This is exactly the way how we talk with our colleagues. This was so new to me before I started working in UK. Everyone is too polite but firm at the same time.
@happymomchristina82113 жыл бұрын
Heyeyeye... E3y3u3u3uu3u3u
@sophiaterry59622 жыл бұрын
Eyeeye and
@lterry523 Жыл бұрын
My goodness I was so into this video, i'm disappointed it ended before I knew how Michael is doing. hahah
@Smubbs6 жыл бұрын
toward the end, they say it- its sepsis.
@sumaiyaiqbal43456 жыл бұрын
I mean how he turned out. If he recovered well haha
@Smubbs6 жыл бұрын
I was the exact same Jordan
@jenniferreid93275 жыл бұрын
@@Smubbs he definitely lived. I knew Michael and can confirm he has a job in Tesco now.
@kansasnew47383 жыл бұрын
I think they use actors for demonstrations....
@salmanhussain99673 жыл бұрын
As a 2nd year student nurse I found this video really helpful and very interesting.
@emmawicker29263 жыл бұрын
These are the best educational videos. The patient actors do such a great job and look and act like real patients
@samacw Жыл бұрын
This was really helpful to me for my clinical exam in February. I like the team work here. The doctor is also very confident
@dapo65432 жыл бұрын
Thank you, RC and all members of this great work :)
@phyothiha38164 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making these video's.
@shawtay7 жыл бұрын
I chose to watch this to gain confidence in being a first aider. I hoped to hear some reassurance to Micheal. He was conscious and could hear and understand what was being said. What rung in my ears, when the doctor spoke to the nurse was, ‘ l’m most concerned!’ I think if l heard urgent and most concerned and being told how hot l was, several times, l think l’d have breathing problems. The rest was brilliant!
@apriljonquil55196 ай бұрын
Brilliant. Very clear demonstration on the right way to do it!
@chavalider4 жыл бұрын
This is amazing !! Thank you so much !!!
@tajrasnomundo6 жыл бұрын
Such a good video. Brilliant.
@richardslater37372 жыл бұрын
This video is really useful for every medical student out there. Thank you so much for making it. ❤️
@slr25299 ай бұрын
very informative ! great for learning purposes and will be incorporating this into my assessment piece :)
@veusola62192 жыл бұрын
amazing and a confidence Doctor and the entire team involved. very useful video for students like myself.
@user-xc7kr9bn5f8 ай бұрын
this was excellent - I can struggle staying on track with A-E during my simulation training but this will help me present my findings in a smooth way whilst still focusing on the patient.
@lauramazzocchitti85092 ай бұрын
Brilliant job great assessment
@stpeter2214 Жыл бұрын
Very informative, professional team-mates and helpful for my forthcoming Clinical OSCA. Bravo!
@aureliaokom86272 жыл бұрын
Wow! I like the systematic approach of the assessment. Nothing was missed...
@kulegodwinkaburuma8008 Жыл бұрын
The most important, THANK YOU !
@Tudorache704 жыл бұрын
this was great, I was sent it as part of my nurse training. I particularly found the nurse's helpful modelling of the SBAR model for communicating with the on-call Registrar. The literature suggests this helps the two professionals share a 'common clinical understanding' of Michael's worsening condition. I was surprised when the Reg asked the Nurse to attach a pulse oximeter - I would have assumed one was attached while doing the ABCDE assessment. Did the Nurse interrupt the ABCDE assessment after B in order to address the fast breathing rate?
@aba91193 жыл бұрын
It’s for demonstration and the exam. You have to ask for the obvious even though it would (hopefully) be done. Like doing a driving test you have to over exaggerate looking in your mirrors or say it so the instructor knows you are doing it
@davidhornsey61413 жыл бұрын
Eyeeyeyeyeeyyeyeeeyeeyeyeyeyeyyeyeyeeyye and
@lterry523 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video many thanks - the Dr should have specified which broad spectrum IVABX he wanted from the Nurse - check allergy status/drugs chart first.
@strecosplays46706 жыл бұрын
They always give Co-Amoxiclav before a blood test, so the doctor is right.
@sloane2905 жыл бұрын
@@sloane290 allergy status should have been done before anything is given. Each hospital has its own policy, some us IV Tazocin instead of co-amox
@423moore4 жыл бұрын
@@sloane290 and you would have just killed me as I am allergic to penicillin.
@nadinehowarth14204 жыл бұрын
@@nadinehowarth1420 Any medications given have to have been signed for on a prescription by the doctor before being given so any allegies would come up the and also allergy patients wear a large bright red wrist band with their allergies so this wouldn't happen.
@sophieperry71424 жыл бұрын
@@sloane290 bloods should be taken before IVABX unless there is the presence of purpura fulminans
@oliviacoy50564 жыл бұрын
Really nice video
@srjuanjo6 жыл бұрын
NHS are very friendly (staff),we are grateful thank you
@kamelmebhah41223 жыл бұрын
Wow. Great video
@lujainissa94092 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@saltoftheearth83243 жыл бұрын
Read the comments here highlight the mouse and cat relation between nurses and doctors. Some comments suggested that we do much than the other people missing out on the interprofessional aspect of working with each other. Overrall i think this video is brilliant and was more of a real situation scenario than text book knowledge.
@verajjingo67063 жыл бұрын
Me too, but what we can do is just...imagine it
@Tudorache704 жыл бұрын
I found this video very useful
@jacquelinelawrence4462 Жыл бұрын
How's Michael? Did he make it?
@jcbs4 жыл бұрын
l am in my second year and find this video very informative and educative. It kind of reassured me and boost my confidence.
@lindaosazuwa61362 жыл бұрын
How did you get a NEWS score of 9 if you didn’t connect the monitorng equipments
@_-love-_192 Жыл бұрын
I startet to learn the abcde sines last week.
@Zeisslermusic2 жыл бұрын
What a fucking legend
@naveenkulasingha3 жыл бұрын
Who's here from BSMS Virtual Work Experience Course?
@nishantmuralidharan2 жыл бұрын
visit DR.ADULE today on his KZhead channel for any type of virus or disease or infections he Is a great traditional doctor.infection like herpes fibroids hpv als.etc
@claudiahillman44252 жыл бұрын
Why is a urinary catheter advised since the staff nurse said the patient was self voiding and they didn't mention any urinary retention?
@tomgrant64165 жыл бұрын
Monitor urine output/ AKI
@hunterz20065 жыл бұрын
@@hunterz2006 I can see your point but why can't they monitor it without a catheter as a catheter is invasive and can cause infection by itself. Would it not be possible to wee into a bottle and measure the quantity of urine that way?
@tomgrant64165 жыл бұрын
It’s part of Sepsis 6
@user-xy4ff5yp7b4 жыл бұрын
@@user-xy4ff5yp7b It isn't. Monitoring urine output is, doesnt require a catheter
@423moore4 жыл бұрын
Tom Grant hey man. 🙂the output then has to be monitored continuously and closely for careful fluid balance. Unfortunately can’t rely on voiding ability which may be affected by many things.
@stevenparksprints2414 жыл бұрын
WHAT ANTIBIOTICS DOCTOR DONT DO ME LIKE THAT
@abbiesharpe2 жыл бұрын
If only the doctors that some people who really need them are like this...
@o.m95142 жыл бұрын
Where is thiis hospital?
@dineshmore14093 жыл бұрын
That nurse was too calm for me. Also, don't you try to do some interventions before escalating? Like do ECG since the patient is tachy, have IV access and also give paracetamol for the spike.
@joanbeauty2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@limangakasidu6340 Жыл бұрын
any one have any idea what does the doctor say at 4:42-4.45?? i really dont understand.
@jikumazumder8862Ай бұрын
As a nurse, I have monitoring the patient asap while the doctor was coming....
@patina364 жыл бұрын
Did you watch the beginning o the video? Post obs was what the Dr was asking as they collaborate. There were a few things he could do before though. oxygenating the Pt and putting in a cannula.
@emmbns3 жыл бұрын
Does the doctor think nurses are silly ? We are much smarter and more empowered, we would already be doing all of these. But if the nurses didn’t know what they were doing fair enough it’s nice that he would keep calm and explain things to him.
@jadebaxter82033 жыл бұрын
@@jadebaxter8203 It's not that we are trained to think nurses are silly, it's just that in an exam scenario we have to explain out loud what we want done and why, so the examiner knows that we are aware of the steps. In the real world as you say, by the time you turn up the nurses have usually already put on monitoring, put cardiac leads on, done a glucose etc... but this is just exam world, that's all!
@laa20093 жыл бұрын
laa2009 Yes I understand, I just wish I saw more of what we actually can do online. We are drip fed this, but we do often have a lot of training we could decide shockable and non shockable rhythms and H’s and Ts, it would be nice to just see that a little. I’m just a student anyway I don’t really know much ! Thank you for your reply!
@jadebaxter82033 жыл бұрын
@@jadebaxter8203 probably not the best examples to give when trying to argue you have a wide scope of practicee
@Cherubrmy3 жыл бұрын
Is wearing gloves not a routinely done practice as I observed the examining physician is without them?
@funpat35023 жыл бұрын
Gloves are not required for examination in normal circumstances. Currently the guidance is 2r mask, eye protection, appron or full cover and gloves.
@rafaeldegiacomoaraujo87783 жыл бұрын
Regular hand hygiene should be top priority but gloves are only required when at risk of exposure to blood or bodily fluids.
@benjaminsmith6092 жыл бұрын
Acute abdomen. Most likely perforated viscus with sepsis with probably in shock. May be having acute kidney injury as well.
@tpraba15 Жыл бұрын
Abdo was SNT so unlikely to have perf, the loin pain raises suspicion of pyelo so looks more like urosepsis than an acute abdomen.
@WTFRussia19 ай бұрын
Is this copyrighted? I’d like to use (with reference) as part of an educational study guide for medical students. Many thanks!
@lucyhoade98045 жыл бұрын
If your using it for educational purposes and not making money on it, it doesn't matter if it's copyrighted.
@kevinhodgkins0075 жыл бұрын
Hi Lucy, Can you email us at publicaffairs@resus.org.uk with details of the study guide and we will be in touch! Best, Emily
@ResusCouncilUK4 жыл бұрын
👍👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌👌
@dr.dinooshdelivera25052 жыл бұрын
This is okay but nurses usually would have done so much already before patient got to this stage.
@Sherirose13 жыл бұрын
QED 100%
@akinsdecaprio9 ай бұрын
Awsome video.. apart from the auscultation bit .. I think he auscultated the trapezius 🤔.. but overall the scenario was perfectly played.. brilliant
@ranjitharanaweera62793 жыл бұрын
That was auscultation of the apices
@ChaosAddiction Жыл бұрын
hi
@spawnzbladez33175 жыл бұрын
I wonder nurse doing bloods wow in ireland no way . No matter how sick patient is sick , 2 doctors looking after 200 patients over night and no nurse will dare to put cannula or bloods even if news is 11 ... so lucky doctor
@kainatjawadfarooqi Жыл бұрын
Did we ever find out his BP?
@georgehavey4 жыл бұрын
99/59.. on the monitor:)
@antonymbuiya9393 жыл бұрын
Generally it was a good approach but it appears strange if you watch this video nowadays with no any PPE used prior to assessing the patient. May need updating..
@aljid20003 жыл бұрын
Can we give antipyretics before continuing? Then reassess
@ayannageorge52583 жыл бұрын
Think this chap needs a bit more of a plan than "Paracetamol PRN and reassess"
@laa20093 жыл бұрын
@@laa2009 Yes. He needs an holistic plan, including vitals every 15 -30 minutes. I said that because an assessment during a fever can yield a different result that an assessment in the absence of fever. Most patients in pain don't talk to you or give you a proper history. Thus we give some pain reliever in an attempt to get a proper history to manage correctly. Thanks.
@ayannageorge52583 жыл бұрын
@@ayannageorge5258 Tell me you’re joking
@zed30633 жыл бұрын
@@zed3063 No.
@ayannageorge52583 жыл бұрын
@@laa2009 Not PRN but STAT
@ayannageorge52583 жыл бұрын
Who’s here from bsms
@davidthomas43942 жыл бұрын
meeeee
@irfanusman2272 жыл бұрын
@@irfanusman227 yep me too
@samimacrae74212 жыл бұрын
BSMS anyone?
@ismail04842 жыл бұрын
He’s got an illness like tick fever.
@gravedigger9313Ай бұрын
When you make video of someone who have hand pain
@isabelsummers80174 жыл бұрын
Great but don’t be misled into thinking that’s it. In your advanced life support your patient is likely to arrest-this show hasn’t included the arrest which will mostly happen on the scenario ABCDE alive assess ABC dead- back to A
@SniffMyDeadwax6 жыл бұрын
bullshit , never reflective of the daily work
@gh0strec0n2 жыл бұрын
OMG he does not need an ITU review, some Ivabx and paracetamol will bring his temp down, which will help bring resps and pulse down, as his body will then be able to meet the Oxygen demand. The iv fluids will help support BP and should contain any systemic inflammatory response, ie the septic responce.
@UItimateGuitarCovers5 жыл бұрын
lol yeah ITU team must have been sat around, bored that day
@pierzing.glint1sh764 жыл бұрын
He scored 9 on MEWS which necessitates review by ITU outreach team. It doesn't mean automatic admission to ITU.
@kirked0074 жыл бұрын
Shouldn't he be put on IV fluids already that's what I had when I was like him
@maisieswindells91134 жыл бұрын
@@maisieswindells9113 Yes Maisie, within the hour of identifying sepsis
@oliviacoy50564 жыл бұрын
No back exam, No DVT ruled out = No wonder I failed the exam after using this video -))
@hammadbhinder71106 жыл бұрын
he did the back exam
@sumaiyaiqbal43456 жыл бұрын
he check the legs for swelling and rashes - no erythema so wouldnt indicated dvt and lungs were clear
@daniellescandal27686 жыл бұрын
You obviously weren't watching.
@kirked0074 жыл бұрын
So all the Senior Doctor did at the end of the day was examine him, prescribe him IV Antibiotics and fluids ! So much unnecessary drama for something so basic. They’re like puppets in the UK. Bending over to stick to guidelines and protocols. Zero creativity. Any sensible Dr in any part of the world would’ve done the same thing without necessarily sticking to this shit abcde assessment. Dumb
This is exactly the way how we talk with our colleagues. This was so new to me before I started working in UK. Everyone is too polite but firm at the same time.
Heyeyeye... E3y3u3u3uu3u3u
Eyeeye and
My goodness I was so into this video, i'm disappointed it ended before I knew how Michael is doing. hahah
toward the end, they say it- its sepsis.
I mean how he turned out. If he recovered well haha
I was the exact same Jordan
@@Smubbs he definitely lived. I knew Michael and can confirm he has a job in Tesco now.
I think they use actors for demonstrations....
As a 2nd year student nurse I found this video really helpful and very interesting.
These are the best educational videos. The patient actors do such a great job and look and act like real patients
This was really helpful to me for my clinical exam in February. I like the team work here. The doctor is also very confident
Thank you, RC and all members of this great work :)
Thank you for making these video's.
I chose to watch this to gain confidence in being a first aider. I hoped to hear some reassurance to Micheal. He was conscious and could hear and understand what was being said. What rung in my ears, when the doctor spoke to the nurse was, ‘ l’m most concerned!’ I think if l heard urgent and most concerned and being told how hot l was, several times, l think l’d have breathing problems. The rest was brilliant!
Brilliant. Very clear demonstration on the right way to do it!
This is amazing !! Thank you so much !!!
Such a good video. Brilliant.
This video is really useful for every medical student out there. Thank you so much for making it. ❤️
very informative ! great for learning purposes and will be incorporating this into my assessment piece :)
amazing and a confidence Doctor and the entire team involved. very useful video for students like myself.
this was excellent - I can struggle staying on track with A-E during my simulation training but this will help me present my findings in a smooth way whilst still focusing on the patient.
Brilliant job great assessment
Very informative, professional team-mates and helpful for my forthcoming Clinical OSCA. Bravo!
Wow! I like the systematic approach of the assessment. Nothing was missed...
The most important, THANK YOU !
this was great, I was sent it as part of my nurse training. I particularly found the nurse's helpful modelling of the SBAR model for communicating with the on-call Registrar. The literature suggests this helps the two professionals share a 'common clinical understanding' of Michael's worsening condition. I was surprised when the Reg asked the Nurse to attach a pulse oximeter - I would have assumed one was attached while doing the ABCDE assessment. Did the Nurse interrupt the ABCDE assessment after B in order to address the fast breathing rate?
It’s for demonstration and the exam. You have to ask for the obvious even though it would (hopefully) be done. Like doing a driving test you have to over exaggerate looking in your mirrors or say it so the instructor knows you are doing it
Eyeeyeyeyeeyyeyeeeyeeyeyeyeyeyyeyeyeeyye and
Brilliant video many thanks - the Dr should have specified which broad spectrum IVABX he wanted from the Nurse - check allergy status/drugs chart first.
They always give Co-Amoxiclav before a blood test, so the doctor is right.
@@sloane290 allergy status should have been done before anything is given. Each hospital has its own policy, some us IV Tazocin instead of co-amox
@@sloane290 and you would have just killed me as I am allergic to penicillin.
@@nadinehowarth1420 Any medications given have to have been signed for on a prescription by the doctor before being given so any allegies would come up the and also allergy patients wear a large bright red wrist band with their allergies so this wouldn't happen.
@@sloane290 bloods should be taken before IVABX unless there is the presence of purpura fulminans
Really nice video
NHS are very friendly (staff),we are grateful thank you
Wow. Great video
Excellent
Read the comments here highlight the mouse and cat relation between nurses and doctors. Some comments suggested that we do much than the other people missing out on the interprofessional aspect of working with each other. Overrall i think this video is brilliant and was more of a real situation scenario than text book knowledge.
Me too, but what we can do is just...imagine it
I found this video very useful
How's Michael? Did he make it?
l am in my second year and find this video very informative and educative. It kind of reassured me and boost my confidence.
How did you get a NEWS score of 9 if you didn’t connect the monitorng equipments
I startet to learn the abcde sines last week.
What a fucking legend
Who's here from BSMS Virtual Work Experience Course?
visit DR.ADULE today on his KZhead channel for any type of virus or disease or infections he Is a great traditional doctor.infection like herpes fibroids hpv als.etc
Why is a urinary catheter advised since the staff nurse said the patient was self voiding and they didn't mention any urinary retention?
Monitor urine output/ AKI
@@hunterz2006 I can see your point but why can't they monitor it without a catheter as a catheter is invasive and can cause infection by itself. Would it not be possible to wee into a bottle and measure the quantity of urine that way?
It’s part of Sepsis 6
@@user-xy4ff5yp7b It isn't. Monitoring urine output is, doesnt require a catheter
Tom Grant hey man. 🙂the output then has to be monitored continuously and closely for careful fluid balance. Unfortunately can’t rely on voiding ability which may be affected by many things.
WHAT ANTIBIOTICS DOCTOR DONT DO ME LIKE THAT
If only the doctors that some people who really need them are like this...
Where is thiis hospital?
That nurse was too calm for me. Also, don't you try to do some interventions before escalating? Like do ECG since the patient is tachy, have IV access and also give paracetamol for the spike.
Thanks
any one have any idea what does the doctor say at 4:42-4.45?? i really dont understand.
As a nurse, I have monitoring the patient asap while the doctor was coming....
Did you watch the beginning o the video? Post obs was what the Dr was asking as they collaborate. There were a few things he could do before though. oxygenating the Pt and putting in a cannula.
Does the doctor think nurses are silly ? We are much smarter and more empowered, we would already be doing all of these. But if the nurses didn’t know what they were doing fair enough it’s nice that he would keep calm and explain things to him.
@@jadebaxter8203 It's not that we are trained to think nurses are silly, it's just that in an exam scenario we have to explain out loud what we want done and why, so the examiner knows that we are aware of the steps. In the real world as you say, by the time you turn up the nurses have usually already put on monitoring, put cardiac leads on, done a glucose etc... but this is just exam world, that's all!
laa2009 Yes I understand, I just wish I saw more of what we actually can do online. We are drip fed this, but we do often have a lot of training we could decide shockable and non shockable rhythms and H’s and Ts, it would be nice to just see that a little. I’m just a student anyway I don’t really know much ! Thank you for your reply!
@@jadebaxter8203 probably not the best examples to give when trying to argue you have a wide scope of practicee
Is wearing gloves not a routinely done practice as I observed the examining physician is without them?
Gloves are not required for examination in normal circumstances. Currently the guidance is 2r mask, eye protection, appron or full cover and gloves.
Regular hand hygiene should be top priority but gloves are only required when at risk of exposure to blood or bodily fluids.
Acute abdomen. Most likely perforated viscus with sepsis with probably in shock. May be having acute kidney injury as well.
Abdo was SNT so unlikely to have perf, the loin pain raises suspicion of pyelo so looks more like urosepsis than an acute abdomen.
Is this copyrighted? I’d like to use (with reference) as part of an educational study guide for medical students. Many thanks!
If your using it for educational purposes and not making money on it, it doesn't matter if it's copyrighted.
Hi Lucy, Can you email us at publicaffairs@resus.org.uk with details of the study guide and we will be in touch! Best, Emily
👍👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌👌
This is okay but nurses usually would have done so much already before patient got to this stage.
QED 100%
Awsome video.. apart from the auscultation bit .. I think he auscultated the trapezius 🤔.. but overall the scenario was perfectly played.. brilliant
That was auscultation of the apices
hi
I wonder nurse doing bloods wow in ireland no way . No matter how sick patient is sick , 2 doctors looking after 200 patients over night and no nurse will dare to put cannula or bloods even if news is 11 ... so lucky doctor
Did we ever find out his BP?
99/59.. on the monitor:)
Generally it was a good approach but it appears strange if you watch this video nowadays with no any PPE used prior to assessing the patient. May need updating..
Can we give antipyretics before continuing? Then reassess
Think this chap needs a bit more of a plan than "Paracetamol PRN and reassess"
@@laa2009 Yes. He needs an holistic plan, including vitals every 15 -30 minutes. I said that because an assessment during a fever can yield a different result that an assessment in the absence of fever. Most patients in pain don't talk to you or give you a proper history. Thus we give some pain reliever in an attempt to get a proper history to manage correctly. Thanks.
@@ayannageorge5258 Tell me you’re joking
@@zed3063 No.
@@laa2009 Not PRN but STAT
Who’s here from bsms
meeeee
@@irfanusman227 yep me too
BSMS anyone?
He’s got an illness like tick fever.
When you make video of someone who have hand pain
Great but don’t be misled into thinking that’s it. In your advanced life support your patient is likely to arrest-this show hasn’t included the arrest which will mostly happen on the scenario ABCDE alive assess ABC dead- back to A
bullshit , never reflective of the daily work
OMG he does not need an ITU review, some Ivabx and paracetamol will bring his temp down, which will help bring resps and pulse down, as his body will then be able to meet the Oxygen demand. The iv fluids will help support BP and should contain any systemic inflammatory response, ie the septic responce.
lol yeah ITU team must have been sat around, bored that day
He scored 9 on MEWS which necessitates review by ITU outreach team. It doesn't mean automatic admission to ITU.
Shouldn't he be put on IV fluids already that's what I had when I was like him
@@maisieswindells9113 Yes Maisie, within the hour of identifying sepsis
No back exam, No DVT ruled out = No wonder I failed the exam after using this video -))
he did the back exam
he check the legs for swelling and rashes - no erythema so wouldnt indicated dvt and lungs were clear
You obviously weren't watching.
So all the Senior Doctor did at the end of the day was examine him, prescribe him IV Antibiotics and fluids ! So much unnecessary drama for something so basic. They’re like puppets in the UK. Bending over to stick to guidelines and protocols. Zero creativity. Any sensible Dr in any part of the world would’ve done the same thing without necessarily sticking to this shit abcde assessment. Dumb
It’s a basic video, not real life duh…