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Emergency (AU) Season 02 Episode 04 - Emergency (AU) 2022

#Emergency
Emergency (AU) Season 02 Episode 04 - Emergency (AU) 2022
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Emergency
Emergency reveals the tribulations and triumphs of the Royal Melbourne Hospital's dedicated doctors and nurses as they deal with victims of vicious assaults, horror car crashes and other tragedies, caring for the constant stream of patients coming through the door every day.

Пікірлер: 113

  • @ydp1401
    @ydp1401 Жыл бұрын

    Since the channel is not monetized. If you would like to send me a small thank you donation I have a PayPal account: www.paypal.com/paypalme/hieukk01 Thank you very much!

  • @snakesonn3590

    @snakesonn3590

    4 ай бұрын

    Please send me a donation for all the work our volunteer fire fighters put in

  • @nenblom
    @nenblom Жыл бұрын

    “You’re always a bit nervous having a lawyer as a patient.” 😂😂

  • @karenrudderham4900
    @karenrudderham4900 Жыл бұрын

    Watching things like these makes you grateful every day you get to bedtime without having any problems!!

  • @bettygitzke4131
    @bettygitzke4131 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, all I can say to ALL YOU PEOPLE WHO SAVE ALL THESE LIVES YOU ARE HEROES ♥️⭐️💙

  • @snakesonn3590
    @snakesonn35904 ай бұрын

    What an amazing woman Dr Emma is.

  • @danielleelias685
    @danielleelias685 Жыл бұрын

    I love watching these documentaries. All you doctors and nurses that save lives daily are amazing. What a rewarding career, you make a difference.

  • @pascalswager9100
    @pascalswager9100 Жыл бұрын

    Naaww firie Dad made me cry. What a sweet man.

  • @nancyalexander780
    @nancyalexander780 Жыл бұрын

    I really like the way Dr Johnathan relates and empathizes with people.

  • @Nina_Olivia

    @Nina_Olivia

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I really like him too! He’s fantastic - my type of doctor 👍

  • @stephaniewood1547
    @stephaniewood15479 ай бұрын

    That poor baby, it didn’t deserve that,nor had it asked for that!

  • @Colorista_1
    @Colorista_111 ай бұрын

    As a retired flight nurse in the United States, these shows feel like “home” to me. I would do it all again in a heartbeat!

  • @katiesimpson8517

    @katiesimpson8517

    10 ай бұрын

    Me too! Retired from Napa Valley, Calif. Best times & the worst too. So I love watching these from the comfort of my couch.

  • @lorenzwinterhoff8049

    @lorenzwinterhoff8049

    5 ай бұрын

    I was never the professional. I was often the patient though, same with my brother. I turn these on for familiar "company" when I clean. 😅

  • @Beepinsqueekin
    @Beepinsqueekin Жыл бұрын

    I live in Omaha Nebraska USA and my husband and I feel so fortunate to have some of the best hospitals in the Midwest. I was so sad to think about that poor unborn baby and hope it is born in good condition. Keep these videos coming!

  • @bblake5116

    @bblake5116

    Жыл бұрын

    We have great hospitals here in Australia and it’s free health care too.

  • @KF-cx8bm

    @KF-cx8bm

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here in UK, its a beautiful life to know that knowmatter what your circumstances you get free health care , in all areas of medicine

  • @melodybrake

    @melodybrake

    Жыл бұрын

    Used to live in Omaha for 13 years . I currently live about an hour away . Small world!

  • @nickislade5533

    @nickislade5533

    10 ай бұрын

    She would have been handed over to police GHB is illegal and Australian reporting laws require her to be reported, that would have brought in social workers and other carers,

  • @esthersiersema
    @esthersiersema Жыл бұрын

    Respect for so many poeple in 1 room for looking chaos but are so organized and working together

  • @ingridakerblom7577
    @ingridakerblom7577 Жыл бұрын

    I've never seen anyone on GHB. But i know enough how INSANE it is to take it while pregnant.. i feel really sorry for her..

  • @W1433LA

    @W1433LA

    10 ай бұрын

    What is it

  • @Alp3124

    @Alp3124

    3 ай бұрын

    @@W1433LAliquid ecstasy

  • @karensamuels390
    @karensamuels390 Жыл бұрын

    Poor Kallan looks horrible. Its so frightening to see him like that.

  • @rosherridge9540
    @rosherridge954010 ай бұрын

    This programme is amazing ❤ thank you for letting us see this xx

  • @scilli.pepper
    @scilli.pepper10 ай бұрын

    All the people in the comments only have sympathy for the drug addict mother, but none for the baby? There surely is help for addicts in Australia, especially when you’re pregnant. But she made a choice. She made the choice to still use drugs and not care for her baby’s wellbeing whatsoever. The baby has absolutely no choice, this is not fair and I only feel sorry for the little innocent child being born into this mess.

  • @nancy-katharynmcgraw2669

    @nancy-katharynmcgraw2669

    Ай бұрын

    Child abuse!!!

  • @Wendy-bd9zu
    @Wendy-bd9zu Жыл бұрын

    I would love to have parents like kallan has ❤❤❤❤

  • @debrakleid5752
    @debrakleid57522 ай бұрын

    As a paramedic one of the hardest parts of the job besides trying to save a life is watching the families suffer especially parents who are in agony watching their child suffer. I’ve had to tell parents that their child has died before. With another call a father accidentally ran over his 3 year old son when he was backing up his truck and didn’t see his son. He was alive when we got there but went into cardiac arrest as I intubated him and we never got him back. It took 2 nurses to walk him to the room to see his dead child. I was told later that his injury was fatal whether we git his heart started again or not I’m now medically retired and I’ve watched my mom suffer when she was seeing me in the hospital including when I was in the ICU more than once. I’ve come close to dying more than once and every year my medical history list seems to keep going up and this year is no different. I’ve had numerous hospitalizations and she has always been there for me but to see her stressed and crying because we didn’t know if I would survive is frightening

  • @sillyasil9533
    @sillyasil9533 Жыл бұрын

    Love how he wanted the drill bit back to finish the job. Such an Auisie thing to do 😂

  • @nancymills1884
    @nancymills1884 Жыл бұрын

    My husband had to have his heart stopped. As a former EMT and caregiver that was one thing I couldn’t watch. Yet I had to be there in case his heart didn’t start again. For him his heart over rode his pacemaker, which should have not happened.

  • @micheledonald9453

    @micheledonald9453

    9 ай бұрын

    Is it all ways shock first? Adenosine maybe or “ pushing like having a bm” sometimes first?

  • @garsu1229
    @garsu12296 ай бұрын

    Please add captions PLEASE

  • @W1433LA
    @W1433LA10 ай бұрын

    I’ve been pregnant 6 times and have six children that I live for and adore I can’t imagine what she was thinking wen she took drugs why I wouldn’t take paracetamol wen I was pregnant that is so bad I mean I hope she doesn’t get custody of that baby because if she does it again I’m so scared for the life of that baby

  • @Ivi27
    @Ivi2711 ай бұрын

    Patients in pain and moaning breaks my heart 😢

  • @janinekaretai4306
    @janinekaretai4306 Жыл бұрын

    Miracle workers

  • @gbaca07
    @gbaca0711 ай бұрын

    Women who are addicted to any substance who are pregnant, should be locked up until after the baby is born or put in a care facility, to protect the unborn child from further abuse. So they can get help,

  • @lakotafire2804
    @lakotafire280410 ай бұрын

    Kallan remained very pale at home. I hope he was eating well and taking multivitamins.

  • @camino06
    @camino065 ай бұрын

    I wish they'd provide a smooth surface for the patient trolley up on the helicopter landing area. Seeing the neck and spine being jolted around as the trolley rolls over the corrugated concrete is killing me!

  • @annamarielewis7078
    @annamarielewis7078 Жыл бұрын

    Kyle “ drill bit man” is so handsome 💝

  • @annedalton289

    @annedalton289

    Жыл бұрын

    Definitely ❤

  • @karencondrey6451
    @karencondrey6451 Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if Ben AFib by having him strain, face in ice water or meds ?? I love this programs!!!! Heath care over seas seems to have way more compassion than In the US

  • @bethanyharrington2533

    @bethanyharrington2533

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with compassion ❤

  • @W1433LA

    @W1433LA

    10 ай бұрын

    Everyone says that I’m from uk and our is amazing I wish you had the same ❤

  • @debrakleid5752

    @debrakleid5752

    2 ай бұрын

    I was wondering the same thing. I was a paramedic for 10 years and an RT (respiratory therapist) for 5 years and when I was a medic I’ve had several patients in A fib RVR and I always gave Cardizem IV and with all of my patients it worked just fine. Most patients prefer that route than get cardioverted. We only cardioverted if they were unstable or had major symptoms like shortness of breath or chest pain and even then I wasn’t quick to shocking someone. I’ve had SVT as well as having sinus tachycardia and I’ve been given Adenosine more than once (I hate that drug because you feel like someone got the closest elephant they could find and have the elephant sit on my body). With sinus tachycardia usually the person needs IV fluids. I have POTS which affects my heart rate and blood pressure and I’m on medication to treat all of it and I even have IV fluids for daily treatment at home with my central line. I also get IVIG for my CVID which has no cure and means I’m immunocompramised and I’m very prone to getting pneumonia, sepsis, and GI infections and I’ve had all 3 numerous times and I’m admitted to the hospital numerous times. Having been a medic and an RT I know what questions to ask and I understand what’s going on with me more than most people. I’ve come close to dying more than once especially on 12/19/16 when I was severely septic and nearly died and I was hospitalized for 29 days. That was my longest hospitalization and that year it was also my 8th admission that year so I ask a lot of questions. I’ve had hospitals make an error on me a couple of times and once it could have ended badly for me. I ended up in renal failure when I was hospitalized for the 29 days. That stay was only supposed to be for around 14 days and not 29. I’m admitted often as well and I live in the US and the hospital down the street from us I stopped going to when it came to the ER. Twice I was sent home when I should have been admitted. The one time I checked in to the ER with a fever of around 102.8 and with me I’m supposed to be admitted for all fevers over 101.5 because I’m immunocompramised and I’ve had sepsis 4 times. Granted we had Hurricane Ian knocking on our door but I was not comfortable going home with a fever in a hurricane and had I gotten worse I wouldn’t have been able to get to the hospital due to major flooding everywhere. The only way to get around was one of 3 ways. Walking which wasn’t an option, getting military grade huge truck to get you out but they were busy rescuing others who had up to 5 feet of water in their homes and the 3rd option was to kayak out which we didn’t have a kayak. A few days after I was discharged from the ER a nurse called to check on me which they never did. Apparently I had a positive blood culture and at that point I probably could have breathed fire like a dragon. I’m afraid that hospital will end up killing me. I went to a different ER a few weeks ago after I had severe back pain that started a few days prior but it wasn’t that painful. Then the same day I went to the ER but several hours prior I was sitting in bed watching a program on my iPad when I felt a pop in the same area as the pain but this pain was 100 times worse. Then I ended up with a fever but it was a low grade fever. I asked mom to take me to the ER as a precaution. My temp was 100.5 and I was having chest pain as well as back pain. My labs were normal except for a high d dimer and I have a history of DVT including one very big one that required a 2 day surgery and an 8 day admission. This was when I lived in another state. They did an x ray and cat scans of my head, chest, abdomen, and pelvis and all was clear. The hospital down the street probably would have done maybe an x ray and give me an excedrin and say “see ya later”. The hospital I went to gave me 2 options. Stay for a few more hours and get another bag of IV fluids and 2 IV antibiotics OR get the IV fluids and 2 IV antibiotics and get admitted for overnight for observation and she would also give me another dose of IV Morphine for the pain. It was around midnight and mom was really cranky because she was tired and was sitting on a hard plastic chair. She hates that hospital with a passion whereas I hate the other one. I opted to get admitted because my pain was so bad and I had to get mom out of there. I finally got to a room upstairs around 7am and a few hours later I went and got a stress test that also came back clear. It was frustrating because the pain was as bad as when I had abdominal surgeries and I was admitted for those on high dose pain meds but not for this pain. Then they said I was going to get an MRI of my t spine. Ok then. I was hoping for a torn muscle so everyone wouldn’t say “see it’s a pulled muscle just like all the other ones you’ve had”. I really wanted a torn muscle so I wouldn’t think I was such a wimp. When she came back the next day she was discharging me which I knew and I couldn’t wait to go home. The MRI showed no torn muscle. It did however showed broken rib on my left side with a small pleural effusion and some chest wall edema. That’s why the pain was so severe. I broke a rib from just breathing. My PCP ordered for me to get a bone density scan to see if I had osteopenia or osteoporosis because at 47 I shouldn’t be breaking any bones without any injuries. It scanned my femurs, spine, and hips and all showed I had osteopenia at 47🥺. We never would have known had I gone to the hospital I hated. Now I know I’m prone to breaking my bones with minor or even with no trauma.

  • @debmacie1612
    @debmacie1612 Жыл бұрын

    Since you have to go so far from ER for a scan, someone on the team should carry an emergency resuscitation park.

  • @Elisheval

    @Elisheval

    Жыл бұрын

    They do. Also, the CT room has a crash cart. It's just not the same as a fully stocked trauma room.

  • @zacharyalmond7744

    @zacharyalmond7744

    11 ай бұрын

    They also draw up drugs like epi into a the syringe to have on hand if the patient codes in between.

  • @katieeasley3945
    @katieeasley394511 ай бұрын

    I get that it's opening a can of worms, but if a pregnant woman hurting herself with an ILLEGAL potentially LETHAL substance is let out the next day what hope is there for that sweet baby? It's already got a fight and miseries ahead. Can they not hold mum on a 3 day psych hold? She clearly had altered mental status, had taken part in reckless activities endangering her unborn child ...... discharge the next day?? Is that the best we can do??

  • @W1433LA

    @W1433LA

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for what you said I was thinking same thing how could she do that

  • @bingsballyhoo711
    @bingsballyhoo711 Жыл бұрын

    The Lawyer owes you one, haha!

  • @monikalagasse516
    @monikalagasse516 Жыл бұрын

    Im a rule miracle i had 2 pacemaker the last 1 shocked me 27 times for no reason

  • @nancy-katharynmcgraw2669
    @nancy-katharynmcgraw2669Ай бұрын

    What is a "yute?" What the weight was similar to , when he got smashed during an industrial injury...

  • @TreasureHuntingNana
    @TreasureHuntingNana Жыл бұрын

    Why check for spinal injuries when you're about to do a ct scan?

  • @LexaWinter-vj5ef

    @LexaWinter-vj5ef

    9 ай бұрын

    He could have spinal cord injury his BP dips are sign there may be lack of blood oxygen to brain and vital organs also he could be tachycardic another sign with dips in BP, then with internal bleeding all high risk signs he may lose consciousness and breathing in the CT scanner

  • @armansembiring5898
    @armansembiring589810 ай бұрын

    Why they have to take off the NRM when giving sync cardioversion? his HR is about 130 bpm and look stable enough, how about digoxin? Can someone explain? Thank u

  • @debrakleid5752

    @debrakleid5752

    2 ай бұрын

    The non rebreather was removed from his face because oxygen and fire don’t mix. Oxygen is combustible and when you shock the patient there can be a slight spark and with oxygen blowing in that direction it can start a fire and severely burning the patient. Same goes for defibrillation. If a patient is intubated we usually remove the BVM from the ETT (intubation tube) to avoid any sparks and oxygen coming together. It’s happened where a patient has actually caught on fire. Some hospitals give patients little goodie bags upon admission and some have Vaseline lip balm for dry mouth but you are not supposed to use Vaseline when on oxygen either In regards to shocking the patient vs trying a medication I had the same thought. It really seemed that they raced to cardiovert instead of trying a medication first. I was a paramedic for almost 10 years and a respiratory therapist for 5 years. As a medic we could defibrillate, cardiovert, and pace patients as well as give medication to lower the heart rate. I’ve had many patients with A-fib RVR which is where the heart is going faster than 150. We only went to cardioversion if the patient was unstable or had severe symptoms like with a low blood pressure, severe chest pain, shortness of breath and so on. With all of the patients that I had in A fib RVR I administered IV Cardizem. I gave it slowly and with every patient that I did this with the Cardizem worked just fine. With SVT we tried Adenosine and only shocked if the patients were unstable. With A-fib if you shock a patient there is always a risk of complications and if there is a blood clot they can become dislodged and travel to where you don’t want it to go. I myself have had heart rates as fast as 187 and they have always used medication and IV fluids. I have POTS which is a condition that makes my heart rate go very fast so I’m on medication to keep my heart rate down and with this type of POTS my blood pressure is affected a lot. I’m on meds for high and low blood pressure because mine tend to go in cycles where I’m high for several weeks and I take all 4 of my blood pressure meds to get it down and it would go right back up. Once I’m out of that cycle it would normalize for a few weeks and then just the slightest amount of meds makes my pressure crash. I’ve been hospitalized many times for this. I’ve also had 2 DVT and PE’s with hospitalizations for both. I hope this is the explanation you were looking for!

  • @lourdesgonzales2613
    @lourdesgonzales261310 ай бұрын

    How I wish Philippines will have the same health care system like we have ...🇨🇦 , Most poor people die without any first aid at all. Massive corruption is the cause of it all.

  • @diggascryptoawarenessdownu7246
    @diggascryptoawarenessdownu72462 ай бұрын

    2 tonnes is like a thousand kilo's 😂

  • @susanhowe163
    @susanhowe1632 ай бұрын

    THESE ARE ALL OUT EDUCATIONAL ❤ I'M CANADIAN AND MY EXPERIENCE WITH MOST CANADIAN HOSPITALS IS NOT FLATTERING I'M AFRAID AND IT'S SO QUICKLY REACHED 😢 😫 CRITICAL VERY QUICKLY AND 😢 IF IT CONTINUES......... VERY FEW HAVE A PHYSICIAN AND CERTAINLY NOT PEDIATRICIANS. IF YOU ARE ADMITTED TO HOSPITAL THERE ARE MANY THAT DON'T SERVE MEAL😢FOR ANYONE ANYMORE. NOT TO SENIOR CITIZENS OR CHILDREN. YOU HAVE TO ASK SOMEONE TO BRING IN A PACKED MEAL FOR YOU FOR EVERY MEAL. NO 👎 LOSS ON THAT ONE! THE AMBULANCE WILL BILL YOU $ 37 EVERY TIME YOU TAKE THE AMBULANCE. I REFUSE TO EVER GO TO THE PETERBOROUGH ONTARIO OR PRETTY MUCH ALL HOSPITAL IN CANADA 🇨🇦. I GOT VERY SICK ONCE IT WAS AFTER A LONG HOSPITAL STAY. GOD KNOWS THAT IT WAS HORRIBLE I'D RATHER DIE THAN GO AGAIN !!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @debrakleid5752

    @debrakleid5752

    2 ай бұрын

    I live in the US and after seeing these hospital shows based out of Australia, the UK, and Canada I would rather go to the hospitals here. Yes we have to have insurance to pay for our stays but the hospitals in those 3 countries with free healthcare have shown the bad sides to free healthcare. I have a couple of friends that live in Canada and one said that when she goes to the ER you can wait for 24 hours in the waiting room and when you finally get a room in many cases there is only a chair. Then if you get admitted you may end up waiting for several days to get to the floor in the ER and you may still be in a chair or in a bed but in a hallway. The hospitals I’ve been to here may put you in a hallway as well especially the trauma centers. I was in the hallway only once but I’m not allowed to be in a bed in the hallway because I’m immunocompramised. I’ve been admitted many many many times including to the ICU several times. My longest wait for a bed upstairs was in January 2018 when I was being admitted for a very bad pneumonia for two weeks. I was in the ER for 26 or 28 hours. I was on those god awful stretchers until around the 16th hour when I asked for an inpatient bed which isn’t great but more comfy than the ER stretchers. I noticed in Canada, UK, and Australia that when you get admitted you usually have to share a room with up to 3 other people and they put men and women together in these large rooms. In the US women share and men share. No men and women together once admitted to the floors and I’ve never seen a room on the floors that held 4 people. All rooms here (at least at the hospitals I worked at as an RT (respiratory therapist) are either single rooms or for two people. We get food although they may taste bad. When I was watching some of the shows based out of the UK, Canada, and Australia (most were from the UK that I saw) there was one show that followed junior doctors in the UK and how they were way overworked and a lot of new doctors were quitting within a year or two. Then another show showed people that went to the hospitals for their surgeries and these are not emergency surgeries when someone was admitted to the hospital and needing surgery or some type of procedure. I’ve needed surgeries while admitted several times and only once was one delayed and it was a cryobronch because a piece of equipment broke so it was delayed by 24 hours. In the UK there was a guy who was getting either a gastric lap band or he was having a gastric bypass and he showed up for his surgery and they told him they were going to have to cancel as their were no beds available after the procedure and it was his 5th or 6th cancelled surgery however the doctor felt bad for this man and there was a private hospital across the street with plenty of open beds. They did the surgery and had him admitted after his surgery to the private hospital for his overnight stay. Another man in his late 80’s or early 90’s needed to have surgery on a AAA (abdominal aortic aneurysm) and his first attempt was cancelled because of no beds in the ICU for when his surgery was done. I was shocked. A AAA will kill you if it ruptures. He had to wait a few more months and then he went back to the hospital for surgery and got checked in and a few hours later they would see if there were beds available for everyone who reported to the hospital for their surgeries and this old man finally got his surgery. When they were about to close they saw he had some more bleeding and had to put him back on cardiac bypass to repair this complication and then they realized it couldn’t be done and that they basically had to let him bleed out. Everyone thinks free healthcare is great but it has its bad sides to it especially with so many people using the hospitals for their primary doctors. We have the same problem but it’s not as bad as in the UK, Canada, or Australia apparently

  • @jackiemarini3203
    @jackiemarini3203 Жыл бұрын

    I think that girl is pregnant .All of you in that hospital are so awesome.Wish we had ppl like you in the USA over here they just don't care .😞The nurse's are so rude sometimes you feel like a fool .Is it drugs she did if so that's so sad 😢Poor baby 💔😭

  • @gabby20

    @gabby20

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't assume it was drug's. This hospital is not what it looks. My brother had a stroke due to medical misconduct. The head of the hospital gave him a formal apology but it's not good enough. He was left for hours with a red line going up to his arm. It was a clot caused by malicious injection plus the wrong medication. If the red line had have travelled to the heart he wouldn't have been here. Royal Melbourne hospital is not what you see here. The crew even ask the doctors to act it out.

  • @annamarielewis7078

    @annamarielewis7078

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans in general are so rude these days.

  • @bethanyharrington2533

    @bethanyharrington2533

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gabby20 😢 I am so sorry to hear about your brother 😢

  • @ssjess2504

    @ssjess2504

    Жыл бұрын

    Umm duh they did an ultrasound which confirmed she was pregnant

  • @annedalton289

    @annedalton289

    Жыл бұрын

    Hosp sun USA all about getting the bill made up !!! Aus and uk have free medical treatment ! So we get cared for

  • @belindaingrid3419
    @belindaingrid3419 Жыл бұрын

    Od bless u

  • @barbaranorrick4164
    @barbaranorrick416410 ай бұрын

    Drugs, poor little baby suffers because of a woman who thinks of herself more than her child….

  • @IamLilith-80
    @IamLilith-8011 ай бұрын

    I hope that baby was taken

  • @ThinMethod2758

    @ThinMethod2758

    11 ай бұрын

    are you pregnant? no! i mean its normal to forget that you did the thing without protection lol

  • @scilli.pepper

    @scilli.pepper

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ThinMethod2758it’s not normal, it’s irresponsible. If you don’t want a baby, use protection. 🙄

  • @ssjess2504
    @ssjess2504 Жыл бұрын

    27:20 did they try adenosine first? Maybe it's bad editing but I thiugh the cardioversion is a last chance type of procedure. I had SVT for a while and have had extreme tachycardia a couple of times which was always fixed with the awful adenosine

  • @KHPlays

    @KHPlays

    Жыл бұрын

    So this guy was not in SVT, he was in what’s called Atrial Fibrillation with RVR (Rapid Ventricular Response), Adenosine will not work with this as Adenosine acts on the AV node, this current rhythm that this guy is experiencing is originating above the AV node therefore Adenosine would have no effect. Hope this helps :)

  • @annajosullivan

    @annajosullivan

    Жыл бұрын

    ^correct but I agree with how with how adenosine is. For me it always made me feel like I free falling and then I could literally feel my heart stop before starting up again.

  • @KrisOsterhout

    @KrisOsterhout

    10 ай бұрын

    KHPlays is correct. The appropriate treatment is beta blockers for maintenance and synchronized cardioversion for immediate treatment. Adenosine is used as a first line treatment in most forms of SVT (Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome being a primary exception) if vagal maneuvers fail to convert to sinus rhythm.

  • @Mori-chandesu
    @Mori-chandesu Жыл бұрын

    just a question why do you not have season 1?

  • @annedalton289

    @annedalton289

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes it’s on here I’ve just watched it all 🤦‍♀️

  • @kristenellie
    @kristenellie11 ай бұрын

    What is a hute? How is it spelled? My searchings on google only makes me more confused 😛

  • @Silvervwolfee

    @Silvervwolfee

    11 ай бұрын

    It's a Ute which is slang for a Utility Vehicle. In the US we call it a SUV

  • @marieravening927

    @marieravening927

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Silvervwolfee I think you call a ute a pickup in the U.S. An SUV is different from a ute.

  • @lindawitherspoon446

    @lindawitherspoon446

    5 ай бұрын

    They are saying Ute. It’s a vehicle.

  • @annamarielewis7078
    @annamarielewis7078 Жыл бұрын

    Doesn’t Narcan help with GHB?

  • @ssjess2504

    @ssjess2504

    Жыл бұрын

    No narcan only works on opioids and ghb is not an opioid

  • @maureengichimu1230
    @maureengichimu1230Ай бұрын

    Why the mask on a patient, everyone else is protected

  • @annamarielewis7078
    @annamarielewis7078 Жыл бұрын

    No birth control in Australia? Drugs and pregnancy do not mix. Sympathy is fine, but drug addicted babies are not.

  • @katarinas3361

    @katarinas3361

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you really think that the addict is going to care about birth control? I am sorry for her, but not sorry for your ignorance. What a dumb question to ask...

  • @cindycreateforlife

    @cindycreateforlife

    Жыл бұрын

    Drugs and pregnancy is just as much of a problem in the US, UK and Canada to name a few! Educate yourself!

  • @annedalton289

    @annedalton289

    Жыл бұрын

    How uneducated you are ! When someone’s on drugs they are not thinking of birth control !!! 🤦‍♀️

  • @annedalton289

    @annedalton289

    Жыл бұрын

    How uneducated you are ! When someone’s on drugs they are not thinking of birth control !!! 🤦‍♀️

  • @kimora337

    @kimora337

    11 ай бұрын

    Addicted women don't take care of themselves.. and most don't use birth control especially since most require a dr appointment. Which they avoid at all costs.. educate yourself please!

  • @itsmyparty4637
    @itsmyparty4637 Жыл бұрын

    lawyer should have avoided the clot shot

  • @shohannie
    @shohannie Жыл бұрын

    It's kind of upsetting they spnt so much time focusing on the baby and not the mother

  • @nickislade5533

    @nickislade5533

    10 ай бұрын

    The mother was full of illicit drugs, they ensured the foetus was ok and not in distress nor was there underlying health issues. Chances are the mother was left to sleep it off

  • @DarkJediPrincess

    @DarkJediPrincess

    9 ай бұрын

    @@nickislade5533 The fact that she was high does not negate the fact that she’s a human being the doctors have a duty of care to _and_ the fact that pregnant people and their rights and well-being are frequently shoved aside in favour of focusing _only_ on the _unborn baby’s_ existence, rights and well-being. They may also be referring to the editorial focus of the show, not the treatment by the doctors, for the record.

  • @nickislade5533

    @nickislade5533

    9 ай бұрын

    @@DarkJediPrincess you work with the patients then?

  • @debrakleid5752
    @debrakleid57522 ай бұрын

    As a paramedic one of the hardest parts of the job besides trying to save a life is watching the families suffer especially parents who are in agony watching their child suffer. I’ve had to tell parents that their child has died before. With another call a father accidentally ran over his 3 year old son when he was backing up his truck and didn’t see his son. He was alive when we got there but went into cardiac arrest as I intubated him and we never got him back. It took 2 nurses to walk him to the room to see his dead child. I was told later that his injury was fatal whether we git his heart started again or not I’m now medically retired and I’ve watched my mom suffer when she was seeing me in the hospital including when I was in the ICU more than once. I’ve come close to dying more than once and every year my medical history list seems to keep going up and this year is no different. I’ve had numerous hospitalizations and she has always been there for me!

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