Real Doctor Reacts to THE GOOD DOCTOR | Medical Drama Review | Doctor Mike

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Dr. Mike is great! There's a second one too I believe if you haven't seen it yet!

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 13 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/Princess-lilly πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Dec 28 2019 πŸ—«︎ replies

I hope this is a joke because as a doctor I completely disagree

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/s200808 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jan 15 2020 πŸ—«︎ replies
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- Hey guys we made a Grey's Anatomy reaction video and you turned it into a hit. Now the next most highly requested show was The Good Doctor. Another show that I haven't watched. (smooth jazz music) (fast-paced classical music) Good hand washing technique. Could be a surgeon, I don't know yet. Oh (glass shattering) Oh, Oh. - Help, Help. - Adam. Oh my God. - Somebody call 911. - Well calling for help is the right thing. That's the first thing you want to do in these types of situations. - His jugular vein's been cut. Does anyone have a clean cloth? - How does he know it's the jugular vein that's... - I have a fresh one in my bag - Pretty impressive. - That's great. Putting pressure on a wound like this is the first thing you need to do outside of obviously calling for help. Anything you can do to stop the bleeding, put pressure on the side, is important in order to help that person survive. - You're killing him. - I'm saving his life he was bleeding out. - Now you have it in the wrong place. - I think I remember enough of Anatomy 101 to know where the jugular vein is. - You would be in the right place if he were an adult. He's not an adult. He is a boy. Which means you're also putting pressure on his trachea which means he's not currently breathing. - I can't really see where his hands are but it's good advice. (dramatic music) (boy deeply inhales) - Don't take it out. - Some glass. - Don't take it out. - He'll be fine. - Yeah. - Who are you? - Hello, I'm doctor Shaun Murphy. I'm a surgical resident at San Jose St. Bonaventure Hospital - Well hello doctor Shaun. Nice to meet you. By the way just so you know if you have an object inserted into you. Object, I know that sounds kind of weird. If you get stabbed with a knife, some glass goes inside of you, if a nail goes inside of you. Never pull it out. Make sure you call 911, let the paramedics decide what to do. Let them take you to the nearest hospital. Because a lot of times what that object is doing is preventing you from bleeding out 'cause it's putting pressure on the spot where the artery or vein was cut. - A special meeting of the board of directors as much as I love you all. Questioning one of my hiring decisions. Did you bother to look up the definition of president while you were skimming the dictionary? - And you're hiring him to be a surgical resident. My department over my objections. - The bureaucracy that you're seeing here is real. There are board members, there's presidents, there's employees, there's trust funds. So these things exist, they put a lot of pressure on doctors and presidents to make certain decisions. - Yes he has autism but he also has savant syndrome. Genius level skills in several areas. He as almost perfect recall, he has spacial intelligence and he sees things and analyzes things in ways that are just remarkable in ways that we can't even begin to understand. Those are assets. Undeniable assets for any doctor, particularly a surgeon. - I'm not gonna lie I agree with the president on that. As a surgeon, it's more important to have very good spacial ability, to be able to have perfect recall, to understand the anatomy perfectly than it probably is to explain the complexity of a specific case and to be able to communicate well with people. Most the time when you're a surgeon your patient is not awake. With that being said, I think it is still important for surgeons to be able to improve their communication skills. To be able to talk to patients, help them understand the risks and benefits of operations and make sure that they don't force patients to go under the knife when they don't have to. - You seen her? - No, now go away and turn off the light. - Sure. - Resident beef. Resident beef. (woman laughing) - They need you to um... - [Woman] (laughing) I heard. - And here I thought this was going to be an all medical show no Grey's Anatomy drama. At least where I practice medicine, there's different on call rooms for males and females. There are times where one of their call rooms may be unavailable and you do have to have a male and a female sleeping in a same room together. Usually it's not a problem but this is unprofessional folks. It's gonna lead to drama. Lots of drama. - We don't have a relationship. We have sex. - They have a sexual relationship. (fast-paced classical music) I wish I had vision like that. That's impressive. Venous distention is caused by increased intrathoracic pressure inside the chest cavity. He's basically saying the veins in the arms are swollen. So he thinks there's some extra pressure going on inside the chest cavity. It can be because of Cardiac Tamponade. Which means that there's blood usually in a traumatic sense like this inside the paracardial tissue which is the lining of the heart. And there could be blood in there and it makes the heart unable to beat properly. - The veins in the boy's left arm are popping. - Is that bad? - I don't see. - Intrathoracic pressure. - Now if his chest is rising he's breathing. - The chest is moving paradoxically. - Paradoxical chest movement is a consequence of something known as flail chest. If you get a trauma where a section of your ribs break from the rest of the ribs. That part of the ribcage doesn't move normally when you take deep breath in and deep breath out. So the chest sort of moves paradoxically. That's what he's talking about. What happens during a pneumothorax one of the lungs collapses or sometimes both of the lungs collapse. And you can't oxygenate that area meaning that when you breathe no oxygen goes to that area. It causes increased pressure. The life saving treatment for this is to literally insert a needle in order to release some of that pressure. - Who here has a sharp knife? - (excitedly) Oh. A blade 5 inches or longer. Nobody? - Is he going to go into the second or fourth intercostal space? - You can't be back here. - Oh I need a knife. - (laughing) He's going to TSA. - A knife. Sure. Anything else? - I do also need a narrow six foot tube and high proof alcohol and gloves and baggage handling tape but I'm going to get the alcohol from the Duty Free store. And the tube from the back of the soda machine. - He's gonna put a chest tube for a traumatic pneumothorax. Look's like he's going to a party with all that Jim Beam. He reminds me of Zac Efron a little bit. I know it's a weird thought to have in the middle of this medical emergency but I don't know. I always found that blowing into the glove thing really obnoxious. How much bacteria do you have in your mouth? Probably even more than your fingers. Your blowing inside of the glove but your getting some of that bacteria on the outside of the glove that you want clean, or relatively clean, when your gonna go insert a chest tube into a young boy. He's gonna clean his hands with the Jim Beam but that's not perfect. - The incision should take place two ribs down. - Second intercostal space. My man. (dramatic classical music) He's actually following proper technique 'cause you want to stay in the mid-axil area line. Meaning in the middle of your armpit. That way you have a lower probability of hitting the heart when you go in with the scalpel, or whatever your going in with. - Okay well, why the bottle? - The air will continue to leak and accumulate until the damage can be properly repaired. The tube allows the air to get out. The water in the bottle stops the air from coming back in. - A homemade one way valve. (boy deeply gasps) He's breathing. (woman happily cries) You saved his life. He saved his life. (crowd applauds) - A tension pneumothorax, you can literally put a needle in that can release some air and that equilibrium does enough of a job. He didn't need all of this fancy technology here. - We need to get to San Jose St. Bonaventure Hospital. - That's where we're going. - Good. - What are the classic signs that someone has autism, or may have autism, is they don't make great eye contact. They're not great at picking up social ques. If you find out that your child has autism you can start them in these early intervention programs where they teach them how to mimic some of these social ques. Where they're not looking to make eye contact with you. Like we do normally because we have good physical recognition and body language recognition but they do so because they're trained to do so. To make conversation seem more normal. Early intervention has showed some very promising results for those with autism. - We'll find another school. - No we won't 'cause nothing's gonna change. They can't handle him. I don't blame them because obviously we can't handle him either. What the hell happened this time? What happened? - You're hurting him. - What did you do? - Those who have autism and grow up with pets actually have better results moving forward in terms of communication, in terms of interpersonability. So if your child does have autism getting them a pet early on definitely serves the benefit. - It changed. - The boy's ECG changed. - It's the same. 86 BPM. - No it used to be higher. - No it used to be 86. It's still 86. - It used to come up to here. - That's not the right way to do it. You have to be seated. You have to have calipers. You have to be looking at the strip and comparing the little boxes on the screen. Maybe this guy, he as super human powers, it's possible but in reality you need to be a lot more careful 'cause this isn't just a game it's peoples lives at risk. - Eight year old healthy boy. Status post encounter with a shattered glass sign. Numerous lacerations. - Echo. - Get him set up with trauma three with an EKG, full blood work and a pan scan. - So far, very accurate. I'm very impressed. The way that the paramedic told the history, very very accurate. - Adam needs an echocardiogram. - Behave yourself or you'll be removed from the building. - I don't know what to make of this guy. I like him 'cause he's super human and knows everything but it's just so unrealistic it's crazy. (upbeat music) Is this the same security guard who knows everywhere he's gonna go? Maybe this guy's a savant too. (machine beeping) - Do an echo. - The boy's wide open. It's gonna take awhile. - Good. That'll give me time to figure out why the hell we're doing an echo. Dr Brown, you're with me. We're gonna go find your weird guy. Keep him stable. - Surgeons just don't go and look for another doctor or someone else on the street that wanted to give them a recommendation on how to treat this patient. - I noticed that there was a slight reduction in the intensity of the electrocardiogram. - Electrical flow. I noticed that too. The heart rate was the same but the amplitude dropped. - Paracardial effusion. - Reduce cardiac output. - Would stress out the organs. - Causing them to shut down. - Yes. - Just to break that down. Pericardial effusion. Peri means surrounding the heart. The tissues surrounding the heart sometimes there's fluid there and sometimes that makes it difficult for that heart to beat and you get cardiac tamponade. That's what I was talking about earlier. - Again. Again. There. - Looks normal to me. - It's not normal. - Four doctors are looking at a scan. They don't believe there to be an issue. This guy comes in, sees an issue with the scan that no one else sees and now all of a sudden there starting to believe him that maybe it could be that. If your looking at the scan it either is or it isn't. I don't know what they're debating about the concavity that's open to interpretation. I've never seen a situation like this. - The YouTube clip already has over 200,000 views. - That's pretty good 200,000 views. The more I think about what he did there in the airport the more I think it's inappropriate. There is a good samaritan law that's in place to help with basic emergencies. Pulling someone out of a burning car and in the process you hurt their back trying to save them. But performing an advanced medical procedure like putting in a chest tube, especially a makeshift test tube like that. Man unless he saves the boy and it's 100% safe there's gonna be malpractice and lawyers involved in that case. (slowly rising music) - The good doctor strikes again. - You saved that boy's life. - Well good. His name is Adam. Traumatic pneumothorax. I'm hungry. - Shuan. Dr. Melendez's team is going into surgery. I mean if you're interested. - I mean how bout getting him to sign all the paperwork and disclosures and HIPPA forms and making sure he has identification. Put your mask on. Put your mask on Shaun. - I saw a lot of surgeons in medical school. You're much better than them. I have a lot to learn from you. You're very arrogant. - (laughing) Matter of fact. - You think that helps you be a good surgeon? Does it hurt you as a person? Is it worth it? (slow dramatic music) - And there you have it first episode of the Good Doctor. Things I definitely enjoyed about the show. Number one it's fairly medically accurate. The drama in the show is interesting. It kept my attention and I wanted to see more of what would happen. I really dig the fact that it gave an inside look into how hard living with autism can be. You know you could have abusive family, you have bullying that's happening. Dealing with autism is a difficult situation and I appreciate that the show highlights that. I will say however that they almost make him look super human and that's not realistic. So that's definitely a con in my book. But I understand that they need that factor to make the show work. There wasn't that much medical stuff to comment on. It was a lot about developing him as a character. If you know a better episode where there were more medical situations that I can comment on, let me know in the comments. If there's another show you want me to watch, please leave it down below in the comments. The best the thing you can do for this channel to help me make more content to make better content is to subscribe and then share this channel with your friends and family so that they can subscribe. As always stay happy and healthy. (upbeat music)
Info
Channel: Doctor Mike
Views: 27,152,173
Rating: 4.9497972 out of 5
Keywords: good doctor, doctor watches the good doctor, the good doctor reaction, the good doctor, good doctor accurate, doctor mike reacts to, doctor reviews medical tv show, medical drama review, real doctor watches greys anatomy, medical drama, doctor mike, dr mike, the good doctor 1x01, the good doctor (tv program), resident, medical drama tv, TV doctors, doctor tv shows, autism tv, tv medical drama, the good doctor season 1, medical tv show, shaun murphy, best doctor tv shows
Id: Ya_trIAWIXA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 15min 22sec (922 seconds)
Published: Sun Apr 15 2018
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