Thank you for including me again! So fun and interesting!
@thermalshockxАй бұрын
Thank you for always giving us great, helpful, useful content! ❤
@katdoesntdoartАй бұрын
omg!
@heatherholzhaus7013Ай бұрын
It's Dr Youn! You are such an informative Dr on KZbin. Thank you
@pancakeHLP69Ай бұрын
hi there doctor!
@AjitaniShirasuАй бұрын
Based Dr. Youn appearance as always
@Woohoo8888Ай бұрын
imagine PERMANENTLY disabling a patient and saying its not a big deal
@justahugenerd1278Ай бұрын
Admittedly I don't know how it works in medical school but I'd go through hell to report that guy to the medical board/the hospital/etc. because that's absolutely insane what that surgeon said
@KaitLynnHtАй бұрын
Apparently this "doctor" didn't understand how difficult it is to get disability.
@VKM-xs5tvАй бұрын
@@KaitLynnHt And how inadequate it is as well. John Oliver has a great episode on this for anyone curious.
@KaitLynnHtАй бұрын
@@VKM-xs5tv yeah, I enjoyed watching that. My mom has a horror story and my daughter and myself are both in the middle of horror stories of our own
@BlackReshiramАй бұрын
instantly grounds for retracting their medical license imo jfc
@ViolinMDАй бұрын
Thanks for including me again! Not sure if I should laugh or cry! Even though I've heard people say some wild things in medicine, hearing them all back to back like this is pretty shocking! 😳
@T_Rav27Ай бұрын
It was so nice seeing you in this video. Been following you for quite a long time. Keep being awesome!
@smaakjeksАй бұрын
Thanks for looking after us when we get sick
@SarafinaSummersАй бұрын
Girl, I am being told that everything is, and I am quoting my doctors, “it is all psychological, the body remembers with the brain does not, go see your therapist. “My therapist, “why are you here? You should be in your doctors office for this. “
@ErutaniaRoseАй бұрын
@@SarafinaSummers Omg this. I swear...Like, I already have weekly therapy and medicate my anxiety. It's NOT my head, lol. My own therapist is always like, "It can make things worse, or be a part of it, but it's not CAUSING this."
@JakeGoodmanMDАй бұрын
Honored to be included in this Doctor Mike!
@helpyourselfimbusy574726 күн бұрын
Very glad to see some mental health specialists in this video. Thank you for coming on and informing people that depression is much more complicated than “in your head”.
@bobowon5450Ай бұрын
as a patient the worst thing I've ever heard was when I was taken in by ambulance and barely alive, couldn't drink or eat at all without puking, had been increasingly sick for awhile and was in so much pain i could barely move. Doctor said "good news we're just going to send you home with some tylonal". One second opinion later and the second doctors words to the rest of the staff was "under no circumstances is anyone to discharge this patient!" he's now my new doctor because he took me in :)
@CuriosityKitty-j5jАй бұрын
Yeah those other kinds of doctors think they know everything ,I hate them but like you found there are better doctors out there .
@kristenlogan2594Ай бұрын
Second opinions can be so crucial sometimes
@CuriosityKitty-j5jАй бұрын
@@kristenlogan2594 Exactly, that's if you're lucky to get one as some doctors can become very nasty and strike you off the surgery patients list and you have to find another surgery. But since covid, I think things have calmed down a bit 🤞 ( this is in UK ,by the way) .
@unlimitedgaming6474Ай бұрын
May I ask what the reason for your hospitalisation was if you don’t mind sharing?
@bobowon5450Ай бұрын
@@unlimitedgaming6474 over the course of about a year and a dozen or so dr appointments I was shoved off time and time again told to just eat more fiber. Turns out i have crohns disease and am functionally allergic to fiber .
@Trident_Gaming03Ай бұрын
3:54 Psychiatrist: "It's all in your head" Patient: "Yes, that's... kind of the exact reason why I came to see you?"
@Novis-NАй бұрын
A stroke is all in your head to.
@yutika237Ай бұрын
😂😂
@Veronica-ew8ycАй бұрын
@@Trident_Gaming03 the best answer 👍😂😅
@Lunarelle1013Ай бұрын
My dad always tells me that, to which I reply, "Yes, Dad, that's the whole point. My anxiety and depression are caused by something in my brain that doesn't quite work as it should... hence why I go see a doctor, just like you do because your arteries are all shot to heck." Seriously... concept.
@monikagombkotoova2074Ай бұрын
Me with MS: "Yes it is, and some of it is in my spinal cord as well!"
@ekeg_Ай бұрын
making a mistake in surgery and saying 'not a big of a deal' is crazy
@slipstick985Ай бұрын
A new patient complemented the dentist on his chair side manner, "Did you learn that in dental school?" "No, all they told us was, whatever happens, don't say 'OOPs.'"
@garychant6444Ай бұрын
Oopsies im just so clumsy
@Stars-MineАй бұрын
one has to hope the person was just trying to cope.
@WhisperingWempeАй бұрын
Or saying "lemme take a quick leak into this chest cavity before we sew him up. He'll be smelly for days and won't have a clue where it's coming from ha, ha, ha." That would be my worst nightmare. 🥺
@ツkittycat__751ツАй бұрын
Fr
@Alexander_VWАй бұрын
2:02 "So suck it up" during LABOR is completely unacceptable.
@elizabethhall339Ай бұрын
That guy should’ve been sacked ages ago!
@dreamon8274Ай бұрын
@@elizabethhall339 *woman
@Gaymore16Ай бұрын
Craziest part, ususally male doctors say this, not women docters! (Ya know- more sympathetic to moms because they are women as well) but that woman is so unsympathetic and literally has no emotions or anything, and said this to a woman in LABOR, WTF
@cs4887Ай бұрын
@@Gaymore16my experience with male doctors has been the opposite actually 🤷🏻♀️ they were more considerate than a lot of the female doctors
@wmdkittyАй бұрын
"Suck it up" is just... unacceptable. Period. Eff that. Grew up "sucking it up" and "toughing it out" and now I'm paying the price.
@xionmemoriaАй бұрын
I had a teacher in college who refused to answer questions from female students. He said he was there to train "Doctors, not mothers." He is STILL employed.
@DelliGamingАй бұрын
HOW? LIKE HOW IMPORTANT CAN HE BE?
@nataliehitchcox3705Ай бұрын
How is this possible?
@zaynes5094Ай бұрын
@@DelliGaming That's the narcissistic, self-absorbed type of doctor you DO want to avoid.
@anjalib8912Ай бұрын
Jesus, tell me thier name so I can avoid them
@cindywhitlow4887Ай бұрын
Very possible he is tenured @@nataliehitchcox3705
@StreetofCrocodilesАй бұрын
Worst thing a doctor has said to me? "I am gonna be straight with you, I think you are just trying to get high" I was in the ER. I was returning because my staph infection wasn't being slowed by the meds, the wound had tripled in size, and it had become necrotic. Since I had been there, a doctor caught that my staph infection was actually MRSA. They somehow got the wrong person's paperwork from the lab, and didn't realize it, when making the initial diagnosis, so I was given the wrong treatment. It was after all this that the emergency medicine doctor told me that. Luckily for me the ID specialist was there, and heard that. So I didn't see that doctor again, until my legal process, for the malpractice, started. That infection ruined my life. It took 18 months for the wound to close, once the infection was gone. I went into renal failure, twice, during that infection. I was illegally fired for not being able to be at work. Lost my house, my insurance, my car, everything. After I was over the infection, and wound treatment had started, I had to not only deal with all of that, but two law suits. The malpractice, and the employment. It has been almost 15 years and I am still not back to even the material status of my previous life. But, yeah, drug seaking behavior, am I right?
@nor-alexАй бұрын
Abhorrent!! Great that you recovered though. I truly wish you well in life going forward.
@laurao3274Ай бұрын
I'm sorry that happened to you.
@Persephone-nr1dlАй бұрын
I hate those doctors with the fire of a thousand suns. I have a friend who died by suicide because she couldn't live with pain anymore. I have chronic pain, too, but at least I have an MRI to prove it.
@margauxnodvin7478Ай бұрын
@@Persephone-nr1dlsame. But I developed an addiction to narcotic pain meds thanks to a dr who WAY overprescribed them to me. I had to get into a Suboxone program to get off of the copious amounts I was prescribed. Now that my record shows I was on Suboxone, I can NEVER be eligible to get narcotic pain meds for my chronic pain again, no matter how much more the discs in my spine degenerate. I have to suffer the rest of my life because of ONE doctor’s actions!
@zackinator1439Ай бұрын
A psychologist saying "It's all in your head" is wild. Like, yeah bro, I know it is. It's your job to fix things that are all in my head.
@tayniloalves7089Ай бұрын
At least in the video psychologists was not mentioned... But I agree with you, not only for psychologists, but any healthcare provider ... And I disagree on the “it's your job to fix”, in healthcare the care is a commitment from both the pacient and the professional
@latenightbreakdowns2107Ай бұрын
Psychiatrist*
@MonkeyJedi99Ай бұрын
I would want to turn to that psychologist and ask, "Wait, does this mean you've been a dental hygienist all along?"
@lisarodriguez6966Ай бұрын
Very important nuance. You've gotta work with the therapist/psychiatrist. They can't 'fix' you through their will alone@@tayniloalves7089
@bjbear5202Ай бұрын
My psychologist always says "just because it's all in your head doesn't mean it isn't real".
@ColoringKariaАй бұрын
The gyno saying that to a patient is exactly why many women and especially those who have been victims of sexual assault avoid going to the gyno. It’s cruelty and sadism in that field that would not be allowed in any other.
@IDONTGIVEAF-ew6bwАй бұрын
I don’t think I’ll ever go as a survivor of childhood SA
@Mewse1203Ай бұрын
I have heard so many stories of Labor and Delivery doctors and nurses being incredibly cruel to folks giving birth. I don't understand why they would get into that specialty just to be awful to the people.
@amberali9248Ай бұрын
@@IDONTGIVEAF-ew6bwplease go 🥹 I know it’s really discouraging when you hear stories like these, but I promise the majority of doctors want to help and won’t treat you that way. Unfortunately, there’s bad eggs in every field and we can’t really stop them all from getting in. But your life is way too important to not be taken care of.
@kamii_kaizenАй бұрын
@@IDONTGIVEAF-ew6bwsame
@becky2235Ай бұрын
Exactly !!! Why is it allowed?
@shadowofchaos7675Ай бұрын
"its all in your head" well yes and I want it out of my head
@GhostBear3067Ай бұрын
Last time I heard something like that I replied with "and pneumonia is in the lungs, what is your point?"
@ghyslainabelАй бұрын
"Doctor, are you suggesting that sometime those symptoms may originate in the lungs or pancreas?" Of course it is all in in the head!
@beatyz2Ай бұрын
I live by the tried-and-true advice of Dumbledore himself, "Of course it's happening inside your head Harry, but why on Earth should that mean it's not real?"❤
@supermarikfanАй бұрын
“Well duh, where else would it be”?
@floramenschenkind2476Ай бұрын
Those answers are so amazing, I have to remember them!
@tranatkikomi6873Ай бұрын
“I have reason to believe you’re faking” was said to my face by a doctor. I outright cried as I told her I felt so sick and tired and sore that I had missed my birthday, Christmas, my niece’s birth, the final dinner I could have with Nan and Pop, Pop’s funeral, my cousin’s wedding… Turned out I wasn’t faking and if she had checked more than the basic iron and glucose, she would have seen it sooner. Because a few years after that, thanks to a doctor who actually did listen and took me seriously and would refer me to specialists she reckoned could help, I was diagnosed with Graves’ Disease. But by that point, the surgeon already knew my thyroid was gonna have to come out because the ultrasound showed it had enlarged significantly.
@froggybug25 күн бұрын
My (EX) doctor when I complained about my heart racing, palpitations…he said “you just don’t know how to be healthy.”
@TeoPP-k2sАй бұрын
That's crazy! I’ve started questioning everything, especially government health advice! After reading "Health and Beauty Mastery", I completely changed my habits. This book reveals so many shocking truths about the health industry!
@MikeW-t6lАй бұрын
Exactly!
@FireOElijahMCАй бұрын
I heard about that
@ashhhh0333Ай бұрын
I got it, truly a good book
@AnnaLorrisАй бұрын
Wow
@OneDoodlingBugАй бұрын
What is government health advice?
@faridawiser5441Ай бұрын
0:18 that is actually malpractice, that shameless man should lose his license!
@NobodyHasToAgreeAllTheTimeАй бұрын
Cue video about the corrupt practice of doctor licensing
@peterirvin7121Ай бұрын
Looks like Doctor Mike found one of the (shockingly overrepresented) psychopathic surgeons.
@MacMasterOGАй бұрын
I think it was a joke, we all know Dr Mike struggles with those😅😐😔
@RavenelvenladyАй бұрын
@MacMasterOG It was a bad and tasteless joke a psychopath would find funny. We're dealing with people's lives and well being here.
@MacMasterOGАй бұрын
@@Ravenelvenlady yeah, maybe I was looking too much at the intention rather than the words 😅
@Stevejake12Ай бұрын
It's terrifying to hear that their are some doctors out there that act like this 😬
@redeye1016Ай бұрын
They’re human beings still - what do you expect? In every field there are bad apples, doctors aren’t exempt at all
@keepernod2888Ай бұрын
@@redeye1016 It's not a few bad apples, their colleagues just laugh it off and don't say anything.
@marmarsameh972Ай бұрын
I've read worse on Reddit
@submrgeАй бұрын
@@redeye1016ACAB should extend to doctors too ig. ADAB?
@xshrmartii7711Ай бұрын
What / was it@@marmarsameh972
@IwonMinАй бұрын
Some of these comments are horrible.. shame on those doctors.
@BabaJagaАй бұрын
The racism and misogyny is gross🤮
@RonaldMcreepyАй бұрын
what comments? the one that the doctors said?
@IwonMinАй бұрын
@@RonaldMcreepy yes
@thelorax336Ай бұрын
@RonaldMcreepy i thought they were talking about the yt comments 😂
@clementineeverett6566Ай бұрын
Some? They were all pretty
@megaeneАй бұрын
My wife's grandmother was taken to the ER yesterday, after she was semi-catatonic in bed (not sure what she had, but they think it might've been a stroke). The ambulance guys not only sat out there forever before AND after getting her (half hour in the vehicle after arriving and another half hour after they got her in the ambulance before leaving), but they took FOREVER to get to the hospital (we arrived over an hour before them), driving super slow and stopping everywhere. With an unconscious patient with suspect of a stroke. Also, they didn't secure the head while moving her, so it smacked against the steps twice. When we called them out, they said "why do you care, she's 80". I'm not joking. My wife was about to attack them.
@terfaliciousАй бұрын
Report them. Report them to everyone who might get them fired. Report them to the mayor, the governor, newspapers, the hospital, the head of the ambulance agency (not just the manager, but them too). Let everyone know you are reporting them.
@JohnClapton-ko7xtАй бұрын
@@terfalicious Report "them"? How about reporting the poster for malarkey. No way in hell an EMT crew (yes crew, they don't work alone) sat outside a house for 30 minutes before and an another thirty minutes after, getting your GMIL and then taking so long they arrived at the hospital after they did. You need to realize magaene's post is bullsh!t. Clues are easy to see, the long wait, come on, EMT's are busy they aren't sitting around smoking and drinking coffee and coming to attendance after they are sated. And what? They tossed ol' granny over a shoulder and dragged her down the steps bouncing her head alone the way? Right because ambulances aren't equpped with stretchers.Okay and how in the hell does magaene know they drove super slow and 'stopped everywhere' as they were at the hospital 60 minutes before the ambulance? What ESP? Oh and finally, so she eventually got to the hospital and, let's see, it's still might have been a stroke, oh wait, suspected stroke two days later? No diagnosis. Come on, let's all make stuff up about the medical community just to sound indignant.
@dirtbagdeaconАй бұрын
Report them to your state department of health. I am serious.
@M-GroenАй бұрын
Not the mayor or governor. You should report them the are sertivied as a medical professional and can be reprimanded or lose there licence.
@tanajastancil245Ай бұрын
Tell news outlets too. And sue 🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️if possible
@OraanuАй бұрын
When people ask me why I quit being a pharmacist only a couple years after being licensed, I tell them that there was simply no one I looked up to and aspired to be like, and that I didn't want to continue down a career path that made me so unempathetic and jaded. The long hours, unrealistic standards, and morally questionable practices soured a lot of pharmacists and sucked all the compassion out of the practice. Some doctors start out bad, but it can't be ignored that the state of our healthcare system is also to blame for turning a lot of good doctors into bad ones.
@akrogirl32Ай бұрын
I worked in hospital pharmacy in both the UK and the US, and the hours were great compared to the hours I worked when I got into engineering.
@chrisharris236716 күн бұрын
What kind of industry are you involved in now
@legzfalloffgirl5148Ай бұрын
I have Cerebral Palsy and had tendinitis so bad that I couldn't cut my food. My nurse practitioner told me, "you're too young to be sitting on your butt making your boyfriend do everything for you. I got better with physical therapy. But not with her help.
@HarrysIrishPrincessАй бұрын
I have cp too. I'm sorry the nurse practitioner said that to you. That was extremely insensitive.
@gamespremier7179Ай бұрын
Ong that was a good one...if u both laughed after it then okay but if no one laughed and she seriously meant it then thats mean asf
@Gaymore16Ай бұрын
That nurse can screw off, can't believe these nurses and doctors can be so ignorant of disabilities
@CuriosityKitty-j5jАй бұрын
Some get too big headed and are a real pain, thank god there's better ones around.
@kristenlogan2594Ай бұрын
Ngl this sentiment of "you're too young for this or that" or "that shouldn't be the case" ticks me off. I have lived my entire life with doctors saying those things and it only prolonging actually getting care.
@cazzcooke3990Ай бұрын
I was a medical receptionist and a patient had died so people came to get death certificate. When asking the Dr for the paper work she literally said there was no rush because he was dead. In fact in his religion it was custom to be buried at sunset of the same day. I was mortified by her lack of compassion. Lost all respect for her right then. 🤬🤬🤬🤬
@linkin0983Ай бұрын
There should be something when doing the practice that they should test them for empathy.
@cs4887Ай бұрын
As if the family just wants to wait around for the death certificate 🤦🏻♀️ as if they don't have other affairs to deal with
@mayathebraveofkitwanga448Ай бұрын
WTF This is horrible thing to say to dead people's relatives. Just horrible.
@seantaggart7382Ай бұрын
Wow
@RedMoon2404Ай бұрын
Although I get why you thought this was desrespectful for the dead person’s family, please consider that this doctor was still taking care of living patients who also needed her. Can you honestly tell me you wouldn’t prioritize a living patient’s pain management or care over administrative tasks? That doctor was probably overwhelmed and chose her words carelessly. She shouldn’t lose your respect over that.
@chinmustache6420Ай бұрын
“That’s why we have malpractice insurance” DAFUQ
@GhostBear3067Ай бұрын
That sounds like someone who uses their malpractice insurance waaaaayyyyy too often.
@submrgeАй бұрын
We should extend ACAB to ADAB
@LlywellynOBrienАй бұрын
Every other doctor who pays way too much for insurance has this person and those like them to blame.
@seantaggart7382Ай бұрын
@@submrge but then The "woke" would use that to abuse the GOOD doctors Which are ACTUALLY AGAINST THIS?
@margaretbushАй бұрын
Bro outright confirmed that bad doctors DO get payed even when they don’t deserve it
@cheeseislyfАй бұрын
As a patient, the WORST DOCTOR I encountered is a Psychologist. Imagine belittling my family trauma and told me that I am far better than those abused, or r@ped..etc. I reported her right away to the facility she’s working with. But goodness, I can’t ever forget that person.
@zaynes5094Ай бұрын
@cheeseislyf I've heard stuff like this too. Why it always gotta be Psychiatrists or Psychologists that are so passive aggressive about that? Ones trauma does and should NOT correlate to another individuals past traumas or bad experiences. Mental anguish and trauma can occur from someone being in a brutal car accident and they could also have similar signs or triggers as someone who was r-worded or SA'd by someone, but that still doesn't mean the situation is the same or that they even remotely correlate to each other outside of the mechanisms of their trauma.
@chriscintron3320Ай бұрын
for me its psychiatrists
@mnmgirl388Ай бұрын
I took my daughter to the ER once for a UTI. It was the weekend so our PCP wasn’t available and the urgent clinic wouldn’t treat her because of her age (she was too young), so my only option was to take her to the ER or wait until Monday. I’ve had UTIs get bad FAST and I did NOT want that to happen with my daughter so I took her in to the ER. When we went in the doctor legit got irritated and asked me why we came to the ER for a UTI. I did not hold back when I answered.
@crow_featherАй бұрын
Sadly, it sounds like you got hit with exactly the sort of attitude Dr.Malik, the urologist, was talking about at the 4:27 mark in the video when she says that women aren’t taken seriously when it comes to pain. I’m so sorry that happened to you and your daughter! I hope that she was given the care she needed!
@terriwetz6077Ай бұрын
Good for you! I've had the same experience with UTI's going bad super fast, had to call an ambulance during one as just hours after making an appointment to see my GP the next day, I developed a high fever, was pissing pure blood and was vomiting from the pain. I guess it depends on which bacteria is causing the infection.
@rusht_8383Ай бұрын
To be fair, ER's (especially the one I work in) are flooded with issues that can be solved by a pcp or urgent care and it takes away from the care of those who actually need emergency services. Your situation makes sense, the doctor was probably just fed up with people coming in who didn't need to be there
@mcrchickenluvrАй бұрын
@@rusht_8383it would help if urgent care centers would treat things like UTI’s in younger patients. There’s I think one in the entire county I live in that will test kids under 10 for them. One in a county with around 7.5 million residents.
@tanajastancil245Ай бұрын
People make excuses for anything, as to not do it. You don’t get paid to treat “only the serious” cases you get paid period to fix the issues. So might as well just do it.
@ScarlettRose19932Ай бұрын
A couple of doctors have given me the line "it's all in your head" before and honestly all i hear instead is "you're making this up" until one day a psychologist explained it to me properly and said that what they mean is you are experiencing real pain but its happening because of your mental state, it's psychosomatic. Honestly, if some doctors just explained it that way instead, it would take a lot of embarrassment and shame out of our interactions.
@nats4377Ай бұрын
😮
@mels607Ай бұрын
any symptom, psychosomatic or otherwise, that is affecting your daily life, requires some form of treatment. psychosomatic doesn't mean it's imaginary or unfixable. DOCTORS should know that's not what that means ffs I can't fathom why they use it as a synonym for "it's not real", drives me nuts
@FrokuBabayyАй бұрын
Its your head, & your own mental fragility further facilitated by your own bad life choices 😂 it is in your own head, meaning you can control it & deaden it.
@AlexAstill0409xxАй бұрын
@@FrokuBabayy Somebody doesnt know how the brain works
@FrokuBabayyАй бұрын
@@AlexAstill0409xx 👈🏾👈🏾👈🏾 Somebody likes to force themselves into a recessive state for attention
@LoveYah1Ай бұрын
This is why I advocate for my patients. I work in the private sector going from different hospitals and care facilities. I had this one patient who had dementia aaox1 and non verbal. I came in and started speaking to them, the nurse immediately told me they have dementia blah blah, I said I talk to all of my patients and tell them what’s going on with or without dent and tell them who I am etc. she didn’t say anything. We got them ready to go and my partner made a joke and the patient just started smiling, the nurse was shocked by the patient reaction. All this time other nurses and herself was probably just not interacting with the patient because they have dementia. It peeves me. I have plenty stories, when you’re under my care you’re being treated as family that I love.
@Tam_EikiАй бұрын
Thank you for your compassion and care of these people. My SO's father had dementia, and he would slip in and out of awareness, we never knew when he was lucid and when he wasn't. I would take him for car rides and just talk to him about what I currently saw and commented on them so he wasn't constantly being asked to remember things he couldn't. He would get so happy to be able to converse about how many cars were on the roads, the color of a car, and any other silly thing. Being able to talk to someone seemed to make him happy, especially when it didn't involve anything more than what he was seeing right then. For the most part he was very aware of things going on around him and knew there were things he couldn't remember. Dementia is a horrible, cruel disease. Kind people like you make their day so much better, even if they can't tell you in so many words. Thank you for being their voice.❤
@Gaymore16Ай бұрын
So she ignored a dementia patient and treated them as a pest? That is genuinely disgusting for a nurse to do that, they are people too!
@CuriosityKitty-j5jАй бұрын
You're brilliant, thanks for being so kind.
@justanorthernlightАй бұрын
I have a severe sleep disorder, I was seeing a sleep specialist about it years ago and told her that the course of treatment she was recommending was one I had already tried and it had tanked my sleep quality so bad it had made me suicidal. I confided in her about my family history of both attempted and successful suicide and that I was really scared about it coming back. She looked me dead in the eye and said "You won't this time." Then she proceeded to say that basically if I didn't re-try it I wasn't trying to get better and I was wasting her time. Zero other options presented. Spoiler alert: the suicidal ideation came back withing about 10 days and there was a 3+ month wait list to get a psychiatric appointment. I have not completely trusted a doctor since.
@terfaliciousАй бұрын
Survive out of spite! Those a-holes!
@dontjudgemycuriosityАй бұрын
As someone with chronic illness I’m saddened by these but not surprised. I have encountered equally horrifying things from appalling to dangerous on a few occasions. People often don’t believe impacted people about this, so I appreciate medical professionals speaking openly about it!
@soapiewaltenАй бұрын
Definitely not the WORST thing a doctor has ever said, but when I told my doctor I was in severe pain daily and taking around 3-6 Ibuprofen pills every single day, he said: "That's okay! If it's helping, you should keep taking it." Edit (for clarification): When I say "every single day," I mean every single day for several years. I told my doctor that I have been taking it daily for years and he still encouraged me to continue doing so.
@dovacon7409Ай бұрын
How tf is that a real doctor 😭 he shouldve AT LEAST give you stomach pills and explain that its bad for the stomach etc..
@OrbObserverАй бұрын
3-6 of the normal dose 200mg ibuprofen pills is completely within the safe daily dose as long as you aren't taking it for extended periods of time. He gave you completely normal advice.
@EternalAmmoniteАй бұрын
3-6 ibuprofen pills per day is a reasonable amount for someone to be on, even for relatively extended periods of time. Especially if they help. Now, if you're still in significant pain, that needs to be investigated. But if you told your doc that that was working for you, his advice was reasonable.
@JenesysAlimvari44Ай бұрын
@@OrbObserver however, OP said they were taking that every single day. doesn't matter if there's a safe daily dose, if you are having to take any pain reliever every single day throughout the day, that is NOT good. and there's obviously an underlying issue. I think that's the point they were relaying. Especially since naproxen can tear your stomach up. Speaking from experience.
@LordCoeCoeАй бұрын
@@OrbObserver Take 6/day every day for 10 years and come back.
@steelcutoaths3033Ай бұрын
Man. The whole women’s pain being minimized is so true. I remember seeing my PCP a few years ago because I’d been having intense headaches (probably migraines) on the daily for a long time. My PCP looked at me and said, “Have you tried Tylenol?” We never touched on any potential reasons for the headaches or even discussed referral options for the future. And don’t get me started on the overwhelming number of people who get IUDs but who are not properly informed of what to expect during and after placement.
@connoraltier7081Ай бұрын
I work with majority HIV and AIDS patients through my job, that first story made me incredibly angry. The stigma is very much still real around that community.
@kcplays1388Ай бұрын
Thank you for the nurse appreciation 🥹
@everydayisaricedayАй бұрын
Oh my gosh. I’m actually appalled and so sad. But you know, I am so proud and hopeful for all the doctors like you guys out there who have such caring hearts. Thank you!
@Srinikesh-yr1jiАй бұрын
"OMG Doctor help my daughter she's dying!!" "Btw white doctors only." Nahh 💀💀
@MYLAR.Ай бұрын
there was a video of a boy who complained of chest pain and his mother was adamant about having a white doctor in the waiting room. needless to say most of the waiting room was like “are you stupid??”
@danielland3767Ай бұрын
@@MYLAR. That couldn't have been me, I'd walked out period. Like knowing the history of Black Doctors and saying we/they can't do something. Then your kid is dying and you still wanna let your hate overcome that child's life, you are not a great parent
@CosmoQueen2900Ай бұрын
It's sad that this was the least surprising of all the ones I heard.
@normalchannel2185Ай бұрын
I would have asked them if they wanted only procedures made by white doctors.
@JohnBoyGamer1Ай бұрын
that's how you get your organs stolen never trust a darkie with your healthcare
@KageTenshiiRyuuАй бұрын
I _love_ that this video has doctors of all backgrounds, professions, and ethnicities.
@anonymousperson49Ай бұрын
right!
@Sol_Badguy_GGАй бұрын
This comment smells like wokism propaganda.
@RavenelvenladyАй бұрын
@Sol_Badguy_GG And your comment smells like reactionary racist propaganda. More and more doctors are from different backgrounds in this country. That is the present AND the future. DEAL with it. 😂😂😂
@KBRollerАй бұрын
@@Sol_Badguy_GG Your comment smells like a special snowflake who can't handle inclusivity without feeling insecure.
@dontjudgemycuriosityАй бұрын
Yes! And stories of things said from all sorts of professionals to other professionals or to/about patients. They show a lot of facets of this issue.
@Namrevlis1938Ай бұрын
Hi Dr Mike, I'm not a doctor but I want to tell you the worst thing a doctor said in my presence. It wasn't really so bad; in fact, a few minutes later we both laughed. As he was performing a small operation on my leg, he said "Oops!" That's all but I was on my back, looking up, and was scared, but just a bit. It was 1957 and I was a freshman at MIT. I'm now 86 but I'll never forget him. Great video, David S.
@TSinRMАй бұрын
Dr. Mike, liked hearing the honesty from these ethical physicians. I am a male and for the first half of my career I was an RN specializing in the cardiac Cath lab, eventually becoming the lab supervisor. I initially loved my job and learned so much, but over time, the verbal abuse I had to take from several cardiologists became too much. Taking care of critically ill patients was a piece of cake compared to taking care of them. Eventually I had enough, and got a job with a cardiovascular device company in clinical research for the second half of my work life. It was a great decision.
@benfoxhall1095Ай бұрын
8:20 'I'm ACTUALLY a board certified doctor' - Dr Glaukomflecken hahaha
@ken_kaniff246Ай бұрын
Fair enough he said that because I was thinking no way that's a real person's name 😅
@rafaelrafaelrafaelАй бұрын
I didn't get what the problem was for him to look something up and present the next day
@tanajastancil245Ай бұрын
@@rafaelrafaelrafaelmaybe he was nervous?
@OliviaMartinez-l3cАй бұрын
This collab was perfect!
@XxNotFxbixxАй бұрын
Bot
@unlistedandtwistedАй бұрын
Dr. Chiang, thank you, thank you, THANK YOU from a VERY BURNT out aide that is rarely acknowledged by the doctors, let alone THANKED. While I don't take what the doctors do or say to me very personally - not much needs to be said to the CNA, not much interaction - whenever any doctor or nurse takes a moment to THANK ME, it helps SO MUCH. Every patient and HCP should know that their recovery is always a team effort. From the aide that ensures you're clean, dry, moving, eating, not dying, to the housekeeping and dietary staff, RNs, Dr's it's never just one person. (Though all it can take is one voice to help that pt...).
@TheTamranatorАй бұрын
I've had nurses and CNA's who were better caregivers than some of the doctors I've seen. There's a reason you all get into the field. I'm sure it isn't the money. Thank you.
@Crafty.Goth.CreationsАй бұрын
I was a CNA about 30 years ago. I honestly can't remember a time when a nurse or doctor complimented me. I did receive thanks from some of the families of people I cared for. I had some major health issues earlier this year and was hospitalized in January and February. I made sure to thank the CNAs every time they helped me with anything. I thanked all the staff, but I had a soft spot for thanking the CNAs. I know how hard of a job they have. They have the hardest workload for the lowest pay.
@danielnator123456Ай бұрын
2:55 Dr. Chiang gave me goosebumps. This applies to almost all fields of work. I'm so sick of people making others feel less important. We're all in the same boat, bro.
@emilysioux2708Ай бұрын
My mom is a nurse and she had a doctor tell her doctors like me keep you employed. She came back and said it’s people like me who take care of your patients and makes sure they stay alive
@yukishira4026Ай бұрын
My mom used to be a nurse at some kind of doctors office i forgot where it was. But when I was around 3-4 I was abused, and my mom was having a hard time being away from me and asked for time off. Her boss and his wife both told her to just "get over it, because it happened a month ago." Thankfully she was able to get a new and amazing job.
@drgarylinkov2 күн бұрын
Thanks for having me Mike!
@gracelovely3838Ай бұрын
My doctor said I shouldn't pursue diagnosis for my autism and chronic illness because "there aren't really resources to help you anyway"
@mcrchickenluvrАй бұрын
Then allow me to introduce myself to him. I do respite and habilitation care for kids and adults with special needs. So yes, there are resources for things.
@EmperorZaph1512Ай бұрын
From experience, he isnt wrong about resources being basically nonexistent in adulthood. But its worth getting the diagnosis anyway because you have documentation and legal backing for lawsuit/employment/benefits reasons should they ever come up.
@Gaymore16Ай бұрын
As a autistic person myself, guy can screw off, if you are suspecting you have autism you should look for a diagnosis just in case- in my non professional opinion 💀
@AlexAstill0409xxАй бұрын
oh HELL NO. There are resources (although scarce and that would have been much more helpful when you were younger), And even if there arent, a diagnosis of autism and chronic illness is SO IMPORTANT. Without them, getting therapies, meds, accomadations, disability, understanding etc is so much harder. Its not his choice to make based on "I dont think you need it"
@pan1884Ай бұрын
Oh, dude, SAME. Despite my doctor going "oh yeah, you definitely have autism" I was convinced not to bother because "there's no medication for it anyway", and to this day I'm not sure why I was even okay with that.
@BabaJagaАй бұрын
The racism and misogyny is gross🤮
@terrnoisrp8894Ай бұрын
It exists everywhere so not too shocked that thier patient who wanted that. Crazy the doctor defended it though.
@ProtogenArtsАй бұрын
2:20 In certain situations I can probably be the one to say "if the racist doesn't wanna be in a room with other races, don't let them" because there are also violent people like this and it would actually be the best way to avoid any conflict. But it's a freaking doctor's office, if I were like that and need a doctor, I'd take the first one available
@BrandonCollins-g5wАй бұрын
But when the healthcare system is pushing for diversity training, putting millions to a side for the sake of diversity and putting whites to a side, that's ok? Especially in Europe where our people are being pushed to a side in favour of LGBTQ and bame. A simple Google search proves this and there's loads of videos of doctors and nurses, especially during COVID talking about if they spoke about it they would be fired. Is that ok?
@MonkeyJedi99Ай бұрын
When I am asked about who I want to care for me ("Do you care if the doctor is a woman?") my answer is always that I just want qualified providers who can explain things well in English. (I have tried and failed over and over to learn other languages) I have had male and female doctors, NPs and nurses. All sorts of national origins, and perhaps even religions. I've allowed a doctor to fill a room with medical students (heck, I've got so many health issues, it ought to be good for their education!). All I insist on is qualifications and communication, particularly between specialties and my GP.
@GhostBear3067Ай бұрын
Seriously, in many hospitals insisting on not seeing any Indian doctors eliminates half the available staff, likely including the specific doctor they need the most.
@phillipmydrinkАй бұрын
Thank you, and all the docs in the vid, for being honest and stuff. It builds a lot more trust when ur honest about tough stuff like this. Most docs aren't bad or evil or nothing, but it's good that yall acknowledge when one is.
@carolbelyeu-Alhaddad28 күн бұрын
Amen to the doctor respecting ALL staff!
@doctorrickyАй бұрын
Thanks for letting me be a part of these videos. Really appreciate it @doctormike
@MrCherbear1990Ай бұрын
I was once taking a new medication for epilepsy and one of the symptoms for an allergy to the medication is a deadly rash so we rushed to the hospital. I was behind the curtain in ER waiting to be seen and I heard the doctor say to the nurse “I shouldn’t even see him because he should have gone to the other hospital, they keep sending patients to us and I’m sick of it!”…We had called the hospital closest to us and there was a 4 hour wait in ER so they directed us to the other hospital.
@oakenshadow6763Ай бұрын
Seeing them call out bad doctors. Seeing the good call out the bad is so important.
@brina4058Ай бұрын
My bestie had an issue she had been dealing with for over a year. The doc she had been seeing told her because of the location of the issue a wound vac wasn't possible. She ended up moving and going to a different doc. He got a wound vac for her, and gee her issue is pretty much taken care of. In about two weeks she'll be able to finally ditch the boot she's been wearing for over a year. I'm so happy for her, but the initial doc just makes me mad AF that he seemed like he wasn't willing to try.
@dianemalek436Ай бұрын
I had pain in my hips and went to an orthopedic doctor that many people in my circle of friends and family said was excellent and he said "What do you want me to do about it?" I was absolutely dumbfounded! Some doctors just have no empathy at all!
@kiii940320 күн бұрын
I once had a doctor ask me which meds she should prescribe me. I didn't study medicine, lady, that's why I came here?!
@SirOwlsworthАй бұрын
9:06 i got told this when i was working in a childrens psychiatry after i noticed the kids really liked hugs and being lifted up. the nurses there were so bitter...
@aurthurpendragon1015Ай бұрын
2:00 You'd think a woman would be more empathetic with stuff like that.
@kinagrillАй бұрын
I mean, not really... sadly it's a clear 'yay I can make a victim of someone else and my own pain more valid without showing it' and stuff like that. Of course not every woman is like that, but it is statistically show.
@thylacocoalthy622829 күн бұрын
If you spent your life on a career and never got a partner, it's pretty easy to be jealous and lash out.
@michellecoleman5577Ай бұрын
Oh lord, I'm 3 stories in and already scared and depressed.
@82dorrinАй бұрын
I love how you actually included the other Doctors in the video instead of just reading from a script.
@wittyamazonАй бұрын
@1:34 I know women from different generations who dealt with that exact comment from people who work that field of medicine. It's disgusting.
@username_taken_alreadyАй бұрын
1:55 How on earth did a doctor feel comfortable saying this to a patient???? This is wrong on so many levels
@CuriSharkАй бұрын
Feels like something house would say 😂
@jasonuerkvitz7611Ай бұрын
LMFAO!
@ellenkarlsson9490Ай бұрын
@@kairostimeYT What the actual F??? You somehow made a terrible, offensive comment made by a doctor about 100x worse. What does abortion have to do with _anything?_ As a medical health professional you provide the best possible care you can, regardless of your own personal opinions or political stance. _"the doctor might have just been too stressed out and couldn't tolerate insubordination"_ If you can't deal with a stressful situation and a patient in pain without dropping nasty comments, the medical profession isn't for you. *Nothing* can make the doctor's comment make sense. Honestly, this comes across as you jumping on the chance to spread awful anti-abortion propaganda.
@AlexAstill0409xxАй бұрын
@@kairostimeYT no. People wont "agree to disagree" about malpractice.
@ElizabethRodriguez-zd3rsАй бұрын
As a CT/XR technologist, I get doctors all the time looking down on us since we aren't doctors. But once we find something before they do, and call the radiologist before the patient leaves our room, they tend to hide away. I've also had a doctor ask me on a portable where the lungs and abdomen was on a abdomen portable. Needless to say, I looked at him weird and explained where everything was 🤦♀️
@lovelies77777Ай бұрын
1:57 the fact that the person who said that is a woman is wild ☠️ Like????
@PlaylistProleteriatАй бұрын
Sometimes women's worst enemy can't be an unempathetic woman
@c.jishnu378Ай бұрын
It's always women, statistically they are 100x more likely to attack, bully, shame or even sexually assault other women.
@shroomykАй бұрын
OB/GYN doctors (even woman ones) can be so dismissive and unempathetic. It is indeed wild. And like, birth happens through a cervix and seggs doesn't. I think a ob/gyn should probably know the difference.
@Gaymore16Ай бұрын
Ya! Usually you would hear this from a male doctor, female doctors are usually way more sympathetic and understanding usually because they are moms themselves or because they just understand, so imagine my shock when a female doctor is so ignorant and awful to a mom in labor, crazy
@lcdesigns614527 күн бұрын
Not really surprised. Similar experience.
@spy97_Ай бұрын
I really respect doctors for all they do. Thank you so much for providing help to the people that need it!
@k.r.t.f4209Ай бұрын
This video was wild but also opened my eyes to the sheer number of different areas within the profession and the incredible range of different doctors and medical professionals all specialising in different things.
@kweenalize5455Ай бұрын
I remember my gaslighting ex boyfriend used to tell me its all in my head. If a doctor told me that, they would be looking at lawsuit and public shaming. That is the definition of malpractice. As an insurance broker, i would refuse to provide them malpractice coverage due to them being a hazard.
@guardianerisАй бұрын
@@dddon513 and you sound like a weirdo on the internet who antagonizes women and projects your own misogynistic worldviews to defend your insecurity.
@QuikVidGuyАй бұрын
For me, it was something they didn't say. Wasn't told that I'd be cathetered and intubated for my hernia surgery. Woke up with days' worth of pain from both ends. Was told after that they do it for every surgery so I should've known. Knew someone who told me later that it wasn't done for their surgery.
@classicambo9781Ай бұрын
It is rare that you wouldn't be intubated for a hernia surgery due to the length of sedation and catheterisation is common as well as it is protective of your urethra... They should have mentioned this to you however.
@lindaherrick1147Ай бұрын
I think I audibly gasped at all of these 😳 This is shocking to hear in a field where empathy is almost a requirement. I get everyone has bad days but some of these comments tell me that it’s not a one-off instance. Luckily it seems like there’s more good doctors than bad out there, such as the ones speaking in this video. 🙌🏻
@Rachel299Ай бұрын
I was in labor with twins, suffering from preeclampsia and, unbeknownst to me at the time, cephalopelvic disproportion. I was in excruciating pain and crying when a male doctor approached me and said, ‘That’s why they call it labor, honey.’ I ended up needing an emergency C-section and later developed full-blown eclampsia. To my surprise, the doctor returned afterward and apologized for his remark. Even though it’s been over 40 years, I’ve never forgotten that moment.
@sheryltaylor7181Ай бұрын
The Dr. Speaking about women not being taken seriously hit home. About a month ago my specialist Dr. actually laughed at me and my situation when I presented my problem. He said he didn't care because he was a guy and guys don't care about this kind of stuff. I brought my concern to him because he had put me on a "new to the market" medication and I was wondering if my problem could be a side affect. I canceled my last scheduled appointment with him, I don't want to see his face. It took me a month to even see another Dr. concerning my issue. I don't go to Dr.'s anymore unless I just can't handle the pain or injury any longer. I feel they don't care.
@EasterEdwardsАй бұрын
You're incredible, don't stop creating videos!
@JimFortuneАй бұрын
As far as making negative comments about patients during surgery, I can say from personal experience that the patient can hear and understand, and sometimes remember what is being said.
@arjaygeeАй бұрын
Yep. I remembered.
@terfaliciousАй бұрын
Me too. It haunts me.
@DelliGamingАй бұрын
I got lucky when I got my wisdom teeth out. Mine were talking about the apocalypse.
@vermithor51acАй бұрын
2:49 that was obviously a joke to break the ice. I hope
@NerdAlert42Ай бұрын
Sounds like a joke that landed poorly
@crow_featherАй бұрын
I come from a family of doctors. After the horror stories I’ve heard, I wouldn’t be too sure about that!
@gabriellegeorge2648Ай бұрын
I think so, but if the patient seems freaked out by the joke it's worth saying "I'm just kidding" 😅
@arturoaguilar6002Ай бұрын
As long as his name wasn't Dr. Nick.
@bea4156Ай бұрын
As a Medical Assistant, THANK YOU DR JUNEJA!! You’re the best!! 💚💚💚
@TheClassNerd1848Ай бұрын
In regards to the "real" doctor thing, I feel the exact same way as a distance education student when people ask me with that wording "Why can't you attend a *real* school?" I get great grades, am a functional teenage girl and much prefer DE over mainstream school, I am not a failure for doing it. And I live with ASD and have had many educators do some truly horrific things to me in the name of "keeping me safe/"de-escalating."
@ayadergАй бұрын
I think the worst thing a doctor has ever said to me as a patient was literally "nope, tests don't show anything, can't help you, goodbye" and they ended the visit in literally 30 seconds
@ayadergАй бұрын
turns out it's a rheumatologist that everyone in the hospital kinda knew was a jerk, but she was the only one who had openings because the patients kept leaving, go figure 🙄
@Khai-h9oАй бұрын
I hope you didn't have to pay for that visit
@guskelly4995Ай бұрын
Great vid! Seeing the perspectives and experiences form other doctors is pretty cool
@dimkar748Ай бұрын
hello doctor mike! i have been watching your channel for 3+ years and as a teenager you have taught me so much. you even made me become the person i am today. i am more interested than ever in medicine, and the thought of it makes me really happy. words cant put into how much i wanna thank you for everything. you have amazing humor and a great personality, theres never a dull moment with you around. you have truly changed the world for the best. i never got to say how much i appreciate you since i always forget to because of your amazing videos. i hope you continue being awesome, good luck on your journey! love from greece❤
@terfaliciousАй бұрын
Wishing you all success! 😻
@mercedeskim5191Ай бұрын
So glad to know empathetic doctors exist out there, ones who appreciate other people on the care team. I'm a CNA, and I swear, almost no one cares about us. At all. Ever. We're doing so much of the hands-on care, but we get the least of the appreciation, care, respect, pay, benefits, and everything else. Outside of SOME patients saying thanks, it's truly a thankless job.
@lindag4544Ай бұрын
indeed CNAs can be jewels!
@lindag4544Ай бұрын
at my hospital (university NYC) most docs and nurses really do know the CNAs are an important part of the team and know what is going on. thank you CNAs!
@may2630Ай бұрын
When i was in labor ready to push i was screaming from the pain because i didnt get an epidural. And a nurse got in my face and screamed at me " SHUT UP, SCREAMIN IS THE REASON YALL TEAR SO STOP SCREAMIN AND SHUT UP". At the moment i didnt know what to say, i was shocked and focused on pushing, now it upsets me that i didnt stand up for myself
@AlexAstill0409xxАй бұрын
Oh I'm so sorry darling. Screaming is NOT the reason for tearing, and even if it was, that awful nurse had no right to treat you like that. Giving birth is such an intimate and vulnerable experience, their concern is your comfort and safety. If moms need to scream during labour, you have every right to scream.
@sophiaisabelle027Ай бұрын
We appreciate Dr Mike for all his hard work and effort. May he continue to live Kong and succeed for the betterment of the community.
@babyplaneswalker341Ай бұрын
Not a doctor. But was in a bad wreck several years ago. Woke up to being wheeled into the ER. They where cutting my clothes off after we got in and I was in so much pain. Like every cell of my body was on fire. I begged them to do something to help my pain. They looked at me and said "We gave you the 2nd strongest thing we have. It's working. You just can't tell" And then they sent me home a hour later in a hospital gown with a still dislocated shoulder
@babyplaneswalker341Ай бұрын
Incase anyone ask. I had no insurance. They where cutting my clothes off to check for any injuries. You don't want to try and pull someone's pants off if they might have a bone sticking out. Could snag. But yeah that hospital and it's staff where the worst
@Eet0saurusАй бұрын
Ive had this happen after surgery. They just kept saying that I should shut up because they already gave me more pain medication than expected for such a small surgery. Turns out I am one of those ten percent of people that don’t get pain relief from codeine
@AlexAstill0409xxАй бұрын
"its working, you just can't tell" Well its clearly not working then what the hell?? If it was working, you wouldn't have been in so much pain. and they sent you home with a dislocation?! Im so sorry you experienced that, it sounds awful
@babyplaneswalker341Ай бұрын
@AlexAstill0409xx not to mention they didn't even try to keep me and monitor me. I was just in a wreck that bent the car in half. Was unconscious and suffering a severe concussion with immediate severe bruising on my forehead from the steering wheel. Just kicked out cuz no insurance
@dtae7855Ай бұрын
This is absolutely frightening & these doctors they’re talking about are PROBABLY STILL PRACTICING wtf.
@REPDC4LIFEАй бұрын
"This is my first time doing this procedure. Wish me luck" is diabolical work.
@meridithmock2036Ай бұрын
The commercial break right in the middle of Dr Malek saying that women are not listened to was something.
@bobowon5450Ай бұрын
didn't notice. wasn't listening to her
@AilieorzАй бұрын
You should ask patients this question not doctors. I guarantee this isn't even the worse
@lindajones4849Ай бұрын
Excellent point.
@shakashadrovandi3958Ай бұрын
When I was 13, I went to see my GP and he was running late with a patient before me. I got into the room with him, he said “sorry for being late, my last patient was suffering from mental issues and wants to 💀herself uuughh” I really thought that was so wrong to discuss other patients issues. I have a hard time telling doctors everything to this day. I’m 24 now and it still urks me
@jimwormmasterАй бұрын
Yeah....that's a HIPPA violation o.o Not to mention the "uuughh". Talk about uncaring! They probably should have left it at something like, "Something came up with another patient". Gives a reason for the delay, without giving any confidential details.
@kbtriplesixАй бұрын
Boohoo how sensitive are you bruh
@Watermelon-hd2gdАй бұрын
@@jimwormmaster no it’s not a hippa violation because the doctor didn’t disclose any information that would tell him who the patient was.
@frerejacques4391Ай бұрын
@Watermelon-hd2gd they may have seen the previous patient walk out of the room before them. However even if it's not a HIPPA issue, it's super unethical
@Eet0saurusАй бұрын
Especially inappropriate to tell that to teens and tweens, because teenagers and people below 35 years old have the highest chance of becoming sui cidal. So what if this patients might have those thoughts or develop them later, then they will not say anything to this doctor
@Majana-.-Ай бұрын
My gynochlogist told me that my period pains were normal and that physically there is nothing wrong with me, then prescribed me another medication that didn’t work and then took my blood in a bad way (my arm was completely bruised and hurt so bad) so thatI needed pressure bandage for it to stop bleeding only for me to take more pills and somehow manage to deal with 9.5/10 pains that completely incapacitate me. I feel like noone‘s taking me seriously
@SpicyTunaRoll97Ай бұрын
Period pains shouldnt be debilitating like that, have you gotten tested for Endometriosis? It often goes unseen or misdiagnosed
@Majana-.-Ай бұрын
@@SpicyTunaRoll97 nope
@Majana-.-Ай бұрын
@@SpicyTunaRoll97 she took my blood to test for compatibility of my Hormons to the pill if I wanted to take it when I‘m older (I‘m still a minor)
@Majana-.-Ай бұрын
@@SpicyTunaRoll97 but not to test for endometriosis
@GmmBeastАй бұрын
Period pains are normal but not ones that are debilitating. And just because something is "normal" doesn't mean that it can't be negatively affecting you. I genuinely don't understand some doctors.
@xerofelix7090Ай бұрын
I've heard a lot of horrible things from doctors. 90% of them are great doctors. But when you're poor, disabled, and move alot, you see a lot of the horrible ones. I've been told "at least you're not depressed" by a psychiatrist while being treated for ADHD and _depression_ . I was told that my autoimmune disorder was because I was fat and to just lose weight. And I was harassed about getting fertility treatment after telling a doctor that I was infertile and not interested in having children. 🙄
@firemaster5695Ай бұрын
People can just find any kind of moral high ground to push someone else down huh?
@teacupwithhoney21 күн бұрын
Thank you to all the doctors who care and support their patients. I pray your patients treat you just as well. Keep up the amazing work 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@Mewse1203Ай бұрын
Why are labor and delivery personnel so fricking cruel to people who are birthing? I have heard so many horror stories of nurses and doctors that specialize In Obstetrics and labor being awful people giving birth
@I.no.ah.guy5722 күн бұрын
You mean "women"?
@Mewse120322 күн бұрын
@I.no.ah.guy57 i said what I said.
@LottieLovesKittiesАй бұрын
1:09 she low key sounds like Sofia Nygard!
@kianaafton1658Ай бұрын
She does!
@axis7644Ай бұрын
Ah true! I lowkey miss her travel videos
@syoung472425 күн бұрын
Right!!
@zaanriyahАй бұрын
I recently had a therapist that said I was already putting in all the work for my mental health when I told her all of the steps I was taking to try to be better, and then she asked “what do you want me to do?” in an annoyed tone. I saw her one more time and she wanted me to list the 10 bad moments from my life and 10 good moments. She was annoyed because I had a hard time finding 10 distinct examples for her when I was put on the spot. I told my psychiatric nurse in charge of my care about both visits and she let slip that other patients had similar stories from that therapist. I decided to not see her again. I’m not sure what happened but I got an email last week letting patients know that she’s no longer with the practice.
@tanajastancil245Ай бұрын
I always enjoy seeing Dr. Youn on here. He’s got the best stories.
@sheadiancantuable23 күн бұрын
Lawyers will love these videos. Please don't delete.
@gerardodwyer5908Ай бұрын
This collage of opinions was quite insightful. Can you do a similar collage on the subject of elective surgery and what advice doctors can offer patients on waiting lists?
@maryelizabethparker2106Ай бұрын
My mom is a doctor. In medical school, during the height of the aids epidemic, one of the other students came up and interrupted a conversation she was in and said “i don’t know why you care about aids so much, it’s killing all the right people.” If that wasn’t bad enough, she was one of the students in the MD/ PHD program meaning she was considered one of the brightest in the class. Luckily, she’s a pathologist so doesn’t have to work with any living people.
@rolands4682Ай бұрын
During one of my deployments to Iraq i had a tooth bothering me. It was really frustrating me so I got the chance to see a dentist at one of the combat support hospitals. After examining me the guy says "you don't have any cavities, the pain is all just in your head." I'm lucky my response didn't land me in some trouble as he was a Lieutenant Colonel, but I said, "Well no sh-t, that's where my teeth are."
@cmtippens9209Ай бұрын
PERFECT answer! 🤣🤣🤣
@karlahdha685Ай бұрын
One time when I was younger and had to go under for surgery, I had a mini panic attack right before they put the mask on that was quickly ended by them just forcing the mask on before I had time to resist. I could hear my muffled cries slowly cease, but I also remember hearing a female voice saying how annoying I was and how I was overreacting, thinking I was completely out or just wouldn’t remember. Thankfully, the very last thing I remember hearing before going out completely was another nurse telling her to stfu.
@autumnwilliams721526 күн бұрын
It makes me happy to see medical professionals showing compassion and empathy for patients and their loved ones as well as helping to hold other medical professionals accountable.
@jennTwaamboАй бұрын
And we trust these people to help us. That terrifies me. This video is a good eye opener.
@systematic4177Ай бұрын
nice vid mike, really enjoy all the content! The doctors are really heartless...