you, that means a lot!
@Take-aim-and-reload...2 ай бұрын
I'm just grateful hearing that the Japanese government was sane enough to put JCO out of business. But still, that doesn't help a lot to reduce the Japanese working toxicity.
@SenorzilchnzeroАй бұрын
83 days later. thats over 2 months.
@ModernnannenginemarineengineАй бұрын
Actually the changed a few directors and the NAME . Too much money envolved bro
@UpperChoresАй бұрын
tbh it's kinda sad that the CEO hasn't received any form of justice.
@grdfhrghrggrtwqquАй бұрын
You are brainwashed by liberal propaganda if you believe that.
@TJSawАй бұрын
JCO is alive and well. It’s part of the Sumitomo Group.
@GABRIEL-dz9mh2 ай бұрын
If only they lost their license 3 years before, when they cut out those safety systems, nothing would have happened
@hopinondeeznuts3502 ай бұрын
At the same time, they didn’t have to work there. They could have left at any time
@YouDirtyBastards69Ай бұрын
Hindsight is a bitch.
@Mohamad20103mk25 күн бұрын
Nice
@ZapHc19 күн бұрын
@@Mohamad20103mkHAVE SOME FAITH
@colintomlinson29463 күн бұрын
Unfortunately it takes things like this to happen to change things
@abbybonilla45112 ай бұрын
This dude got his insides vaporized cuz of corporate stupidity.
@SvalbardSleeperDistrict2 ай бұрын
Because of the standard operating principle of capitalism*
@kellowilliams5998Ай бұрын
@@SvalbardSleeperDistrict worked out well for the USSR🤷🏽♂️. Goes to show no matter what’s humans are proven to be greedy, lying, and corruption.
@diaperfang5293Ай бұрын
@@SvalbardSleeperDistrict get that commie crap outta here
@Matthew-AnthonyАй бұрын
@SvalbardSleeperDistrict You must be a socialist. The Soviet Union did the same thing at Pripyat, Ukraine.
@SvalbardSleeperDistrictАй бұрын
@@Matthew-Anthony Firstly, what other reason may have caused a similar outcome somewhere else is not an invalidation of the point made above - especially considering how the factuality of that point is illustrated in the video - and secondly, the Soviet Union =/= socialism.
@D4veJap4n2 ай бұрын
I know it's the Hippocratic oath to not do this, but if this happened to me I'd want to be put out of my misery before my veins spill open like seives.
@bilboswaggings2 ай бұрын
Except #1 that's not really a thing #2 most modern equivalents don't even discourage euthanasia
@Bobsponge35212 ай бұрын
@@bilboswaggingsyes they do.
@bilboswaggings2 ай бұрын
@@Bobsponge3521 As of 1993, only about 14% of medical oaths prohibited euthanasia There are laws, rules and regulations that prohibit it... not a freaking oath
@Bobsponge35212 ай бұрын
@@bilboswaggings dunno in france my grandma died recently, she was in coma they knew she wasnt getting out of. They also knew she was in pain. They decided the "ethical" way of dealing with the situation was to stop giving her food/water so she would slowly die of hunger or dehydration
@wavdv1999zaАй бұрын
@@Bobsponge3521 In the Netherlands you can get euthanasia if you just want to die. It honestly depends on the country.
@RamenNoodlePackets2 ай бұрын
This poor man honestly probably had the worst death out of any human to ever exist up until now. Even with all the pandemics and wars and dark ages full of sadistic torture, it all pales in comparison because it didn't take over 80 days.
@dustinmeek40322 ай бұрын
I don't know the torture methods that used to be employed sound worse because at least this dude had drugs in the hospital to keep him comfortable
@RamenNoodlePackets2 ай бұрын
@@dustinmeek4032 The thing is if you watch some more videos from different youtubers, they explain how his circulatory system wasn't working so when they would give him pain killers, they just leaked out and didn't do anything.
@furiousdestroyah9999Ай бұрын
I wonder. Cases like Junko Furuta were also unimaginably horrible
@inflation1139Ай бұрын
Not even close , not even close.
@bradebronson8835Ай бұрын
@@dustinmeek4032 You think this was comfortable? This was horrific pain...
@684shilmido27 күн бұрын
“he did not have the luxury of time to develop leukemia..” That’s some sad stuff
@deusexaethera2 ай бұрын
It's amazing they were able to keep him alive as long as they did while his body was literally dissolving.
@merlz002 ай бұрын
They were extremely cruel
@RAVEN_SPRING_2 ай бұрын
You mean he was amazing. The guy was suffering the whole time and stayed in there.
@deusexaethera2 ай бұрын
@@RAVEN_SPRING_ : Both.
@deusexaethera2 ай бұрын
@@merlz00 : It's a tough call. Do you end it mercifully because the odds are so remote, or do you grab every tiny thread of hope that remains and also collect as much invaluable scientific data as you can while the opportunity still exists? And from the patient's perspective, if you pretty much know you're done-for but it's for a stupid reason, do you let yourself go or do you tell them to pump you full of as much painkillers as they possibly can and try to make your suffering count for something in the big scheme of things? I don't think any of them can be faulted for the decisions they made. It was an unprecedented situation. Nobody had ever been exposed to that much radiation but also had access to premium medical care before. Nobody really knew how it would play out until after it was done.
@FatalFistАй бұрын
Oof the point where pain meds can’t even work because your body no longer has the ability to absorb and distribute.
@Baddy187Ай бұрын
I question the purpose of the anti-suicide banner KZbin put under this video. Not like people go: "Ye I'll have what that Japanese dude is having."
@jdsbusaАй бұрын
That’s funny, and the Suicide Note is annoying.
@MountainmonthsАй бұрын
block element
@UnknownString123Ай бұрын
I assume that it's for the Japanese workers that are overworked and might get ideas seeing how bad the system treat them.
@timetinАй бұрын
The wonders of coded "automatic intelligence".
@flowrepins6663Ай бұрын
@@UnknownString123they would not want to go the most painfull way possible. Also few people would even had acess and be exposed to those equipments
@apophisstr671929 күн бұрын
I can confidently say, greed, is probably the number one worst trait of human beings.
@gamers-xh3uc25 күн бұрын
But if it wasn’t for greed we would have gone extinct so not really, more like lack of empathy and care is a better example
@apophisstr671924 күн бұрын
@@user-if1de8pt2j Well, you aren't wrong.
@TheOriginalShakuraz13 күн бұрын
When greed was so dense it formed a blob on the ground, the first jew stepped out of it.
@ryanboutr7756Ай бұрын
A single chest x ray exposes a person to .1 msv....they took 30,000msv. They were instantly dead and didnt even know it at first
@lenoirxАй бұрын
Who's they?
@severiusbrandusa1413Ай бұрын
@@lenoirxThe Nipponese Guy
@lenoirxАй бұрын
@@severiusbrandusa1413 He should have said "he" not "they"
@Butterscotch_96Ай бұрын
@@lenoirxwhy?
@lenoirxАй бұрын
@@Butterscotch_96 It's weird
@ASkeletonNamedDanielАй бұрын
Crying blood ? The intestine membrane is dead? 10 blood transfusions per day? Dead organs? Skin peeling off? Holy fuck thats crazy
@kirby3910Ай бұрын
I rather die in peace than be a vegetable and live in agony while being dependent on everyone around me
@marisakirisame867Ай бұрын
Yeah, but they said the otherwise...
@gamers-xh3uc25 күн бұрын
You wont say the same if this was you
@Droller24 күн бұрын
Us humans cling to life dearly more than we think we do.
@kacperrutkowski635023 күн бұрын
@@DrollerI mean it depends a lot. There are quite a lot of people who don't seem to care. Most commonly extreme athletes (as they're used to alnost dying) but also some doctors etc.
@AmandaWillette22 күн бұрын
Ur a disgusting person. As I am a care taker watching my mother so sick and depend on everyone and this comment was very hurtful to me
@mrmosty51672 ай бұрын
How dare the suits claim they just wanted to get out of work early
@RizzawriterАй бұрын
That's company bosses for you. They always claim they care about their employees until something happens to one of them, then its a mad scramble to blame said employee and protect themselves!
@darkhorseman826322 күн бұрын
Psychopathic ceos and suits never accept personal blame. They project blame on to others.
@kitsune5746Ай бұрын
I remember watching a documentary about him. One nurse that on duty to him said, his condition so bad that when they lift Ouchi's leg, the entire feet to knees fell off, and his skin was rotting to the point you can see his bones. His bed has been constantly changing since his blood spill anywhere on his body. His white bed turning to red and his body becoming more like a experimental body figure due to severe conditionhis internal organs wont work properly as well especially the heart. Some doctor said Ouchi got 80+ heart attack survived in just single day. HE died in organ failure in the end
@APPLP1E23 күн бұрын
Can't imagine how traumatized the doctors and nurses ho looked after him could be
@thepixelcatcher2 ай бұрын
Those doctors knew that he had absolutely no chance. His family may have wanted him to be kept alive, but I wonder if they were urged by medical staff to do so. This was beyond cruel. Nearly three months of unfathomable suffering while he was used for medical research.
@wrxrob25892 ай бұрын
Stem cell treatment was brand new, so there was a chance as we didn’t know the impact of said treatment. If it worked, I’m sure it would have been worth it. And it wouldn’t surprise me that they did urge the family for all possible treatments, as the patient was a very rare case. But that’s how medical advances happen. I blame the company for this accident as it shouldn’t have even happened.
@jesusofbacon2 ай бұрын
@wrxrob2589 what he has no lymph nodes left even stems cells wouldn't save you from that. In fact because of that it would potentially be a higher source of infection than a cure.
@poopjeans11352 ай бұрын
Your opinion is very narrow sighted. People are NOT irradiated to that extent on a daily basis. You kind of have to do the research when the opportunity presents itself. Also, any insight gained into treating radiation sickness would benefit the rest of mankind. Not to mention the Japanese have arguably more experience dealing with the side effects of nuclear radiation than any other country. Seems contradictory, to keep someone alive, in a culture that views self-deletion as a good thing.
@chelseaoocandy2 ай бұрын
I read the book A Slow Death: 83 Days of Radiation Sickness and it’s made clear the family demanded the doctors do everything to keep him alive, despite being told it was hopeless. What was unethical in my opinion was that they didn’t have the tv or radio in his room because they didn’t want Hisashi to hear that he had a lethal dose of radiation. They should have told him the truth.
@rosewaters2533Ай бұрын
Regardless, the well documented research done to save his life would now contribute to future radiation cases.
@mnx2802 ай бұрын
this is so unbelievably heartbreaking
@Storified12 ай бұрын
Yes, it indeed is 😞
@Craig-j2e26 күн бұрын
My wife got SA'd by two different men who took advantage of her OCD and Bipolar. One moved in with her and the NHS and a local charity manipulated her. She got a ten year rrstraining order and I haven't interacted with my loved ones in approximately 7 years
@so656326 күн бұрын
@@Craig-j2e she got SA'd. So why does she get a restraining order now? And do you still love her after she moved in with another man?
@بوسعود-ط8ت14 күн бұрын
@@Storified1انه تقليد للأجانب اليهود في امريكا مفاعل نووي
@tielmaster7879Ай бұрын
The fact that they painted these men as just dudes rushing to get home early is diabolical and disgusting.
@pntbtrКүн бұрын
amen!
@Usmc5113Ай бұрын
At some point, fighting to keep someone alive becomes torture...
@mattslivar517427 күн бұрын
His familly believed he would Get better
@i.sebastian.c6563Ай бұрын
Corporate greed is in every industry. Money over safety... That is the true crime against humanity.
@paulvggggggАй бұрын
boeing
@Highland_MooАй бұрын
It’s cruel that they carried on with treatment when it would’ve been patently obvious he was dead from the moment the accident happened.
@ShadowTaniАй бұрын
At least his suffering wasn't in vain, thanks to making the effort they learned what to expect, how such a condition progresses, what treatments have an effect, what to be careful about, and so forth. One may pray that such cases never happen again, but the knowledge gained is still invaluable.
@soonergiant65Ай бұрын
I agree, but respect to this guy. His will to live had to be the most anyone has ever seen.
@thefox5301Ай бұрын
His family demanded the hospital do everything to keep him alive you need to do your research before saying something stupid
@Khawaja7210 күн бұрын
There was no DNR so they cant no keep him alive or else they woukd be sued.
@chaosXgum2 күн бұрын
You are stupid
@KanenBlack2412Ай бұрын
Fuckin hell, so his body literally decomposed alive, that is awful
@skyfigurefunАй бұрын
Ikr Hes already dead 😢its like being alive in corps body
@anon_14825 күн бұрын
biggest problem was actually that he was radiated so badly that his body became radioactive. So even if they literally replace the stem cells and the DNA, his body is radioactive and just continuously destroys all the DNA and stem cells they inject in him
@radoslavkafelov3437Ай бұрын
The story of this poor man always makes me realy sad.. No living thing on this planet deserves this torture. I hope that he is at a better place.
@opo36282 күн бұрын
His first worry was cancer...but as it turned out any potential cancer wasn't an issue...because his cells could no longer replicate. 😣 Holy crap, this incident is beyond horrifying.
@BennnWJK23 күн бұрын
Never risk your life for your work. It’s not worth it. Employees are always replaceable in the eyes of the management.
@Curiescat-f5f5 күн бұрын
If you really love it why not?
@hodenbacke555553 күн бұрын
So no one should work as a police officer? What are u talking about man 🤡
@desubokudawanano6 сағат бұрын
@@hodenbacke55555Good goy, Mr Noseberg is proud of you
@wizardoflolz56262 ай бұрын
Greed should be penalized
@jhonsepulvedo67502 ай бұрын
Chances are you're greedy
@brianaprilbuchanan79632 ай бұрын
It is via taxes.
@SvalbardSleeperDistrict2 ай бұрын
Good luck with that under societies run based on interests of private capital.
@wizardoflolz56262 ай бұрын
@@SvalbardSleeperDistrict yeah I don't have any hopes for it, we are monkeys after all.
@nz62412 ай бұрын
Pfft, Greed should be Admired and Rewarded, until something goes wrong, then they get penalized.
@UK2K1990Ай бұрын
They weren't trying to help him survive, they wanted to see how long he would live.
@edwardshank5190Ай бұрын
100% to document and study . It's insane the amount of medical knowledge we have do to nazi experiments, stuff like this and so on.
@loathsome-bh3rxАй бұрын
That's a false claim. Ouchi's family wanted him alive and even he said himself he wanted the treatment to keep going.
@ChildrenOfTheGrav29 күн бұрын
Deep down he probably wanted to go but didn't say it
@MarceloAlahid-vm3if28 күн бұрын
@@loathsome-bh3rxNahhhh i dont buy it
@maheshch182915 күн бұрын
Yes. They used him for studying. They knew he was a rare case of nuclear disaster, and they wanted to study how the human system responds and survive for such a level of radiation exposure
@akaiwrxАй бұрын
Faster than the speed of light...FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT?!?!?!
@159tonyАй бұрын
Particles CAN travel than the speed of light so long as it is not in a vacuum, when charged particles achieve this, the result is a blue flash of light. Air is also a medium, as is water. Light traveling in a vacuum is a constant and nothing can travel at those speeds.
@GamerGeeАй бұрын
One way we could get faster than light to travel light years
@maijo2597Ай бұрын
@@159tony I got this from Google "Yes, particles can travel faster than the speed of light in certain mediums, but this is not considered to be actual faster-than-light travel: Cherenkov radiation When electrically charged particles, like electrons and protons, move faster than light in a medium like water or glass, they emit a blue glow called Cherenkov radiation. However, this is not considered to be actual faster-than-light travel." I found that a peculiar word salad at first but now I get it. Particles travelling in a medium may travel faster than the speed that light can travel in that same medium. But that is not actually travelling faster than light, because the definition of the speed of light is the speed that light travels in a vacuum. As you said. ;-)
@jaceallen3270Ай бұрын
@@maijo2597well said. Makes sense.
@robspot101Ай бұрын
I know right. That shit blew my mind too. And to think all those particles bombarded every part of his body at the speed of light.
@SVTCO2 ай бұрын
Idk what's the worst way to go, this or the Nutty Putty Cave Death.
@gaivsvalerivs58182 ай бұрын
Definitely this one
@keithgrey84842 ай бұрын
other than some extreme torture, this is abt as bad as u can go out
@RossoFormulaАй бұрын
Nutty Putty is overrated and mainstream.
@SVTCOАй бұрын
@@RossoFormula lmao how in the hell do you over-rate a tragic event in which there's extreme suffering? Hell of an algorithm playing as your mind.
@RossoFormulaАй бұрын
@@SVTCO Same way you compare a caving incident to something like this...
@user-zr6pl6nb6zАй бұрын
The Japanese medical staff were so intelligent and assiduous in trying to help Hisashi. They did everything they could. I wish our medical system worked like that.
@QuellBlackАй бұрын
I just said the same thing.
@user-zr6pl6nb6zАй бұрын
@@QuellBlack To whom?
@WSNight-2 ай бұрын
someone should have went to prison
@Marlysa-e1bАй бұрын
6 people from the company did actually.
@GamSpu2 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying the truth that Japan is not an wonderland! It really truly sucks.
@kingofkingz23526 күн бұрын
Tell me what lala land you are living in because most of the countries in the world get corrupt ppl the run it
@nahyanabid23 күн бұрын
Still loads better than America😆😆
@lnr12241Ай бұрын
At what point does it become human medical experimentation? ? That dnr should have been done way sooner. This is ridiculous
@jakeg3733Ай бұрын
You need to understand the differences between cultures here. I read the book, written by the journalists who were there in the hospital for those 83 days. The doctor was not onboard with doing this; however, it is ultimately up to the patient and family. They (and especially someone who was a fucking _nuclear technician_ ) were unbelievably ignorant when it came to ionizing radiation and ARS -- 17Sv is not survivable, straight up. Regardless, the attending was duty-bound to try everything possible to keep Ouchi alive, at all costs. He retired after this case and was apparently crippled with guilt; probably doesn't help that people spew lies about him all over the web now
@mrzetsu489328 күн бұрын
knowing the Japanese, that kind of experimantation wasn't something they were above doing
@jakeg373327 күн бұрын
@@mrzetsu4893 Yes but... this isn't unit 731. Those guys were dead or retired long before, and this wasn't an experiment. Japanese medical ethics had, if anything, gone too far the other way since the war (a typical reaction from a culture that had done terrible shit) The doctor did not want to keep trying with Ouchi, but he had no choice. This was not because the government or some shady scientist ordered him to, it was because the last verbal orders from the patient (and family) were to try to keep him alive. Then patient became unresponsive (and as in the US, you must assume patient's previous wishes still hold unless explicitly documented otherwise in a DNR, etc.). That's it -- Sorry, no dark conspiracy on this one
@mrzetsu489324 күн бұрын
@@jakeg3733 you're right lol but i was jus saying that they're not completely incapable of doing such
@jakeg373324 күн бұрын
@@mrzetsu4893 No one is, especially once ethics have been declared obsolete
@Stinger-rq4gyАй бұрын
Never ever cut corners/short cuts with safety, or using radioactive materials. Always be safe.❤
@Abeer-b4e6 күн бұрын
Same thing happened last year , Japan put tones of radioactive and nuclear water in the ocean , which after 10 years it will be expanded to half of Pacific Ocean . They told people it’s clean and safe , but no one believed them so one of the resident or idk who drink this water live to show them it’s safe . But not more than months he disappear no one saw him again . His skin was falling and peeling and is dead now . Japan started these action last year august. But no one saw or knew because they just hid it so bad .
@michigoerantosАй бұрын
This channel should increase popularity even more, I really like your story lining and built-up with detail evidence great work keep it up!
@fdfgaming9076Ай бұрын
The scary fact is the family were the ones keeping the treatment going
@XmarlonXPTАй бұрын
Hope was the last to die
@NerdyBassHead2 ай бұрын
Nice narration, kept me focused which is rare for me
@MasterZeustastic29 күн бұрын
Greed is a common thread connecting most of the industrial accidents across the history.
@HelloMyNameIsAxlАй бұрын
They just extended his suffering until the last moment, I mean, once your intestines collapse by radiation, the game is over bcuz there's nothing else to do after that.
@kamimazaАй бұрын
This is a Homer Simpson level nuclear plant error...
@Hooligan.Residuato.Italia.90Ай бұрын
DOH!
@jibberism991026 күн бұрын
And Bart Simpson levels of diarrhea.
@redraven16047 күн бұрын
I was hoping he’d turn into a Samurai Hulk. Instead he got 83 days of Hell.
@hikikomori698 күн бұрын
Wow I’ve heard this story before. My ex’s father was a physicist who worked there, and was exposed. He ended up dying of pancreatic cancer several years later.
@YxC1l12 ай бұрын
This channel deserves more fame
@Storified12 ай бұрын
@@YxC1l1 I appreciate that 💙
@JRGV_828Ай бұрын
hey said "faster than the speed of light" Nothing goes faster than the speed of light.
@Dana__blackАй бұрын
I was going to subscribe but this comment made me change my mind
@Storified1Ай бұрын
@@Dana__black See pinned comment.
@jasminarkmАй бұрын
Yes ,when i see this quality , i ask my self , why youtoube offer me hawk touah in first plan , people today are very very stupid , and because of that some peoples make money on stupid things
@brianwong-b4hАй бұрын
This hard working 35year old man looks like an 18 year old
@iMBlackouTzАй бұрын
Those cases proves that science is as cool as it is cold, how ever the family was struggling, they knew that that guy was already died and there were nothing to do, but they refuse to set him with an painless death!
@MrBubbi2000Ай бұрын
It's amazing how a company will throw you under the bus
@DustinKeating-yk3vq2 ай бұрын
I hope if i get sick the doctors try this hard to save my life
@JoeAteYoToastАй бұрын
Honestly.. Those mf doctors were basically playing or "researching" On his body
@jemicabond3916Ай бұрын
@@JoeAteYoToastexactly how I see it so disturbing that they see this man was declining in the worst way I’ve literally seen talk about pulling the plug on an co worker cause he had a blood clot in the brain or bleeding but he was in a vegetation state still blinking but the nurse said they weren’t real blinks and told my friend with me that they were gon have to pull the plug soon and he wasn’t in there nothing but three days and he was still in great condition I even rubbed his arm and they were massaging his feet but the nurse did say to not stimulate him with all of that but they sure seem like they was through with him and ironically he was Asian too nurse white and I’m black but he wasn’t in pain and seemed to be trying to fight but according to the nurse it was all the machine so for these people to keep this man alive in excruciating pain just to try 12 different things that made it worse hell they the ones who probably did all that to him cause he wasn’t like that when he came in that’s why they call it the worst case they literally tortured him like an old haunted asylum movie
@Wavex3illuАй бұрын
@@JoeAteYoToast They did not. His family told them to continue.
@DrDope164Ай бұрын
@@Wavex3illu Thats fucking sadistic of them. And absolutely egotistical. They dont want to face loss so they force their " beloved " family member through the worst possible.
@rubemartur8239Ай бұрын
@@DrDope164Its XX century, stop using standards of a 15 child from Our century that knows the effects of radition at School and lack of cure resources. As If the family knew every pain He would pass then think "It doesnt matter, let Him live, because we are bad egoistical people who loves suffering of others"
@michellelynngarceau3851Ай бұрын
This is absolutely horrific. My deepest sympathy and condolences to the two victims and their families 😢
@oshadhagamage882117 күн бұрын
His family is also responsible
@alejandroalejo330229 күн бұрын
Them doctor's never gave up on him, God bless them for their relentless efforts to keep him alive🙏💯
@blaze_tron824125 күн бұрын
Yeah. God must’ve been happy when we saw this
@goemon9378Ай бұрын
I'm wondering how "residual radiation" remained in Ouchi's body many days after the initial exposure such that his sister's bone marrow transplant DNA was damaged too.
@mismis315329 күн бұрын
That seems to be an inaccuracy from the video. His body wasn't radioactive after the incident, but the cellular structure was destroyed beyond repair. Initially (like after the initial exposure), the stem cells would be able to make the white blood cells, but after a certain time they would also die. There are many reasons as to why that would be the case but that's beyond my level of understanding of the subject. It's possible that the body just couldn't sustain cell replication, or that apoptosis was triggered, or other stuff. Your guess is as good as mine seeing how badly damaged the poor man was. So it wasn't residual radiation, but residual damage caused by radiation.
@JavierCR25Ай бұрын
This is terrible, they should’ve just put him to sleep somewhat peacefully
@Khawaja7210 күн бұрын
They cant until after 83 days when the fsniky sigbed the DNR on his behalf
@Chez8922-kf6cy8 күн бұрын
I think this is one of the worst deaths imaginable. Just awful to have your body literally fall apart before your eyes.
@TheRealJaCrispyАй бұрын
Its amazing how resilient his body was. Its remarkable that he survived that long.
@gamers-xh3uc25 күн бұрын
Not really it was the doctors that keep him alive he would have died shortly if no treatment happened
@drummerdude051519 күн бұрын
Thank you for not using that misrepresented photo of the severely burned person, people on the internet believe anything.
@Storified118 күн бұрын
I came across that picture, but I found out it was a completely different case.
@drummerdude051518 күн бұрын
@Storified1 yup, it's from a children's hospital in Texas. Ouchi never had a leg amputation but in that picture you can clearly see there was a leg amputation. Funny how these internet rumors catch on
@river.Ай бұрын
Once you vomit, its game over
@BlindMansRevenge2002Ай бұрын
The University of Tokyo medical staff had a good time with that guy. So that is one of the most unimaginable ways to die apparently, a lot of research on treating radiation sickness was gleamed
@arvurebantra763924 күн бұрын
If I remember from other stories about Ouchi, because he was one of the first people to go through such a huge dose of radiation, his death gave us a lot of information about the effects of radiation poisoning. Unfortunately, he was mostly a study case near the end. It's such a sad case.
@ATMUSA200027 күн бұрын
There is more to this story. I read the book about his life and death. He begged the doctors not to put in the breathing apparatus in his mouth, as it would make him unable to speak. He was yelling at them.I don't want to be your guinea pig. Despite his pleas, they still put in the machine down his throat to deliver air.I guess it was like a tube. Taking away his ability to speak. Nobody on this planet has died a more horrific way than the way this man died when they autopsied him. They found the only thing alive was his heart. Everything else was rotted, and they kept bringing him bac.
@alwin961621 күн бұрын
I felt dread reading this
@XLeon_S_KennedyXАй бұрын
Cutting corners and shortcuts yet have the audacity to put the blame on thier workers. Those responsible should have exposed the high radiation dosage and see how they feel about it. Disgusting JCO 🖕🏻
@jakeg3733Ай бұрын
Typical 21st century corporate culture
@ZboeC529 күн бұрын
This video triggered a "you are not alone" message with a phone number for a suicide prevention phone line. WTF google...
@Khawaja7210 күн бұрын
Ik right like who tf will look at this and say yep i want this💀
@orcave88022 ай бұрын
Editing is amazing
@Storified12 ай бұрын
@@orcave8802 Thank you so much!
@AkiyamaKatsukoАй бұрын
I'd rather die if I were exposed to the same amount of gamma radiation than to suffer through all of that.
@MelihErdem012 ай бұрын
The thumbnail didn’t lie; this truly is the worst way to die
@abhishekpatnaik1442 ай бұрын
This channel is so underrated
@melina001aКүн бұрын
As soon as ochi was exposed to that blue flash he was a walking dead man 😢
@kaydg9888Ай бұрын
It is sad also that these sounded like really nice people. "A Slow Death: 83 Days of Radiation Sickness" describes what he and his family was going through.
@supgrocktv3696Ай бұрын
my father in law suffer like this, although not because of the radiation😢 it's difficult to watch as day pass by his internal organs started failing, his skin start deterriorating😢 and we can only watch as his hearbeat slowly go down😢
@leighagnello7993Ай бұрын
It's crazy how all of nuclear disasters are due to human errors or humans changing a process that shouldn't have ever been removed..... Maybe the only one is Fukashima due to earthquake and tsunami.
@NabiL_Lam23 күн бұрын
The poor guys they just wanted to go home to their families but ended up never arriving 😢
@markchapman25852 ай бұрын
I thought the medical team wanted to keep him alive, but he didn't want to live
@drappointment45092 ай бұрын
For research purposes
@randomgamer6252 ай бұрын
@@drappointment4509his family also wanted him to be kept alive in hopes that he’d survive even if it was futile
@LoveEachDay94Ай бұрын
I heard he intially said yes but I also am pretty sure they never asked him again and at some point he wasent able to speak anymore and probably didn't pose the question when he couldn't talk
@derekfitka1457Ай бұрын
I wouldn't want to live after that. RIP
@WestSideGorilla1980Ай бұрын
Horrible thing this poor man went through.
@captaincat174319 күн бұрын
His radiation dose was equivalent to about 3 times the maximum dose a cancer patient would receive over multiple radiotherapy sessions for the most severe cancer treatments (i.e. when radiation is used to deliberately destroy a patient's immune system prior to a bone marrow transplant). That is the dose he received all in one hit. It is horrific to think about. Hisashi became one of the first people in the world to receive a stem cell transplant, and in that respect his sacrifice was not in vain. Thousands of children's lives have been saved by stem cell transplants since his death, in part due to the knowledge gained from Mr. Ouchi's treatment and his willingness to undergo it. He died as a hero.
@itventures2 ай бұрын
Please upload more frequently if possible The videos are good.
@Storified12 ай бұрын
@@itventures Thank you!
@merlin7766Ай бұрын
I worked as an engineer in a nuclear fuel fabrication facility. Even the water in buckets used to mop floors with was limited. Water is a moderator and the action of rinsing mops in a bucket could over time allow nuclear material in the form of powder to go critical in exactly the same way. This is well understood and it is the cutting of corners and usually pressure from above to get some things done in a compressed time scale that causes these accidents. Ever since the Manhattan project, nuclear physics has been understood. The mathematics understood and dangers understood. Just about all the accidents that have happened in the industry have not been down to a lack of understanding, they have been down to sloppy procedures, carelessness and corporate pressure.
@UploaderizationАй бұрын
And political pressure, as with Chernobyl.
@nicklong7661Ай бұрын
They kept this poor man alive for all those days. And he suffered for science. And he was beyond ill . yet the poor die all the time for lack of money. Doctors could do so much more if allowed. The system is broken. I hope this poor man found peace in heaven
@gamers-xh3uc25 күн бұрын
There was not much the doctors could have done, they pretty much tried everything,once it was discovered the man had residue inside he was pretty much dead
@MondropGaming3 күн бұрын
His family was a big reason of why he kept living so long
@Francisco-k5r2 күн бұрын
@@gamers-xh3uccould you read better😂
@BaoNguyen-ln3fgАй бұрын
They kept him alive for as long as they could so they can experiment any theorized treatments. Let's get this straight, what are the odds that someone exposed to the same or more radiation ? He's a golden bar for them.
@stoerre27 күн бұрын
4:54 Your notation is short for megasieverts, not millisieverts. The M on MSV must be lowercase, as in mSV. mSV means millisieverts.
@godwishyoutubeАй бұрын
Years years ago i saw this poor guy's photo at his last stages. He was just a skeleton a little bit flesh on it (without skin) hooked with chains on the bed (an image worse than any Hellriser movie). It was a horrific sight... still can't erase from my memory and probably youtuber didn't want to show it because of video will be deleted. As far as i know they kept him intentionally alive to observe to immense radiation effects on human body... If you see the photo yourselves you will understand why. Because there is no way a human being might become healed from that stage.
@dpmjmun18 күн бұрын
honestly, i'd prefer to ask for a moment with my family so i could say goodbye and die before the agony got to what this man felt; how much time doesn't matter when you're like that, at least to me i'd much rather have very few and bearable minutes to express love.
@Tearsace93Ай бұрын
I have seen this pictures on reddit years bevore….man this was god damn hard….this story ist so sad…. Please dont research this story on ANY plattforms its get a way worse than this….
@AngelSkies-mh4yv27 күн бұрын
This is what human greed does. Every day companies and people seek more and more wealth, without worrying about the well-being of others, they humiliate and step on others, they go over others to obtain profits for themselves or their own benefit. All this while these men accepted the reality of work imposed on them in order to support their families, they should not have suffered so much. This evil in humanity needs to end, people need to look at each other with more love, only God knows what this man suffered, the suffering he went through is unimaginable for all of us
@EverythingLvl7 күн бұрын
What a weird communist way of thinking. How is it that some people's wealth seeking is "imposed" but for others it's just their evil greed? We're all the same
@CaseyJaymzАй бұрын
Why did this have to happen on my Bday of all days! Truly appalled about this company's lack of Safety for their workers & glad the company got shutdown but it doesn't replace the lives that were lost!
@beepbopboop7727Ай бұрын
What has this got to do with you and your birthday???
@@beepbopboop7727 Nothing smart mouth it's just ironic is all!
@gnrtx-36969Ай бұрын
Probably one day you'll end up like that
@CaseyJaymzАй бұрын
@@gnrtx-36969 you already do look like that
@SalviAlmightyАй бұрын
Literally the worst death in history, and all because of corporate greed. While I understand that the medical staff were honoring Ouchi and his family's wishes, they should have pulled the plug (literally) way earlier. I can't even begin to imagine the agony this man went through before he was put in a coma. As much as you want to try saving someone, you also need to realise when they are too far gone to save. (Or put in serious perspective the quality of life they would have if they do survive)
@BysuicideIreintroducemydesigni7 күн бұрын
So you wanted the medical staff to pull the plug,then what? Get sued or jailed for unaliving him? Did you seriously miss the part where his family refused to sign a DNR?
@aileenbaebeeАй бұрын
They experimented on that poor guy 😢
@1833-j4gАй бұрын
It’s not necessarily residual radiation in his body, but rather residual chromosomal defects that spread to the stem cells
@TheKingSaltyАй бұрын
I like how around 4:45 the music got all Warhammer 40K
@The_Real_KaiO18 күн бұрын
They experimented on that poor man for three months. They knew he was already dead. Terrible.
@BogartttAwAw29 күн бұрын
3:06 Bros mixing uranium in a bucket is like they're mixing a cement 💀
@MrTiguriusАй бұрын
It’s the same all over the world, whole sale greed.
@dutyofcall7659Ай бұрын
Getting hit with 17.000 MsV is like having over 1.000 CT-scans in one second 😰
@burak_p012 ай бұрын
Keep up the good work bro
@Some_1_else18 күн бұрын
8:17 Ngl, I thought it was gonna be a sponsor 💀
@TacticalNomad3312 күн бұрын
😂😂 same
@Life_is_beautiful___Ай бұрын
This type of accidents and case studies make us realise how precious the life is
@arslanyounus1126Ай бұрын
a prettt young family man died just because of some greedy dogs who dont want to hire more employee to meet the work demand😢
@simple847527 күн бұрын
So making it alive from the incident lends you jail term that’s wild.
@Lilmickcrocodiledundee0001Ай бұрын
Why would you even consider not wearing proper PPE!!?? Idc if it's you're choice, I'm wearing it. But I'm not even working there in the first place!
@mrplayfulshadeАй бұрын
Yeah I woulda looked at my boss and told him to eff off lmao
@Kenj109023 күн бұрын
Me: "Give it me straight Doc, how bad is it?" Doctor: "Let me show you this video." {Watches video} Me: "Mmmmmmmmmmnmmnn-NOPE! I'm out! Peace!"✌️ {Grabs Glock}
@CNCmachiningisfun2 ай бұрын
Nuclear power is fascinating, yet terrifying! Just one mistake, and....................
@Kage999Ай бұрын
And..... 💥💀⚰️
@rahul025729 күн бұрын
could this guy be saved in today's time? can't even image what this guy went through.