Infectious disease is that guy from school who asked for a second paper to write on during an exam.
@DaTimmeh3 ай бұрын
While writing in the smallest font size known to man.
@hadifalex3 ай бұрын
there was an exam in undergrad physics that I felt strong going in. The format was that you only select 2 out of 3 main sections, but if you somehow complete all sections you are marked based whichever two brings you the highest score. It was one of those rare cases where I knew every single question asked like the back of my hand. Asking for a second exam notepad and seeing my good friends panicking thinking that one of the questions must have been particularly hard and lengthy (i mean, why ELSE would this dude need an entire extra notepad?!) was a core memory that will stick with me.
@yogurt24973 ай бұрын
@@hadifalex wow!
@lechatbotte.3 ай бұрын
This is so true
@rudemedic3 ай бұрын
Can confirm - source my Dad was an ID Consultant (Attending for the Americans).
@exp27453 ай бұрын
That "strong work" made me so unimaginably happy for the student.
@bigblue17623 ай бұрын
I say strong work to my students and house staff all the time
@drimwalkr89233 ай бұрын
With a work ethic like that, that student will be ready to break into, I mean, Investigate patients' living spaces whenever Dr. House asks, maybe even before he asks.
@Frozy_lolipop3 ай бұрын
Me too ! 😊
@JimzAuto2 ай бұрын
He’s a future felon, I mean Fellow
@lindsey823122 күн бұрын
😂😂
@JessicaTaylorPMC3 ай бұрын
Infectious Disease notes just casually be like "She inherited a red-billed Quelea on the first Tuesday of March in 1998"
@jazzykayonbroadway3 ай бұрын
😭🤣🤣
@phoenixfire89783 ай бұрын
Last time my father was hospitalised I started mentioning that ID had interviewed my mom and I and written something in his notes whenever we got new doctors or a different specialty in his room (Dad wasn’t cogent). EVERY single one of them clicked into that tab of his notes. They were so thorough that they had me fill a cup with water to the approximate amount that I filled my Dads wineglass at home so they could more accurately judge his alcohol consumption!
@adambailey79323 ай бұрын
I tested positive for Chagas disease after donating blood about 12 years ago. There were only something like 12 cases of verified endemic Chagas in the US at the time. It was like the opposite of winning the lottery. The doctor was compassionate but I could tell he was already writing up the case study in his head when he was talking to me. I couldn't blame him, I would have been practically giddy too if it weren't me. But he got me some Nifurtimox, so I didn't mind. It may or may not have done anything, but it was worth a shot. After seeing this, I think I practically handed him his note on a silver platter from the history I gave him with almost no prompting, because I had looked up the disease myself and gone through my own history with a fine-toothed comb trying to pinpoint the likely source and date of infection. I was lost to followup because I moved and I think he either changed jobs or retired. If you're still out there Dr. Brown, thank you.
@SujanraAcoma3 ай бұрын
It’s so uncommon that they only test you for Chagas if you’re a first time donor or you have a travel history. I worked in the relevant lab for five years and I don’t think I ever saw a positive Chagas.
@francescafrancesca35542 ай бұрын
I'm sorry to hear that you went through that, I hope you are doing better now 🫂
@bozoforce3 ай бұрын
Dude who drinks raw milk and fosters armadillos has both tuberculosis and leprosy... Truly unfortunate.
@FayeVert3 ай бұрын
He's also got Legionnaire's disease and probably all kinds of GI stuff.
@MikeMD473 ай бұрын
The raw milk is better linked to Brucella. TB is generally person-to-person transmission
@lh35403 ай бұрын
H5N1 goat milk FTW
@bozoforce3 ай бұрын
@@MikeMD47 intestinal TB spreads to humans via raw milk from an ungulate with disseminated TB.
@whyamimr3 ай бұрын
WILL NO ONE THINK OF THE MACROPHAGES????
@stephenmcginnis57893 ай бұрын
The correlation between those who refuse to take vaccines "because they don't want to mess with their immune system" and those who demand antibiotics for a fever of 98.7 and a runny nose always amazes and amuses me.
@Crymeariver2273 ай бұрын
I’m not amused by those doctors who write Rx’s for antibiotics for a 98.7° and a runny nose. Isn’t the overuse of antibiotics what got us into antibiotic resistance hell in the first place?
@stephenmcginnis57893 ай бұрын
@@Crymeariver227 Read again more carefully.
@Crymeariver2273 ай бұрын
@@stephenmcginnis5789 I did; I didn’t misread what you wrote or what I meant. The patient can’t get the antibiotics without the physician, right? Maybe our thoughts just went in two different directions.🙂
@emperor87163 ай бұрын
@@Crymeariver227 Hard agree. They even told us in our molecular biology classes that "Doctors should be taught not to overuse antibiotics." You're telling me they didn't know that already?
@Crymeariver2273 ай бұрын
@@emperor8716 they do but I still see it being done.
@PhoenixRoseYT3 ай бұрын
Dying laughing because my experience in ID and IM was literally this. It’s like the ER refused to admit anyone without starting vanc and zosyn first. I WISH I could put people in ID jail 😂😂😂 about to start my IM residency in July and then I want to be an ID doctor!
@Ananvil3 ай бұрын
Don't be ridiculous. We use zyvox.
@dr.floridamanphd3 ай бұрын
IM? Internal Medicine?
@ninjacuttingonions58613 ай бұрын
Damn is the antibiotic resistance so bad in US that you need to use those as empirical antibiotics?
@QuidamEU3 ай бұрын
@@ninjacuttingonions5861 I wonder how bad it will become after pip-taz is used for all their patients...
@sammiller66313 ай бұрын
@@ninjacuttingonions5861 Yes
@Maverick6263 ай бұрын
the catfish part really cracked me up
@SUIIIIIII773 ай бұрын
For the people who don't believe this : doctor house has a double specialty in infectious disease and nephrology
@DangerSquiggles3 ай бұрын
Also, Dr. House is a fictional character made up by a writer with no medical background
@deeceepnw3 ай бұрын
After 6 specialtyconsults, I was sent to ID (on a Friday) my consult lasted 107 mins. He said my case was “interesting” and not straightforward. He wanted to read my records over the weekend. 😮 As a side note, I went on a medical mission to Cambodia 🇰🇭 the following year and one of our clinics was on a floating village…you know where they’re so poor they float their house to avoid taxes. This means they drink the same water they clean their laundry in, defecate in, swim, fish. You get the picture. We had no EHR there, just a paper record 😂 Glad I brushed up on my ID before we left. 1300 patients in 6 days.
@fluffyunicorn57Ай бұрын
I don't think the floating villages have anything to do with tax evasion. The Vietnamese migrants to Cambodia were stripped of their identification documents under the Khmer Rouge and effectively live as stateless people, unable to buy land.
@jonathanballoch3 ай бұрын
"I didn't start catfishing until fellowship! Strong work!" Dead lolol
@Vishnu-B3 ай бұрын
"This is a little light" Man... Gotta love ID for the nerdiness. 😂😂
@deanawalko37853 ай бұрын
My daughter's ID Dr. Was exactly like this Dr. The most insane note taker I've ever seen not to mention the smartest human that I've ever met. every time we spoke he inspired me to learn he was an amazing physician.
@darcieclements48803 ай бұрын
The notes are too offload some of the information so that you can put more into thinking and problem solving. Is this much technique that makes someone look smart as it is being smart when it comes to complicated systems like that where you need to be watching for outbreaks and transfer mechanisms to head them off before they get out of control.
@erinrf66273 ай бұрын
He went for quality over quantity. He's going places.
@tyrant-den8843 ай бұрын
ID jail. Quantity of data is quality of date
@MsVilecat3 ай бұрын
@@tyrant-den884You want to focus on granularity, not quantity. They're not exactly the same thing.
@infernox10993 ай бұрын
I feel like I stopped paying attention to the video for 1 second and somehow it transitioned from niche medical problem into spy film dossier retrieval
@juliaappleton173 ай бұрын
My fav ID consult was tiger bite Abx coverage recommendation. Note was legendary.
@sonakshiawasthi3 ай бұрын
Antibiotic resistance is no joke man; my microbiology professor at Med school used to scare the shit out of us when he would tell us how close pharmacists and doctors have gotten to inventing the super bacteria 😢....felt goosebumps like u r in a literal Avengers movie 😭
@sarahelo0093 ай бұрын
I plan on taking microbio (undergrad) next semester and this makes me excited. Am I insane?
@sonakshiawasthi3 ай бұрын
@@sarahelo009 Nah bro, microbiologists and Infectious disease doctors are the whistleblowers medical professionals need before they accidentally make the most resistant concoction of pathogens and end half the human population like Thanos 😭 The world shall always be grateful to u guys
@sonakshiawasthi3 ай бұрын
@@sarahelo009 microbiology undergrad I think will cover alot more than med school microbiology, We usually only read about pathogenic microorganisms in medicine... But U gonna read about the good and helpful ones as well. I bet u gonna have a complex love-hate relationship with microbes 😅
@sarahprice6593 ай бұрын
Then there’s the problem of not enough work/research going into new antibiotic treatments cuz that’s not where the money is… so Pharma isn’t funding the studies…
@Ferd4143 ай бұрын
Yep... As a "horse-people", I'm seeing VERY similar issues in the barn - Over the past 20 years or so, we've effectively lost several previously very useful and effective dewormers to rapidly increasing resistance among the target worms. Today, we're starting to see clear sign that resistance to currently used ones is increasing rapidly, and at last word, we have practically nothing "on the drawing board" that's at all likely to come into accepted use anytime in the next 15-20 years, if that soon, to replace both the ones we've already "lost", and the ones that we're actively "losing" right now due to mis-application.
@maryroberts93153 ай бұрын
I think the guy who fosters armadillos is the infectious disease winner.
@PierSilver3 ай бұрын
eh, it's just leprosy, not that interesting.
@CircleOLove3 ай бұрын
@@PierSilver 😆
@pompe2213 ай бұрын
That line about "What's going to be on my tombstone?" reminded me of an ob-gyn I used to work with. Her tombstone line is going to be, "Keep scooting down. Little further. Little further."
@MsJMHS3 ай бұрын
To all the infectious disease doctors out there, thank you for saving my life! I didn't really have any idea what goes into doing your job, I met so many different doctors, apparently my case went up before a panel?? The entire panel decided to not tell me just how bad I was doing, because they didn't want me stressed out since I was experiencing organ failure. The director of ID came and visited me finally on my last day before being discharged, and apologized for not giving me fully informed care, he had told my next of kin and told them to not tell me 😳 I didn't know that people can and do die from sepsis, and mine was absolutely antibiotic resistant, they just kept putting up new IV antibiotics hoping something would work. Thank science for modern medicine, and all the medical staff that makes treatment effective ❤
@xanderopal73673 ай бұрын
This was very amusing. Especially from the perspective of someone who still drinks raw cow's milk from the dairy farm I grew up on-- and I'm told, in my infancy, my folks used a wheelbarrow of straw for a cradle while they milked. On the other hand, I recommend pasteurized milk for anyone who has not had a lifetime of exposure to a specific farm's biota.
@lh35403 ай бұрын
Avian flu has been giving farm cats lethal brain hemorrhages, might want to lay off the raw milk
@linamendt91493 ай бұрын
I worked at the FDA in infectious disease area for 30+ years. My colleagues were so interesting! My husband then was an animal foreign infectious disease specialist.
@harliyana3 ай бұрын
I am in ID now and I have to sift through notes of a recurrent admissions from years back and do a summary and I want to cry. It is giving me another level of crazy.
@llamababiezhellyeah3 ай бұрын
I LOVE infectious disease. The stuff makes me feel like Indiana Jones, but extra, extra, extra nerdy.
@karenward2673 ай бұрын
This clip is how I think ID teams worldwide talk. Thank you for my early morning west coast chuckle.
@Sammysgrammie6503 ай бұрын
Mine too😂😂😂❤
@AryanBanyal-g3j3 ай бұрын
ID saying strong work on notes!? Damn bruh🗿
@janetesan10553 ай бұрын
Everyone where I work would have a life sentence to infectious disease jail with no option of parole
@dr.floridamanphd3 ай бұрын
Loophole: they quit and are immediately rehired. Their “life” ended upon termination and a new “life” began upon being hired. 🤭
@silverjohn60373 ай бұрын
While being trigger happy with antibiotics isn't the way to go being gun shy of them can be just as bad. Jim Henson passed away after he was sent home from an emergency ward with a respiratory problem that developed into pneumonia. I don't envy doctors trying to find the right balance in those situations.
@notlikely44683 ай бұрын
Ok...I'M NOT the infectious disease guy But, I play one on tv.... This can be the problem Do you start a wide spectrum antibiotic NOW (Like the dopey ED doc on the weekend) Or a type specific antibiotic that may not cover the bacteria you fear and then wait for the cultures And if you guess wrong...that patient MIGHT be in extreme condition by the time you have the results to justify using the right antibiotic
@rickystassi24663 ай бұрын
The mistake is not taking cultures first. Then try broad spectrum until cultures come back.
@darcieclements48803 ай бұрын
I thought he died from flesh eating bacteria from a toe cut that he didn't seek help with in time. The whole reason people know now that if you get red lines radiating out from a small infection that you need to see a doctor immediately is because of his case and all of the publicity around it. I can't think of who that could possibly be confused with to lead to the idea that his death was a pneumonia based death and pneumonia is not necessarily bacteria and way more complicated than I care to get into right now but I can guarantee you that if pneumonia is involved there's a darn good chance that antibiotics are not going to be the solution anyway. Bacterial infections alone very rarely actually lead to pneumonia, there's almost always another complicating factor at the root of it and It remains a symptom that is very very deadly regardless of what causes it. I just think it's important people understand that most of the causes of pneumonia are not actually bacterial in origin even though at one point in time we thought that. Also please get your vaccines against the various organisms that cause pneumonia, it matters a lot.
@fluffyunicorn57Ай бұрын
@@rickystassi2466 But trying antibiotics then stopping before the full course is done is also terrible stewardship. It's not a thing you should be jumping to as a default.
@DaveTexas3 ай бұрын
My fever of unknown origin about five years ago was only West Nile. It wasn’t interesting enough to even get an ID consult. My PCP told me to go sleep it off because there was nothing more to be done. Five years later, I’m still sleeping. All. The. Time. Roughly 12 hours per day. That got me the ID consult. Nothing tested positive. The sleep never went away so we called it PVFS (Post-Viral Fatigue Syndrome). It might be regular CFS, but the hilarious part is that there’s no way to tell the difference! ID doctor lost interest in me after that diagnosis…or lack thereof, more accurately.
@S-mf8co3 ай бұрын
I too have chronic fatigue, except doctors have no explanation for it. I 'm sending positive, healing thoughts your way.
@DaveTexas3 ай бұрын
@@S-mf8co thank you. Five years is a long time to have been sleeping my life away…
@radicalratx77903 ай бұрын
Doc here, check your ferritin levels, and vitamin D, B9, and B12 as well for good measure. I've seen incredibly low ferritin (storage form of iron) in postviral patients, and that can explain severe tiredness and cognitive dysfunction.
@DaveTexas3 ай бұрын
@@radicalratx7790 trust me, I have EXTENSIVE blood work done every three months. Every test - ferritin, all vitamins, every hormone, liver & kidney function, everything - comes back in the normal range. The only ones that fall outside the normal range are the ones related to the Type 1 Diabetes I’ve had for 44 years (A1C of 6.2 on my last test), occasional dips in testosterone (I’m on replacement therapy), and liver enzymes that sometimes creep up due to lingering effects from near-failure of my liver a few years back due to toxicity from a prescription drug I was taking - a drug that doesn’t have liver toxicity as one of its common side effects. Oh, and my cortisol levels tend not to rise in the morning. That one puzzles all my doctors, but it might explain at least some of the constant fatigue. I’ve had extensive neurological examination, which discovered a cyst on my pituitary. (We initially thought it was metastatic melanoma, but it turned out to be just a cyst, thankfully. Probably congenital.) Without more tests, we can’t determine if the cyst is affecting any of my hormones, but my neurologist didn’t think it would be causing my CFS. The thing is, my chronic fatigue started suddenly. I can pinpoint the week I started sleeping way more than usual. That week coincides with the West Nile recovery, coming about a week or two after my West Nile symptoms faded. That’s why the doctors are fairly confident in calling it PVFS. I went from my usual nine hours of sleep per night to about 14 hour of sleep plus constant daytime fatigue in the space of a few days. After months of tests, scans, and imaging, the doctor’s advice was to try to wait it out to see if it got better. Then the world shut down for the pandemic and I didn’t work for a year (I’m an opera musician and all live theater was shut down until mid-2021. I continued to sleep 11-14 hours every day, more on days after I did something as strenuous as going grocery shopping. My iron levels, ferritin, B & D vitamins have never fallen outside the normal range. Being on testosterone replacement, I’ve actually had trouble with elevated hematocrit levels in the past, requiring regular therapeutic phlebotomy, but it’s been about a decade since that last happened and we altered my testosterone treatment to prevent elevated hematocrit. I’ve seen my primary care physician, my endocrinologist, and also a neurologist, a hematologist, an oncologist, an infectious disease specialist, a vascular specialist, an ENT specializing in apnea, and probably a couple of other doctors that I’m forgetting about. I have had to cut back on work by about 90% because I’m either asleep all the time or too exhausted to function, so I’m living below the poverty level. I can’t afford any more tests or doctors except when absolutely necessary, like last year when we discovered I had stage 2 melanoma. That, along with all the MRIs to look for metastasis, wiped me out financially - and I have insurance. The copays just drained all my savings, which I had only started to build back up after the liver failure of a few years earlier, which sent me into medical bankruptcy. So there’s nothing more I can do to try to find a cause for the fatigue. I’ve resigned myself to just sleeping away half or more of the rest of my life, too tired to do anything else despite the fact that I’m only in my mid-50s. If I could afford to move into a retirement facility of some sort, I would, but I’ll never be able to afford that. Oh, and I’ve been turned down for SSI/Disability three times - all three using disability attorneys to help me navigate the process. If the melanoma comes back, I’ve decided that there would be no point in trying to fight it. How’s that for a fun little comment?
@darcieclements48803 ай бұрын
I suggest checking with endocrinology next in case there's a hormone issue involved. I really hate the catch-all I don't want to deal with this category of illnesses and the whole oh you had a virus before and now you just have lingering effects for the rest of your life, sucks to be you type of mentality is something that bothers me a lot. Obviously something still wrong, we just need to understand how the something is still wrong so that we can fix it. It's great that you figured out a virus is the reason something went wrong, but what does the something?!
@purpletetrisdragon3 ай бұрын
Because I have Cystic Fibrosis and have Staph and Pseudomonas, infection disease is consulted quite a bit for my IV antibiotics. Fun fact about me, at one point in my life, I tested positive for staph, pseudo and MRSA, so I used to walk around joking that I was basically a walking biohazard. No need to worry though, I have always been very careful to stay away from anyone who is immuno compromised. 💜
@almaraNZ3 ай бұрын
Yep. I'm an RN on the gen med / respiratory ward. CF get single rooms as 'protective isolation' to stop you getting any resp bugs you don't need..... But there is an unspoken awareness that it's also bc if anyone is going to cultivate their own personal science project of an antibiotic resistant bug, it's gunna be y'all
@purpletetrisdragon3 ай бұрын
Yeup! 😂
@shgstewart46743 ай бұрын
Anyone *else*, you mean. Congratulations on your longevity, anyway. :)
@8523wsxc3 ай бұрын
Why get some pathogens and parasites when you could have all of them?
@mixiearmadillo74523 ай бұрын
Fostering armadillos 💀💀💀
@D4Z3D_3 ай бұрын
BUT THEY ARE SO CUTE!
@eMderGirls3 ай бұрын
So I've been binge watching these videos for last three days instead of studying for my exams and I'm so amazed by the acting skills, like I keep forgetting it's all the same person, with just expressions and speach you can know exactly who is who and I totally love it. I also haven't laugh so much in months, so, thank you. (I have also deep compassionate feelings for emergency's burnout, it's like, I'm feeling this on a personal level.)
@virginiamoss70453 ай бұрын
Keep harping on this issue, Dr. G, as well as all the other issues in medicine. You are the cutting edge of this fight. Thanks for all you do and do so very well.
@robertgibbs61543 ай бұрын
"It's a little light" and "I didn't start catfishing until I was in fellowship." Has me rolling on the ground. ID physicians take their job sooooo seriously.
@Lychz3 ай бұрын
Dude I cannot stress how unironically real is this.
@haythamkenway133 ай бұрын
I want to watch a conversation between the ID doc and the rheumatologist!!!
@elisabetk25953 ай бұрын
I made the mistake of reading notes while I was still in the middle of a two-month hospital stay, so I had to laugh out loud at the copy/paste. I would get so mad about errors that would be propagated for days when someone mistyped e.g relevant medical history. And by days, I mean weeks. Fixing those errors practically took an act of Congress.
@63Maryann363 ай бұрын
I ❤ infectious disease docs. My favorite class was parasitology: part trivia pursuit, part science fiction. Nerd heaven!
@ThatGuyUpThere3 ай бұрын
The only problem I have with Infectious desease is they are not accounting the super bacteria has bigger odds to be zoonotic in origin, the overuse of antibiotics from the meat industry severly overshadows human medicine.
@susanjoycesabo84503 ай бұрын
I am a semi-retired doc in Public Health and Addiction Medicine. In 2020 when COVID hit, the medical profession really depended upon Infectious Disease. To me it has always been very interesting and we thank ID for their service.
@sketchyskies85313 ай бұрын
I don’t understand like 90% of the medical terminology in these videos but they’re pretty funny regardless
@kellyburds29913 ай бұрын
Okay I know the random people with interesting descriptions are probably jokes, but I do know a person who was born and grew up in a remote and impoverished region of south-east Asia who has a combo of a bacteria and a fungus infecting her GI tract so badly that she went from having ulcers to sepsis, but I swear to God those same infections seem to be fighting her stage 4 cancer.
@philippak77263 ай бұрын
Horrifying for one reason or another, but you get that in meds. As a total layman the ones I know about is "the sickle cell mutation protects people from malaria because the cells implode when the disease attaches" and of course the famous cow-pox-prevents-smallpox
@RabbidTribble3 ай бұрын
Well, that would certainly be an interesting cancer cure
@Frommerman3 ай бұрын
That's unlikely, but actually possible.
@punchkitten8743 ай бұрын
@@FrommermanActually extremely likely. Cancer needs fuel to grow. GI tract infections are usually treated by putting the patient on a low-residue diet (very low carb, no fiber) so they don't have much poop. Cancer needs carbs to grow, so that's one way to starve it out. Not to mention the infection in the GI tract was sopping up that sugar for itself, also starving the cancer.
@le_th_3 ай бұрын
Well, considering chemo nearly kills you so it can kill off the cancer, maybe it's not so odd after all?
@timothydavis83883 ай бұрын
You should do a trauma rounds one where it's only 95 year old patients needing PT/OT/Facility Placement, somehow thats' what like 70% of the "traumas" were at my hospital because ortho refused to admit them lol...
@Hagvan4523 ай бұрын
I was really looking forward to this one and I am not disappointed in the expected dr house reference
@RabbidTribble3 ай бұрын
Ooh, what was the reference?
@jmpanther843 ай бұрын
I’m a nurse on an infectious disease unit. This is spot on how our ID doc is. She’s awesome and easily the smartest doc in the hospital.
@lauraspaeth61303 ай бұрын
The cat-fishing lines were comedy gold, especially since you can’t them coming!😂
@pkonnekerАй бұрын
My grandpa got a resistant infection in the hospital. The struggle is real.
@c.renmark18803 ай бұрын
Oooh: histo/blasto, rabies, Legionnaires, Q fever, listeria, leprosy, all the parasites and cryptosporidium and giardia, Infectious disease must have a lot of fun when a veterinarian comes in sick.
@dirtbagdeacon3 ай бұрын
The raw milk!!!! It's this huge movement in Christian fundamentalist circles and extreme crunchy groups right now. I don't understand why they are putting themselves and their families at risk, but considering all the other risky behaviors they do, I am surprised more kids haven't been gravely injured or died. Certainly many of their kids are going without critical pediatric care.
@BlackCanary873 ай бұрын
I know!! PASTEURIZATION STOPS TUBERCULOSIS!! WHAT ARE THEY THINKING??
@jaredragland47073 ай бұрын
Listeria isn't a problem any more, is it? We got rid of that stuff with... oh right, pasteurization.
@dirtbagdeacon3 ай бұрын
@@jaredragland4707 Also, anthrax! Tuberculosis! Bird flu! E. Coli! Salmonella! Camphylobacter!
@Cara-393 ай бұрын
The anti-vaxxers brought back deadly childhood diseases so why not listeria too??
@bosstowndynamics54883 ай бұрын
They don't see it as a risk, and they do see things like pasteurisation as a risk. They're wrong, but because of their views they're not just convinced they're doing the right thing, they're also convinced that the people trying to help have a secret evil agenda so they don't believe it when people try to explain this stuff. It's not an easy problem to address
@sithisaksay68893 ай бұрын
Ok, but that random Cambodia mention makes my Cambodian heart really happy 🥰
@ttselha643 ай бұрын
Love it. My ID consult 12 years ago resulted in recovering from pneumonia and cellulitis.❤️
@rebeccacrockett83343 ай бұрын
What I love about my ID folks, is that they are JUST as direct and blunt as this. They always cut to the shit in conversation but leave crazy consult notes.
@cuniving78313 ай бұрын
I'm having awful flashbacks to my surgical intern rotations where I'd have to explain my consultants rational - or total lack thereof - to the ID consult reg.
@colindunn40353 ай бұрын
Dude excellent job. I was losing confidence in your ability to get new jokes in but you are delivering! Thank you for all of the good laughs through my training and beyond.
@kittencaboodle81242 ай бұрын
delivery on "a LOT of river water" is impeccable
@TheLunarElixir3 ай бұрын
I lost it at "I didn't start catfishing until fellowship" 😂😂 strong work as always from Dr. Glaucomflecken
@meklee5981Ай бұрын
Meanwhile an ID physician in our local hospital ordered hantavirus serology with NO rodent exposure...🤦♀️
@kkuro70543 ай бұрын
Pro tip: _artisanal_ "skilled, related to craftsmen" does not mean and is not pronounced the same as _artesian_ "related to Artois, especially of wells relying on ground pressure to bring up water".
@LadyAnuB3 ай бұрын
Olympia beer campaign: I Brake for Artesians
@iuliak84113 ай бұрын
Infectious disease feels like such a heartfelt guy!! I love him!
@trychanreaksa45053 ай бұрын
I’m from Cambodia! Been a fan for so long! I was so surprised when he mentioned my country! 😁
@princ3sstofu3 ай бұрын
They sound unhinged and a lot of fun. Please do more of infectious diseases!!!
@CptnPeggyCarter3 ай бұрын
Those first 30 seconds are so very relatable. The super bugs will someday get us all, and it will be our own darned fault!
@bunnicula32212 ай бұрын
When someone knew your family's history better than you:
@ILoveMyselPH-DАй бұрын
I have an unbelievable story regarding being prescribed antibiotics for something for MONTHS, and it turned out i didn't need them at all, and i had a condition that mimics a certain infection. Developed leaky gut from all of the candida. Opportunistic it is.
@ReDeadLauren3 ай бұрын
I'm always waiting for infectious disease to ream out another doctor for ordering neosporin. Our ID docs hate neosporin with a burning passion
@FayeVert3 ай бұрын
I WISH the AMA, etc would stop listing it as something that should be in your home/workplace first aid kit.
@ReDeadLauren3 ай бұрын
RIGHT?! It's the devil istg
@FallacyBites3 ай бұрын
@@FayeVertplease elaborate, for i am an ignorant civilian and need all the help I can get
@FayeVert3 ай бұрын
@@FallacyBites it's no more effective than plain vaseline, the antibiotics in it aren't concentrated enough to actually kill anything, but are likely to contribute to antibiotic resistance. Also, it's occlusive (meaning it keeps dirt in and air out) and sticky (dirt sticks to it). I hates it.
@FallacyBites3 ай бұрын
@@FayeVert well, crap. Now I know! Thank you ❤
@blusafe13 ай бұрын
Dr. G's humor is for doctors, but somehow makes it good enough for everyone else to laugh too.
@kristincarr42482 ай бұрын
As an infectious diseases doctor, I wish our hospital had infectious diseases jail for: people who place ID consults before an HPI is started, those don't order blood cultures in septic patients (happens a lot), treating candida lung colonization,asymptomatic bacteriuria in pre-heart surgery patients, and using vanc/zosyn for strep cellulitis.
@FallacyBites3 ай бұрын
A friend used to work on a sheep ranch in camarillo, and one the shepherds got cutaneous anthrax. The doctor was super excited, because the population is mostly city. They hardly EVER get to see zoonotic stuff. The doctor was calling in all the other doctors and med students to come have a look. It's always fun to be weird enough to be found fascinating.
@ericthompson39823 ай бұрын
I, ok... there's a lot to unpack here.
@chazz300003 ай бұрын
Those consult where full of question buzz words, I had PTSD flashbacks
@the_newt_nest3 ай бұрын
Phil is going to be wearing the fancy sunglasses soon
@Spock3563 ай бұрын
In fervid defense of emergency medicine, we often TRY to be antibiotic stewards (I even will tell people not to take the pointless antibiotics that urgent care prescribed them) but the administration makes it so difficult. They are absolutely obsessed with sepsis markers and scores (because it affects their reimbursement) so we get nasty emails and pointed comments if we don't empirically order broad spectrum coverage on practically everyone with two abnormal vital signs 🙃
@PhoenixRoseYT3 ай бұрын
That’s why we need to unionize and re-evaluate using SIRS criteria. You can meet SIRS criteria after a brisk walk in the summer. Stand up to them.
@IPEX-BADD3 ай бұрын
It's a little light. "Said while weighing in hand" 😅
@dsagent3 ай бұрын
To be fair humanity has had a good run.
@urielgrey3 ай бұрын
Beautiful simply beautiful! Really appreciate the much needed laugh. I love how every aspect is perfect including how ID wears his glasses. Thank you and your family for being yourselves :) you're pretty darn awesome!
@MissDuke20123 ай бұрын
I had a fever for TWO WEEKS from bacteria!! Every one said, “oh there’s a stomach bug going around.” Not me though! The nurses and doctors wouldn’t budge. Omg it was the worst intestinal pain ever. It was worse than giving birth. Finally, I got the damn nurses and doctors to let me do a stool sample, and shock, the results caused the the health department to get involved. All I needed was a round of antibiotics!!! So “simple!” That restaurant I got my food poisoning bacteria from also got a surprise visit.
@tiffanysaffell40493 ай бұрын
I recently read a (news) article about an individual who was suspected to be carrying a new to the US strain of an illness. They could tell because they had found signs of the disease in sewage samples. The “fun” part came in when they said they lived in either city 1 and commuted to city 2 or vice versa because their stool had been isolated to those two cities. There was a large population in those two cities who did have commute patterns in either direction depending on their industry.
@TheRealJBMcMunn3 ай бұрын
When I was an ICU attending and we had a patient who'd been there forever, we'd consult ID just to get a summary of the patient's care.
@TheWalterHWhite3 ай бұрын
Blood cultures Negative: "probably a false negative. Repeat cultures." Blood cultures positive: "probably a contaminated draw. Repeat cultures." The second round of cultures ordered by hospitalist: "will d/c ordered cultures as my abx will cover the likely pathogen and differentials."
@supercalafra3 ай бұрын
Too accurate!! I think it should be standard protocol to draw two cultures an hour apart from the get-go.
@tagtraumerin50773 ай бұрын
Infectious disease is my favourite character besides ortho bro and obviously Jonathan
@Ragnar12103 ай бұрын
Please make some videos about UROLOGY! 🙏 Like 'How to ace your Urology residency interview' or 'Urology rounds'!
@Green-iu9qb3 ай бұрын
In two minutes round, i got confused and tired of infections disease, imagine full 3 hours round, god help them .
@hathhath24443 ай бұрын
It must be the 'don't meet your heroes' because infectious disease are my kind of people. The snark, sarcasm and comments. I almost wanna drink river water, feed pigeons on my balcony, clean cat litter trays and travel to Mediterranean country to contact leishmania...just to meet one of these guys!
@FallacyBites3 ай бұрын
Dr. Mark Crislip has a fun podcast called "gobbet o' pus" where he discusses interesting cases he's run into. He's the reason I know to avoid raw goat milk/cheese, and also that heroin addictions involve A LOT of heart valve infections from using non-sterile water sources...ew...
@lifeinflight7778Ай бұрын
Here's a scary one if the patient visited Hawai'i, Rat Lung disease. Wash your lettuce and don't eat slugs/snails. Eosinophilic meningitis is a savage beast.
@taylorsmith41283 ай бұрын
Dude!! I had (have) a yeast infection for over a decade, initiated by antibiotics and perpetuated by alcoholism (since recovered). Antibiotic stewardship!!! Gut health!!
@lancedicker8583 ай бұрын
Nice! Only thing missing is ID's usual mysterious discharge recommendation for "4-6 weeks" of their antibiotics. Well which is it, 4 or 6?? And starting when??? 😛
@darcieclements48803 ай бұрын
I am not an infectious disease specialist but if I had to guess, start immediately and 4 weeks after symptoms resolve so it's 4 weeks if they go away immediately and 6 weeks if it takes a long time for the symptoms to go away. But that's just a hunch based on how it's done for animals and plants.
@WasabiSniffer3 ай бұрын
ohio river valley woman living in an abandoned church belfry loaded with bats... NEXT TO A BARN IN HARVEST SEASON
@juanlehoux1063 ай бұрын
Antibiotic stewardship in the hospital while they give massive doses to livestock with every feed.
@rxmcgree3 ай бұрын
Is anyone else disappointed that they do not know the initial APGAR score for any of the patients. A fu history? Really?
@lughd55783 ай бұрын
I plan on going into epidemiology and I dream of the days where i get to take insanely detailed histories
@treblebat3 ай бұрын
It's me. I'm Ohio River Valley woman who loves bats.
@davidgoodnow2692 ай бұрын
Thank you! I felt that, having ended up with photos medical texts, twice.
@michelle_ajema3 ай бұрын
The facial expression at "Oh my God" is sending me. 😂😂😂😂
@Crow-Fly3 ай бұрын
I'm not in medicine at all, but I love these videos and reading through all of your inside jokes :) you guys are great!
@kittylynndale52643 ай бұрын
I love them all, but ID and ortho are my favorite docs
@jenniferbates28113 ай бұрын
I'm in Rhode Island, and I my mom is friends with a lady whose family grew up near the Dupont plants in Michigan and holy shit did her and her family grow up with lots of medical problems!
@narre713 ай бұрын
Im a surgeon, and I have this immense urge to please ID doctors. Idk why, I just kinda wanna impress them, make them proud, make them happy. LOVE ME ID DOCTORS PLEASE
@buffewo638615 күн бұрын
My VA Doc just finished his time here in San Antonio and is moving into an ID position out of state. I promised to find something "Interesting" to catch if I ever travel that way.
@danielcampion2513 ай бұрын
Infectious disease meets rural medicine when?!?!?!??