All these health professional versus health professional videos made by several different users is such a red flag about how abusive health science is as a profession.
I'm a Surgical Technologist, and even I know how to suture a 5mm laceration. Shoot assuming it's not advised for some reason, I'd even use Monocryl so she wouldn't have to have them removed later.
For anyone who feels offended by this video, please, allow me to interpret it's meaning for you: "Sometimes specialists are called unnecessarily." That's it. No more - no less. Everything else was just added for comedic effect. So relax, and watch some more of these funny videos.
I sleep on call and jump at at 5 mm laceration and do a full day of office or smaller OR cases. I gave up being on call before a microvascular case the next day. I bill the patients or parents appropriately for dragging me out of bed and yes, they pay for my stamina!
Call me anytime when I am on call Kadprice or will you be concerned about the patients' financial welfare.
I could not delete the above post so I will clarify that my response is in the context of my kid is going to be a movie star and has to have the best scar possible as oppose to a dog bite with a lot of parental guilt involved.
Nice video Mortois. I can relate and found it amusing.
Are people really trying to defend the woman in this recording? If she cannot utilize or is not capable of common sense, she does not belong in a hospital, period.
I'll whole heartedly second the shift worker comment. You can't even pretend the hours worked by ER are comparable to medicine, let alone surgery.
I understand that patients ask for Plastics from time to time, but the question isn't whether they are comfortable with the ER doc closing the incision, it's if the ER doc is comfortable and capable. Patients with chest pain don't get to request cardiologists, patients with a cough don't get to request a pulmonologist.
@Plastikos07 if you think an evening shift in an urban ER is a cakewalk compared to an inpatient medicine day maybe you should try it. Regarding what "the question" is, the actual reality is many parents ask for the best person, EM docs have no followup, can't give continuity, and truly don't know their outcomes. Not that many wouldn't try, but refusing the consult is hard to defend in a suboptimal repair. You can see from other videos chest pain patients do get a cardiologist. Same reason.
Coming from the guy who sleeps on call you're telling me about stamina? Your presumptions are again false, I'm not an ER physician but find your musings petty all the same, especially since you get paid for consulting.
The intern who is calling you is probably just trying to be nice. Go ahead and give her crap if that's the doctor you are, who cares if you did it too to an unpleasant consultant in med school or transitional year, but putting your fabricated diatribe on Youtube is asinine.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
Crying about consults just reflects your arrogance given their importance in inpatient practice. The majority of folks get sutured in EDs not wanting to wait for you, so unlike your contrived skit here, it's not for your "talent" you're getting called. If you don't have stamina to stay up with people who have to work and face difficult parents, no one says you have to be a consultant. If you're a resident, then do your job.
@kadprice Oh, lighten up. It's called satire. And to be fair, I posted a similar video from the reverse perspective. I can tell you, as a practicing plastic surgeon, neither video is terribly contrived.
But as far as stamina concerned, I'm assuming that you are either an ER physician or resident. Maybe a medical student. Either way, you are a shift worker, and you really don't know what you're talking about.
@kadprice Unfortunately this is typical of an ED consult at a teaching hospital. Yes, its not our talent were being called for its usually ignorance and laziness on the EDs part. A good portion of calls have zero to do with plastics and wholly to do with not taking the time to learn whats an emergency and the proper care of most things. Too many times ive come in to literally put a band aid on, or evaluated someone who has already received the appropriate care elsewhere and was transferred.
she smells like blood and cookies. HAHAHAHAHHA then i can have the 3rd year med student walk him through it... HAHAHHAHAAH omg, i'm a MS3... that made my day
@azncaramel69 the reason the plastician wants you to do it is so he can complain about the ER's scar at followup and charge the patient for a few Z-plasties to repair it. Don't believe me? do an outpatient plastics rotation.
gundam age
wingz240 1 week ago
All these health professional versus health professional videos made by several different users is such a red flag about how abusive health science is as a profession.
looker768 6 months ago
In Spain same thing happens all the time. And since all patients have insurance, you can imagine what it is like
tanimara285 6 months ago
I'm a Surgical Technologist, and even I know how to suture a 5mm laceration. Shoot assuming it's not advised for some reason, I'd even use Monocryl so she wouldn't have to have them removed later.
vjm3 9 months ago
For anyone who feels offended by this video, please, allow me to interpret it's meaning for you: "Sometimes specialists are called unnecessarily." That's it. No more - no less. Everything else was just added for comedic effect. So relax, and watch some more of these funny videos.
rmcdaniel423 9 months ago
I sleep on call and jump at at 5 mm laceration and do a full day of office or smaller OR cases. I gave up being on call before a microvascular case the next day. I bill the patients or parents appropriately for dragging me out of bed and yes, they pay for my stamina!
Call me anytime when I am on call Kadprice or will you be concerned about the patients' financial welfare.
Danhuang8 1 year ago
@Danhuang8
I could not delete the above post so I will clarify that my response is in the context of my kid is going to be a movie star and has to have the best scar possible as oppose to a dog bite with a lot of parental guilt involved.
Nice video Mortois. I can relate and found it amusing.
Danhuang8 1 year ago
@Danhuang8 I have no idea what your point is but thanks for seeing your consults. I am glad you get paid for the job you signed on to do.
kadprice 8 months ago
Are people really trying to defend the woman in this recording? If she cannot utilize or is not capable of common sense, she does not belong in a hospital, period.
jbarum 1 year ago
The comments here are laughable. Can't anyone take a joke anymore? I guess this is yet another negative ramification of the Bell Commission.
Demagogue8990 1 year ago
HAHAHAHAH THAT'S THE REALITY, NICE VERY NICE VIDEO THANKS !
Naty476 1 year ago
I'll whole heartedly second the shift worker comment. You can't even pretend the hours worked by ER are comparable to medicine, let alone surgery.
I understand that patients ask for Plastics from time to time, but the question isn't whether they are comfortable with the ER doc closing the incision, it's if the ER doc is comfortable and capable. Patients with chest pain don't get to request cardiologists, patients with a cough don't get to request a pulmonologist.
Plastikos07 1 year ago
@Plastikos07 if you think an evening shift in an urban ER is a cakewalk compared to an inpatient medicine day maybe you should try it. Regarding what "the question" is, the actual reality is many parents ask for the best person, EM docs have no followup, can't give continuity, and truly don't know their outcomes. Not that many wouldn't try, but refusing the consult is hard to defend in a suboptimal repair. You can see from other videos chest pain patients do get a cardiologist. Same reason.
kadprice 8 months ago
Doctors complaining about being doctors is one of the most annoying things ever.
dirtydodger 1 year ago
Coming from the guy who sleeps on call you're telling me about stamina? Your presumptions are again false, I'm not an ER physician but find your musings petty all the same, especially since you get paid for consulting.
The intern who is calling you is probably just trying to be nice. Go ahead and give her crap if that's the doctor you are, who cares if you did it too to an unpleasant consultant in med school or transitional year, but putting your fabricated diatribe on Youtube is asinine.
kadprice 1 year ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Crying about consults just reflects your arrogance given their importance in inpatient practice. The majority of folks get sutured in EDs not wanting to wait for you, so unlike your contrived skit here, it's not for your "talent" you're getting called. If you don't have stamina to stay up with people who have to work and face difficult parents, no one says you have to be a consultant. If you're a resident, then do your job.
kadprice 1 year ago
@kadprice Oh, lighten up. It's called satire. And to be fair, I posted a similar video from the reverse perspective. I can tell you, as a practicing plastic surgeon, neither video is terribly contrived.
But as far as stamina concerned, I'm assuming that you are either an ER physician or resident. Maybe a medical student. Either way, you are a shift worker, and you really don't know what you're talking about.
mortois 1 year ago 17
@kadprice It's a joke. You thought way too much about this. Please do something to lighten up. You are so uptight, it's probably unhealthy.
aortaable 1 year ago
@kadprice Unfortunately this is typical of an ED consult at a teaching hospital. Yes, its not our talent were being called for its usually ignorance and laziness on the EDs part. A good portion of calls have zero to do with plastics and wholly to do with not taking the time to learn whats an emergency and the proper care of most things. Too many times ive come in to literally put a band aid on, or evaluated someone who has already received the appropriate care elsewhere and was transferred.
zjbarnes 1 year ago
she smells like blood and cookies. HAHAHAHAHHA then i can have the 3rd year med student walk him through it... HAHAHHAHAAH omg, i'm a MS3... that made my day
azncaramel69 1 year ago
@azncaramel69 the reason the plastician wants you to do it is so he can complain about the ER's scar at followup and charge the patient for a few Z-plasties to repair it. Don't believe me? do an outpatient plastics rotation.
kadprice 1 year ago
Comment removed
azncaramel69 1 year ago
LMAO!!!!!
paolitab22 1 year ago
ROFL those are some idiotic doctors lol
R3MUS2007 1 year ago
So funny!
kchaiyas 1 year ago
lol 3rd year... that's pretty clever
koed15 1 year ago 4
thats awesome.
phatman23 1 year ago