This LEGEND has dived almost 10x deeper than us!

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so back on july 26th of 2021 we released a video called how deep can humans dive and on that video we share the fact that the deepest ever recorded saturation dive was down to 1752 feet which is 534 meters that's ridiculous depth and you know one of the friends of the show dr doug eversol he reached out to us and said i mean you guys know that joe has been deeper than that right we were like what are you talking about and he said yeah you should reach out to joe and ask if he wants to talk about it for dive talk the joe that he's talking about is joe detour he was a commander in the u.s navy he was a saturation diver for the navy he's done a lot of amazing things uh you know in the navy and he has a phd in biomedicine i mean he's an expert in decompression um so we reach out to him and ask him he's also the training director for intd and an amazing cave diving trainer um and we reached out to him and said dog um sorry joe is it true that you've been deeper than 1700 feet the deepest ever recorded saturation dive and he said yes you guys should come to tampa so we can talk about it so of course we hop on a plane me and woody we fly down to tampa where he owns the undersea oxygen clinic we walk in we get there we get there about five minutes early he says just come in come in stand on the back just be quiet let me finish this class and as he's finishing the class i started recording some video of him like teaching the class he's talking about the compression medicine and stuff i also noticed that behind me there's like some navy awards and diplomas and stuff so i turn around and start recording uh the kind of the pilot license that he has for the suit the one atmosphere suit that he used to dive deeper than the deepest ever recorded saturation dive and i'm also you know recording here a picture of the actual suit and you can see on the reflection that even though we were supposed to stay back in the back of the room woody just decides to wander off and go into some other room in this place that we've never been and because i noticed that he wandered off i decided to follow him and here's what happened it depends on your prescription anywhere up to three atmospheres um the most common is about two uh that's super rare we just got here um even at three that would be very we literally just got here yeah watch whatever you want up there um it's a sliding scale so it's yeah it kind of your your risk increases up until about two and it stays the same and then all of it until about three you know it goes up slightly and after three is when it kind of goes up exponentially since i've been working here i haven't seen it yeah yeah so if someone's actively convulsing we have to wait because i'm not going to increase decrease the pressure while you're clenching a whole bunch of words so the only thing we can do at that point is i would have our medical air which is which is regular 21 air and i come over here and i'd um there's this little valve that's right up against the chamber i don't know if you can see it um there's a little little green valve and it will push 15 liters per minute of air in there and that's all i can do while you're actively convulsing essentially correct me if i'm wrong but people get tired like their bodies literally get tired and they'll stop convulsing and at that point i start bringing you up and this is just the one only other thing we can do to try to make that happen sooner or like what's l the convolution i mean at a high pressure that's the big mystery i've asked them everybody's like we don't know exactly yeah it's it's not um fully understood don't know it's something to do with um some uh yeah some oxygen radicals and so forth there's a lot of thoughts as to what it may be coming from it's not known for sure yeah there's a few good is [Applause] foreign no don't they're gonna kick us out this is this is a serious place these are scientists woody this guy has a phd so really he's hi everybody hi i am here with gus i'm here with dr doug eversol i am here with dr joseph de turi and here's where we're at everybody i want to set this up a little bit we are at the undersea oxygen clinic we're in tampa florida tampa woohoo west coast baby and we have been wanting to interview him for a while there is some incredible stuff that this man has done i want you to give a little bit of a background it's very long if you look up his resume i mean it's unbelievable i mean seriously how many years in the military doing yep interesting 28 years in the navy i had i was blessed being a navy diver i got to do special operations i got to do deep submergence i was blessed to be able to work with special operations command and design and have built dry combat submersible and then i decided to retire went back to school got a phd in biomedical engineering and now i do clinical research in hyperbaric medicine i teach med school a 40 ama1 cme course and heterobaric medicine and i i just i have a lot of fun and i can't dive occasionally so he made it you made your life around diving after diving in the military your whole world was diving related after that kind of sorta um dva never outside of diving he jumps out of planes i jump out of planes yeah it's like if you if you if you like like your youtube channel like every video there's a different badass activity there's like like a wrestling alligator here's something there's me jumping out of the biplane go look at that here's me doing this look at that it's just look man the unexplored life is not worth living so just just live it man skating after it okay so let's start with this let's set it up like this what is this place what are you doing here in general so this is the undersea oxygen clinic and what we do is we administer hyperbaric oxygen hyperbaric more pressure oxygen to you two individuals that come here by prescription and they get treated for all kinds of ailments osteomyelitis gaseous gangrene carbon monoxide poisoning you know a gamut of approved and even off-label indications because we want to treat those that are in need you know and in the off-label indications right i was asking this a minute ago are you seeing yourself improvement of various different things if so like give an example of something you've absolutely seen improvement on right right so once again non-peer-reviewed non-double-blind non-placebo-controlled studies that i'm doing right now that are we're working towards get listen every indication was off label except for dcs and then we made a burden of proof and then all of a sudden we got ag and we made a burden of proof and we got burns and we made a burden proof and we got you know whatever so for instance one of them that's looking really good right now in joe's opinion is crohn's and ulcerative colitis now let me back up a little bit since we have the cardiologist here i want to ask so doctor what was the initial use for viagra uh actually viagra was an anti-anginal drug for people with heart disease um blood pressure right it was a vasodilator so it would dilate coronary arteries to get angina to go away right it's just when they did the studies they found it had a very interesting side effect profile so that's again that was more marketable than the original indication so that's the on label indication so give me an example of an off-label use of that particular drug what well erectile disorder so now it's an offline use so that's illustrative of on label oxygen use and off-label auction use doesn't mean that it doesn't work it just means that it's not fda approved yet yet remember every single indication was not approved except for decompression sickness so but then they became approved over time once they meet a burden of proof we have seen crohn's and ulcerative colitis right now that is really well responsive that's a that's an inflammatory if you don't know that's an inflammatory disease of the colon they're kind of cousins wow yeah i don't know anything yeah it's a it's a it's a it's an ulcerate of the colon ulcerative colitis puts you at risk for colon cancer often requires a full colectomy um crohn's disease is a more chronic disease and causes fistulas so it's just a very built both are very debilitating diseases pain you know i hate to be tied to the bathroom yeah yeah lots of diarrhea a lot of bloody bloody stools you know just a terrible very um debilitating not necessarily fatal illness but a very debilitating so anything that can improve that would be huge for people's you know quality of life as exciting as this conversation is okay can we use a crappy conversation can we move on that's good are we allowed to say that that's a crappy conversation i want to go back because i want to talk about when you went into the navy like going back like being a diver is that why you went into the navy or do you end up just being a diver because i know a lot of people go into the navy or into the army or whatever it is and they end up doing a job that is not exactly what they wanted to do all right so i'm gonna wrap myself out here i did not pay attention in high school so pay attention high school so i did not pay attention in high school i was bored i was whatever i was scatterbrained whatever whatever i did not do very well on my s.a.t i got a 9 10. i know so my 9 10 on the s.a.t and everything right so the 910 on the sat afforded me exactly zero college possibility but i wanted to get out of new york because i grew up in long island in new york and i knew that i was not going to be hanging out on a corner of 4th street and 4th avenue for very long just like my brother and his cousin and brother and friends and all that and i just wasn't going to do it so i needed to get the heck out of dodge navy was really my only choice i could have gone on the marine corps but my mother wouldn't have signed the papers didn't want to go in the air force because i i don't know it just don't look good in blue i don't know and then so so that was basically it in the army i don't look good in green so poof i'm in the navy but when you're in the navy then what how did you go down this tree so interestingly enough i joined the navy and i went as a nuke because i scored really well in the asvab the standard aptitude test for the military scored really well on that and they said you can go be a nuke so i went to nuclear power school and it was in orlando florida right here and he was in the school with anthony uh oh yeah yeah oh yeah that's why yeah so we were chit chatting about that but it's like you know it's the okay this person can actually do some logical thinking okay great so i was on a motorcycle and i was coming up from i-4 to the east-west expressway and i wrecked my motorcycle and i ended up in the hospital found out i chipped my hip during that and then i had eczema so when i showed up i had this eczema and the guy goes whoa wait a minute doctor goes you're not allowed to be a nuke and i'm like whoa my contract done says thou shalt be a nuke and i was in new power school and i was good and da da da doing okay and they were like no you can't be a nuke you're medically disqualified and i was like uh that's not going to work because i have a contract then the navy offered me my choice of any school in the navy and i said wait is this diver thing real they're like yeah i was like i kind of like diving because my dad had introduced me to diving my first scuba diving lesson was my dad i think it was 11 years old and i had a double hose regulator and he basically said oh hey by the way just don't hold your breath that was my entire diving education breathe it out repeat as necessary and then what i did was i went on to his boat in the canal in new york you can imagine right so it's filthy and there's a shopping cart here and there's and i'm and i'm doing this with with a zinc tail there's probably a body i would love so i'm trying to take a zinc tab off uh with a uh with an allen key trying to take that zinc tab off and put another one on and uh a fish comes swimming up and goes boop hits me right in the face and it goes boop hits me right in the face again and i'm like ah this is so cool i want to do this and then you know that's it after that you can dive in the navy that's a thing oh yeah okay so now so jumping way ahead i i don't want to get too technical now i want to get into right now what is the single most amazing area that either you're working on or that is being worked on as it relates to improving the technology or the gas we breathe or anything as it relates to diving something really cool cutting edge stuff cutting edge yeah you messaged me a little bit about it but i want you to talk about it yeah so we do have some cutting edge stuff i mean the the more we improve the gear the longer we can stay i remember being a cave diver in the early 90s trying to get back to the hinko required so many stage bottles now it's like you got a rebreather you jump in you get on your scooter you're there in like seven minutes eight minutes whatever it is you know your scooter's on 12 you're you're back at the hinko and then you can go explore so we're getting deeper longer as the rebreathers improve as the quality of the computers can improve but that's not the that's not the that's the art of the possible so what is the next next the next next i'm telling you it's biometric monitoring joe's opinion i believe that we are going to tie biometric monitoring to people and we are going to find out their decompression their individual decompression predicated upon how their hearts beating what their doppler is from their hooked up what their heart rate variability is because heart rate variability is an indicator of stress decompressive stress is a stress if you're stressing the autonomic nervous system you can get a key before you actually get a a sign or symptom of decompression sickness this is joe's opinion i'm just throwing that out there so by having that individual analysis going on you can optimize something exactly for them that's what you're saying so you optimize the decompression for you on that day joe's opinion on that and that's the way all the medicines go into personalized medicine oh it's got to be that way in all the medicines okay but and i'm reading some notes here because i don't by the way yeah keep going uh joe's saying this not as a guy who's out of the navy and doing this on it joe still works contract-wise with the military yeah so he's still very much involved in all the cutting-edge navy stuff yeah so but you messaged me something else some other uh that does something related to helping circulation it's i let me read exactly what was it called again that he was saying let me read your answers and you were like this is the coolest thing that we're working on right now and i should have had this up so it's called nitric oxide that's what i'm trying that what he just said so tell me about so so it's a smooth muzzle mediator and interestingly enough there are three kinds of them one's inducible one's excitable and one's neuronal right inducible excitable and neuronal and one comes from um high intensity cardiovascular work so if you do like 30 minutes of hit and i'm talking high like a 180 or above cardiovascular work right yes high intensity cardiovascular what it does is it puts a sheep on the inside of the endothelium lining so not to get really complex it's just it's prophylactic to having the or it protects you from having the bubbles form on the inside of the endothelium lining which if you read steve thom stuff is kind of predictive of decompression sickness now remember we don't know what causes really decompression sickness we think it has something to do with bubbles look at some of that look at some of the videos online but the the whole if you protect the inside of the endothelium lining with something that prevents you from having those bubbles form that's hydrophobic that won't let those bubbles sit on the inside of of the lining you could possibly cure decompression sickness i think that's a thing but so there's excitable inducible neuronal right the one of them you get from high cardiovascular work the other one you get from a statin drug called lipitor and joe did not tell you to go out and die of lipitor and i am not a medical doctor i have a phd in biomedical engineering so don't listen to me listen to dr eversol because he's he's a medical doctor i'm just a real doctor and we're just dive talk so increase nitrogen decrease inflammation and so forth same kind of concept right but our p so how are they testing this like what's going on with it oh my goodness so so here's the real story there's not enough money in diving to do these kind of tests when i was in the navy we had done some of these type tests and i was like oh i wonder if this and then you know before you knew it this guy couldn't be bent but he was on 80 milligrams of lipitor and you're like what's going on here this is weird and then you have to stop because you have these trip gates uh when you're doing uh when you're doing your research you have to have these off ramps for we went too high right so basically we couldn't bend this guy and we were like hey what's going on so immediately they theorized nitric oxide synthate uh from the uh lipitor was putting a prophylactic sheath on the inside end of the lining preventing but it makes sense because the navy dive tables are predicated upon an 18 to 24 year old male in peak physical condition right we used to pt crazy right i wasn't in the navy so this is another reason to be in peak physical condition because if you're doing high intensity cardiovascular work you're actually getting that prophylactic lining yourself you're putting it on there so you're not taking it from lipitor so there's yet another reason so another reason why navy divers weren't getting bent but you shouldn't dive the navy dive tables if you're not in peak physical condition or 18 to 24 years old and i'm not eating i'm not 18 anymore no so then really then there's nothing much more going on with it right now yeah so you need what you need is money you make any money okay so yeah this is what that this is where joe thinks the end-all be-all is but that's just an opinion man this is like everybody's got one speaking of money though like you know joe you the the cool thing that i learned about you a long time ago was where you end up like where you evolved as a diver within the navy because i assume you didn't start diving on the one atmosphere suit no right from day one so you tell us a little bit of your story as a diver like where do you start in the navy and how do you end up being selected to dive this thing well what is it first of all what is the one atmosphere so the one atmosphere suit is a pressurized suit basically it is a big thick aluminum suit and uh you get in it and you can go to up to 2000 feet it's a one-man submarine it is a one-man submarine that's basically exactly it it is pressurized to one atmosphere all on the inside and on the outside you can withstand pressure because of the pressure barrier that is supported to you by the aluminum so what is involved in the training i mean don't just get in this thing and start breathing and you want to do it next week right well i want to take the class i'm going to get into that i want to identify me on that i don't think we have enough so but no seriously well it seems like i just get in this thing and i start breathing and somebody controls me from the boat or something breathe in and out repeat as necessary right so it is when i designed the curriculum for uh the training and uh and i worked that through uh it was turned over to me as it was introduced to the navy and then i took it on the first international exercise i became a pilot there are 35 pilots in the world my number is 21. it takes 20 hours of flight time before you can be considered a pilot minimum 20 hours of flight time i have time next week yeah and what we do is you got 20 hours so yeah the suit is 1500 pounds this suit now there are a lot of one atmosphere suits but this one goes 2000 feet there are many like it but this one's mine did you go to 2000 2000 feet 1947 feet yeah okay you know what like i said i stepped in the right lighting right and and i'm blessed your eyeballs have looked out this suit and seen oh please the wings at 1947 feet i'm telling you right yep yeah but no don't i know you're not going to admit this but we know you know that you saw aliens down there there are ntis baby ntis if you watch the abyss the abyss the abyss those guys listen i did i i wanted to get it out there no no i think so okay stop that's off topic but i think when he did see that he can't tell you but what can you do why why as much as you can say i don't want to put you in jeopardy why do we have this what is the navy doing with this thing so this was called intervention for submarine rescue and what you do is you fly the suit down a submarine crashed on the bottom of the ocean you'd fly the suit down you'd go clear the suit maybe you drop off a pod inside a uh a life support pack inside the submarine you open the door of the submarine you drop it in the first one you close the door and then they can evacuate the water out of it and get that life support pod and then you set it all up and clear the hatch that's called the intervention aspect and then the rescue asset which is either the um mccann rescue chamber or the pressurized rescue module which i put into uh service in the navy as well and they could sit down on it and evacuate the people out of it and do a dry transfer how much dexterity do you have with the suit you're talking about opening doors not as much not as much as you would think so you got to get really well qualified in the pool you do lots of stuff remind me about the not rope but everybody thinks everybody thinks that what separates us from everybody else is the opposable thumb well if that was the case lobsters would run around and rule the earth you don't see lobsters right what really separates us from other creatures is our ability to what we call pre-hence that's touch this finger touch this finger touch his finger and touch his finger opposing so if you can move your thumb like this this is what helps you grab things if you ever tried to pick up rice with two chopsticks like this you really it's hard right so you know it's kind of a tough thing to do and that's exactly what you have on these on these one atmosphere suits is what's called a manipulator so all you have is the ability to do this so you've got to grab something pick it up you can twist it but you can only twist as far as your wrist will that's it and remember you're picking it up with a chopstick so that's all you can do really really hard dexterity flying you know and and you know you're sitting basically on a bicycle seat for up to eight hours and you're trying to fly this suit to get over to whatever you're doing and move wires and cut things and you know use tools and all kinds of other stuff so when you say fly in it you mean there's like petals or sticks to move things around there's not like a computer it's more of a joystick yeah so what you got is you you are sitting on a bicycle seat and you have your feet free they're not touching the bottom and it's toe down to go down heel down to go up forward backward left right right so oh yeah so it's all good if you happen to be in one position all the time but you're in a 300 until you go this way you're laying down and you're working your project and then it's toe down to go backwards [Laughter] peel down to go forward and it's like oh that's it and then you're trying to you're trying to chase around this is the not rope training they take a rope it's tied it has a knot on one end and not on the other end and it has a washer a bolt a a washer a nut a washer a nut a washer not a washer nut they take it they empty it in the pool they unknock the rope and they throw the rope in the pool your job fly over get the rope tie a knot in one end fly over pick up a washer put the washer on the rope fly over pick up a nut put the nut on the rope fly over pick up a washer oh my god did you do it yeah i did it for a license and then you got to tell them to be able to do it oh yeah it's a qualification to be a pilot yeah and then you have to know all the all everything that's going on in that so if you look at that thing it is a giant rebreather yeah yeah that's a big giant rebreather right so it's a huge thing of carbon dioxide absorbent and you know you have metabolic makeup which is for oxygen and you know so it's really neat so and the washers always end up in the corner of the pool where you can't get oh man they got like claw to go killing me brutal so what i was thinking about with that we were talking about that it's a basically a rebreather and it has o2 and it has a scrubber and you know nobody stuff rebreather training has to do with when stuff doesn't go right that's what rebreather training is it's all great when it's working you just sit there you breathe and you've got a perfect po too yup what is the training that you do when things go bad in here oh two stab yourself in the heart you're 2 000 feet under water you have it's no longer at one atmosphere pressure or the o2 isn't firing right or the scrubber is not firing right can it can it fly it can flood if you flood at 2000 feet you're at 810 pounds per square inch pressure coming in so you do we've we've said that we'd be like not only would it cut you in half it would cauterize the bleeding wounded but there's no drill what happened okay so seriously you have to but you do have to train lots of emergency procedure training so i was the guy that was in charge of that setup and i told the training master chief i said listen we when i took over i said we have dove our last unfaulted dive every dive we will train everyone the yellow hat came out and somebody was doing a drill so we train like we fight we fight like we train carbon dioxide scrubber material failed this failed this fan failed oxygen pressure level so yeah you trained every dive so it wasn't only the 20 hours that you got every dive you did in the suit there was a drill have they ever used this suit dude to extract i'm going to ask a very he doesn't have the answer like let's say that we have bad guys you can't see me right the only way that bad guys can get off of their middle eastern land like syria or something that's only like accessible to them by water would be to bring them on a submarine and then get them into something and bring them through this thing back up to the surface type of thing some kind of a terrorist extraction thing i'm just thinking that would be a great use yes that sounds like a terrific year something like it sounds like a james bond player i think that's going on i couldn't i can either confirm no denied that no it's guilty i knew it that's awesome i could tell you but then i'd have to kill you how much do these things cost to make them and then who makes them uh so they are made by a company called um hard suits they're out of canada so like we get so we get we get the one atmosphere chipped to us and it has this big pot leaf on my freaking soup and i'm like hey who put the pot leaf on my suit it's a canadian flag i'm like oh did i offend you i'm sorry i'm like well we're taking the pot leaf off the suit so it's made in canada and uh they were they were the bitter that one and they did a great job on it and now they've commercialized they have a commercialized version of this suit you know it was initially theorized by a guy named phil newton it was in fact the nude suit so the new suit converted to the hard suit the hard suit made by heartsuits incorporated or you know so do you know how about how much they cost a lot of freaking money i don't know i didn't buy the hundreds of thousands or it would be a million dollar type of thing ah it's got to be over a million it's a submarine so we thought it exactly and each piece of it now you talked about the dexterity right so there's a piece here there's a piece here a piece here a piece here a piece here a piece here and then a piece on the wrist so all of those are separately poured blocks of aluminum that are milled out because we didn't want to pour the mold and then have there be some porous in there because it could crack right under 2000 well you know 810 psi at 2000 feet of sea water would be bad so what we did was we filled block and then we poured it all out and then we used this equivalence principle and a liquid-filled joint to use as much pressure pushing in as pressing back it's a great idea and what you wind up doing is being able to turn pretty well so you can go like this you can go like this you can go like this but you're still limited by the person's shoulder dexterity and they're you know it can't swim in it i mean this suits 1500 pounds so what what do they do so did they like take the people that they selected and like make suits to fit them or they just pick people to fit the suit yeah so you can put extra rings in it to make you taller you can go down to i think the minimum was five six the maximum was six four there because you get some of those big guys six eight i wanna be in this would i forget i had i had a guy who was my md who was a former navy seal and his quads were too big to fit inside the ring of the suit so he put his legs down and and the suit literally stopped him but he was quadzilla i mean this guy's huge yeah are you still doing anything with the military with special ops any kind of training with them i uh from time to time i'm hired to do things for the government just fun stuff for me and that's just using my expertise stuff that i learned in the military and stuff that i learned in the civilian world and combining that and then bringing it to the military and helping them so from time to time i am my government calls me trust me i would cut my air and go back in the military you can bank on that i would you would you would in a minute the one thing that i miss the guys yeah like i had guys and it was great there's camaraderie and it's fun and we're doing cool things together and then you retire from the military and it's like i got you guys and i could go cave diving and die we could have cave dogs that's fun but but you know like your brother from another mother was that person in the military that did the same training as you spilled blood in the same mud you know yeah that kind of stuff so outside of all of this you're also i don't know the official title you're the director of education maybe that's the training director training director of iintd yup the international association of nitrox and technical divers at one point i owned stock in that company and they made me the training director they asked me to be the chum mount asked me to be the training director my mentor asked me to be the training director so when your mentor asks you something you say yes so we did that for a lot of years and then i sold off the shares and i then i went back to school i got my phd and during that time i was like tom i cannot help you during this time and then it was time i was finished with my phd and the guy who was the training director was looking to move on and he said hey do you want to be hit again i was like one two three and i tried to say not it okay you're right i'm like oh i don't do it but what i do is i enforce the standards i train the standards we write the standards there's a committee of people him on it that we get together and we go hey what do we think we should do for this and then we put that out we do common consensus type guidance and then i work with all the other training agencies for those of you out there that think that the training agencies don't talk oh man myself and sean harrison from tdi we talk all the time certainly we used to do it more than we have done lately because it's pretty well running lockstep but you know the guys from now either guys from paddy we talk all the time so don't think that you can just jump back and forth between agencies we're all we're all actually friends yeah and they really are when you say that the training agencies like we're we do a really good job i think of self-governing i mean these are really strict these standards i mean they think of a lot of details as it goes into the training and then they enforce those standards yep so we enforce the standards well we want the instructor to be at this level right we want the instructor to be able to do this we want the instructor to teach that and you know it's like from time to time i get the oh this guy was actually doing an open water tri-mix class inside of eagle's nest and i'm like he's not allowed to do that here's the reason here's the rule that he violated let's not do this let's not do that whatever you know it's like that kind of stuff you know so you do an open water dive you got to be in open water you can't be in an overhead environment it's just the rules sorry i don't make the rules i just enforce them okay so my final question i don't know if anybody else has it what's your i ask this to a lot of people what's your end game like where are you how much longer are you planning on doing all these things that you're doing and when you do retire whatever that what do you want to do so um when i when i got out of the military retired after 28 years i said i want to figure out what i want to do i had this crisis of life i you know i had been in the military still i had been in the military longer than i have been not in the military right so i have to live until i'm 56 in order to be into the military as long as i was out of the military right so i had a complete crisis and i didn't know what i wanted so i went back to the drawing board and i started with deming the end in mind keep the end in mind what do you want to be when you grow up and for humans what is that it's a tombstone so if you look at the tombstone what do they want to say on your eulogy right what do you want to be said about you yes i want to help make aquanauts astronauts and sub-sea submersibles safer that's what i want to do so i made my vision board i start driving towards that i needed a phd so i could do that i could do this research to make stuff safer to help people to kick that can down the road and like i said astronauts aquanauts same same thing i mean my master's is in astronomical engineering you know my phd's in biomedical engineering it's all life support everybody's like no it's not trust me it's the same similar i mean that's pretty amazing i'm just thinking that i just want to be able to get a little bit better trim on my teeth that's all i i mean it's different you guys all heard what we're doing and i'm thinking maybe yeah it's all decompression strategy right it's a little bit no but we really appreciate this um we had to come here oh my goodness look and i'll tell you this we are we are one of the west coast only uh 24 7 365 diver treatment chambers you do not want to be bent for the first time when you come here come we're open we're we're pretty approachable so come on in uh you know we're at 701 north west shore boulevard tampa florida 33609 give us a call look us up at uoc tampa undersea oxygen i'm sorry hbo tampa i don't even know my own address hbo tampa.com look us up and we'll take you in here we'll give you a tour we'll show you what it's like and this way the first time you come to the hypeberric treatment center is not when you're doubled over in pain yes it's pretty amazing too i got a chance anybody's medical once training oh yeah and we teach 40 ama1 cmes to physicians in hyperbaric medicine i also teach that class at the university of south florida too so you know if you want to come and have fun you'll be learning the exact same medical stuff that you know guys like dr dub ever saw learned which he didn't learn anything for me i actually he was in the class but i learned a lot from him i love when doug says oh yeah we took that class for fun one day what do we do this week and now let's just take a class right right exactly quite like our ice diving class yeah there you go oh so much okay so that that's really cool i i did tour this we got to tour it a little bit a while ago i think you've got some footage up there's some like b-roll footage you guys you got some footage too we got some footage so um thank you very much oh thank you guys love to see you thanks for flying down we really appreciate your time that's good thank you for your service now we're talking oh thank you guys yeah oh wait one last takeaway sure people are saying thank you for your service now when i first came in the military that was not the case when i first came in the military was 1985 and there were signs in norfolk virginia that said dogs and sailors keep off the lawn that would not happen today that is a change in the united states of america i am here to humbly thank you as a servant to this great country thank you for thanking us that is just it's wonderful and we really appreciate you so god bless you and god bless the usa awesome well-deserved great way to close it thank you everybody see you on the next one
Info
Channel: DIVE TALK
Views: 93,139
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: SCUBA, IANTD, TDI, NAUI, PADI, SSI, Tec Diving, Tec Diver, Tech Diving, Tech Diver, Cave Diver, Cave Diving, Open Water Diver, Scuba Diving, Scuba Instructor, Dive Instructor, Joe Dituri, Recompression Chamber, Hyperbaric Chamber, Hyperbaric Medicine, Hyperbaric, Recompression, Decompression, Hyperoxic, Hyperbaric Treatment, Joseph Dituri, Oxygen Radicals, Tampa, US Navy, US Navy Special Command, US Navy Commander, Abyss, The Abyss, Aliens, Decompression Sickness, Chamber, Newt Suit
Id: EjFKUuJIWZo
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 38min 49sec (2329 seconds)
Published: Mon Aug 23 2021
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