Aspiring Medics

Aspiring Medics

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  • @sajidabenmbarek
    @sajidabenmbarek12 күн бұрын

    the vibes in this room must have been SO GOOD !!!

  • @davei2938
    @davei293814 күн бұрын

    I joked a little more in my interview lol

  • @user-ym2tp2lr1j
    @user-ym2tp2lr1j21 күн бұрын

    How would biases influence the use of diagnostic AI. Whist poor training data sets provide poor quantifiable outcomes. The current use of AI such as for use in ECG and radiology slides, to analyse the pixels of the output images. Would a patients ethic background influence the ECG readings or MRI results, in terms of the characteristic hallmark of a certain pathology?

  • @carmen9247
    @carmen9247Ай бұрын

    interview coming in two days,thanks for the video,really helpful!

  • @mmipracticequestions
    @mmipracticequestionsАй бұрын

    I love these type of walk throughs of questions. They help immensely !!!

  • @wendy1574
    @wendy1574Ай бұрын

    Do you think 3years is enough time to get prepared to get into Oxford University ?

  • @zombie-xj7gc
    @zombie-xj7gcАй бұрын

    How to get rid of the NHS 101. Get in to power sell off the lucrative parts and cut the funding to the rest. Fill it with managers. Wait for it to start failing and the public to start saying it doesn't work. Bingo an America system starts up, the rich get richer and the rest get poorer. Wake up to what this government is doing.

  • @Sara_lfc-22
    @Sara_lfc-222 ай бұрын

    Do you need all 9s at GCSE?

  • @lynnnn2402
    @lynnnn24022 ай бұрын

    Which college were you in?

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics2 ай бұрын

    I studied at Balliol College, Oxford!

  • @Rachel57567
    @Rachel575673 ай бұрын

    How about the simple fact that the NHS treats patients as less than human and is more worried about money and time saving protocol than the patients best interests? How about the fact that people have to wait 10+ hours in A&E to get seen even if they’re in pain? Surely that’s the main reason to leave the NHS

  • @Sara_lfc-22
    @Sara_lfc-223 ай бұрын

    Really useful thx

  • @Esther-zk5hg
    @Esther-zk5hg3 ай бұрын

    My first thought for stn 8 was " I watched Lord of the Rings Lately" 😅

  • @sebinpark3739
    @sebinpark37393 ай бұрын

    I’m Moroccan 🇲🇦and hope that i will get there (Oxford uni) inshallah!

  • @sajidabenmbarek
    @sajidabenmbarek3 ай бұрын

    this is so funny

  • @hey-jy8fy
    @hey-jy8fy3 ай бұрын

    "I will never be able to join this university." My dream 😢

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics2 ай бұрын

    Anything is possible with enough preparation and practice 🙌🏼

  • @nnannaibeh3027
    @nnannaibeh30273 ай бұрын

    This is helpful 🤷‍♀️🩸⭐️👍😩😩

  • @user-ug3sz5hs6h
    @user-ug3sz5hs6h3 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @zuzannadulnikiewicz2017
    @zuzannadulnikiewicz20174 ай бұрын

    Not even one short word of a lie, you have genuingly saved me. I’ve watched pretty much all your videos with these answers and aced my interview

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics4 ай бұрын

    Incredible 💪🏼

  • @Mp17241
    @Mp172414 ай бұрын

    Hi. thank you so much for this amazing video. I have my interview soon so was just wondering how you would approach a situation like this: ' you are a doctor. You have lost a patient's blood sample but this has no effect on the patients diagnosis. What do you do?'

  • @Mp17241
    @Mp172414 ай бұрын

    Also as a follow up. What would you do if the patient was known to have severe anxiety?

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics4 ай бұрын

    Ah that's very kind of you - best of luck I'm sure you'll smash it, here's how I'd approach it... If I lost a patient's blood sample, my immediate response would involve owning up to the mistake by transparently communicating the error to the patient, emphasizing that their diagnosis remains unaffected. I would apologize for the inconvenience and take full responsibility for the oversight. To clean up the situation, I would expediently arrange for a new blood sample to be collected at the patient's convenience, ensuring a streamlined and comfortable process to alleviate any additional stress or discomfort. For a patient known to have severe anxiety, I would handle the situation with heightened sensitivity and empathy. This would include preparing a calm and supportive setting for the conversation, potentially involving mental health support. I would carefully explain the error and its non-impact on their diagnosis, focusing on reassuring the patient and offering additional support to manage any resultant anxiety, including clear guidance on the next steps. To level up and prevent such incidents in the future, I would initiate a review of the existing procedures and identify any lapses or weaknesses in the process that led to the loss of the blood sample. This might involve additional training for staff, implementing more robust tracking systems for samples, or introducing double-check mechanisms to ensure samples are handled correctly. The goal would be to strengthen our protocols to prevent similar mistakes, thereby safeguarding patient trust and maintaining high standards of care.

  • @Phauzia549
    @Phauzia5494 ай бұрын

    Could you plz provide tips on enhancing communication skills.

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics4 ай бұрын

    Sure thing!

  • @didilove8022
    @didilove80224 ай бұрын

    I wish I could talk like that..

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics2 ай бұрын

    You can with practice and also there’s not a set way to speak, it’s about being you, showing a realistic insight into medicine. There’s no ideal medical student and come from a variety of different backgrounds :)

  • @ravjayakodi2746
    @ravjayakodi27462 ай бұрын

    lol dont worry too much, they dont actually talk like this, you can see the cuts in the videos. good points regardless

  • @sunriselotus
    @sunriselotus4 ай бұрын

    Getting into med school is not the hardest part. It is a stepping stone. The journey begins from there.

  • @njscan007
    @njscan0074 ай бұрын

    Nice explanation and approach.

  • @wotreplays8896
    @wotreplays88965 ай бұрын

    Yes, it's shameful what happens in UK, it's very similar to a communist country where everything is ‘’ free of charge”, while only 1% of doctors actually know what they are doing in their job and they are all complaining of being overworked when they actually go to work privately (at the same damn time of having a job for NHS) for better money. I'm quite sure the management of NHS is on drugs 24/7 as nobody seems to wake them up, they are out of touch and it seems like it'll be the same for another 300 years. Had to go overseas for a life threatening condition that required a simple operation. I was suffering for nearly 2 years, had to go to the emergency a dozen times, gave me painkillers all the time and after a few hours they would send me home with pain, telling me they don't have anymore available to operate, also told me to speak to my GP to refer me to someone who can operate. Fast forward another year i had an appointment for someone to operate just to find out that it was only a check up, I guess they wanted to see if i could survive that long. These so called doctors never took me serious, they pretend they care about patients, but they only care about the problem they have with NHS as their salaries are low and the fact they don't have enough muppets in there to do the job. The ones that are working for NHS for more than 10 years they don't do any work and they don't care as they know they can't be fired, they can only fire them when there is proof that they made a huge mistake and someone died after what they did. Also forgot to mention that in UK proof gets covered all the time, they always say that the records are missing from their system ( very similar to communist practices as they always cover their mistakes) and they close almost every case with “apologies for any inconvenience created”

  • @rosie8094
    @rosie80945 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @kewboyd632
    @kewboyd6325 ай бұрын

    Really had to see this video after my interview (they asked about junior doctor strikes)

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics5 ай бұрын

    🤖 Sign up for the world's FIRST AI Medicine Interview Platform "AVA" for only £30 per month - ai.theaspiringmedics.co.uk/

  • @smallcatbigmeow
    @smallcatbigmeow5 ай бұрын

    I have an MMI this week so these videos are so useful thank you!!!☺️

  • @MulYono-rf9fi
    @MulYono-rf9fi5 ай бұрын

    thank to here that ,thank you very much .

  • @MrGathernomoss
    @MrGathernomoss5 ай бұрын

    😂 😂 4 hours? In January last year I’ve been sat on those uncomfortable chairs for 26hours! Couldn’t get a wink of sleep, hospital sandwiches are as good a garbage and I decided I’m gonna fast, I thought I’d be out of there within 5-6-7 hours… And the first question the consultant asked me was “did you have any long fight lately?”. Me: “What would you consider a long fight?” The doctor: “Anything above 4 hours”. Me: “I’ve been sat outside your door for the past 26 hours” It was after the covid shots skyrocketed blood clots incidents and the nurses kept trying to give me 2x heparin shots (or some blood thinner). Me- knowing that I was only there with a nasty chest cold that kept trying to suffocate me in my sleep- I declined their belly shots, I wanted advice and perhaps some antibiotics. After the consultant checked me for 5 minutes he informed me that I needed some antibiotics… shocker. 26 hours!

  • @ElSWVisitor
    @ElSWVisitor5 ай бұрын

    Without specifics or context this was a bit irrelevant to me but the the presenter has a nice voice and pretty eyes and she hypnotised me so it looped a few times.

  • @kewboyd632
    @kewboyd6325 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @sayekrahmankhankhan423
    @sayekrahmankhankhan4235 ай бұрын

    what did they say

  • @ElSWVisitor
    @ElSWVisitor5 ай бұрын

    I think its a general/ hypothetical thing tbh

  • @evascarlettjess
    @evascarlettjess5 ай бұрын

    Massive population increase has absolutely nothing to do with it though. My gp in 2004 was 3 GPS only and never had to wait more than a couple of days. It over doubled on size to about 8 GPS plus many more nurses and yet now its full all the time and is weeks before you can get an appointment. Hardly coincidental.

  • @IAmNinboy
    @IAmNinboy5 ай бұрын

    Aging population.

  • @personasgold
    @personasgold5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your uploads, Aspiring Medics team, it's always high quality and useful! I've got my interview on Monday, so these are very useful :)

  • @Monique-ue7qg
    @Monique-ue7qg5 ай бұрын

    Big Fan of Aurnia!!

  • @dennisachionye
    @dennisachionye5 ай бұрын

    MORE!!!!!

  • @yumnabarhamji1700
    @yumnabarhamji17005 ай бұрын

    So useful, thank you.

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics5 ай бұрын

    🤖 Sign up for the world's FIRST AI Medicine Interview Platform "AVA" for only £30 per month - ai.theaspiringmedics.co.uk/

  • @SvetlinaRuseva8997
    @SvetlinaRuseva89975 ай бұрын

    Your videos have helped me immensely in my interview prep!Thank you so much! ❤👏🏻

  • @mehak.ahmed1
    @mehak.ahmed15 ай бұрын

    Hi, if a patient was asking to get an X-ray would you mention that as it uses radiation we would try to avoid the amount of scans done using X-ray unnecessarily?

  • @aliakberrajani3425
    @aliakberrajani34256 ай бұрын

    It is mostly privatised already aside from the ownership of the estates and the employment of staff. The cleaning, laboratories, diagnostics, transport and equipment is entirely outsourced.

  • @aliakberrajani3425
    @aliakberrajani34256 ай бұрын

    Year by year certain services are being scrapped. The classic example is NHS dentistry which is barely available anymore

  • @TheAspiringMedics
    @TheAspiringMedics6 ай бұрын

    🤖 Sign up for the world's FIRST AI Medicine Interview Platform "AVA" for only £30 per month - ai.theaspiringmedics.co.uk/

  • @theethanexperience6097
    @theethanexperience60976 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making these videos. Would it be possible to check the microphone because when you’re listening through headphones one side is louder than the other.

  • @yumnabarhamji1700
    @yumnabarhamji17006 ай бұрын

    This is brilliant, thankyou!

  • @owenmerkel7836
    @owenmerkel78366 ай бұрын

    No.

  • @randycny
    @randycny6 ай бұрын

    NO!!! DON'T DO IT!. I'm in the US and it's ridiculously expensive so many choose not to get treated or pay for meds because they need food or rent. We pay more than twice what every other developed country pays and not everyone is covered. It's the NUMBER 1 cause of bankruptcy/financial ruin.

  • @Dontcare66
    @Dontcare666 ай бұрын

    No

  • @vidarr7827
    @vidarr78276 ай бұрын

    No… just no bad idea

  • @piotrwojdelko1150
    @piotrwojdelko11506 ай бұрын

    i agree it should be privatised that doctor would understand how they destroyed chemists .They won't be able to strike .bulshits

  • @piotrwojdelko1150
    @piotrwojdelko11506 ай бұрын

    as a pharmacist i would say wages are going down and we are not allowed to strike .