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Breaking Bad News with Oncologist Dr. Don S Dizon | Knock Knock, Hi! with the Glaucomfleckens 

The Glaucomfleckens
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Episode 3 - Dr. Don S Dizon
Thank you to Dr. Dizon for teaching us the art of breaking bad news and to Kristin for letting me down somewhat gently.
Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere else you binge podcasts: apple.co/3uPKA68
New episodes every Tuesday! Can’t wait? Join us on Patreon for early access, exclusive shows, livestream hangouts, and MUCH more! www.patreon.com/glaucomflecken
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Email: knockknockhi@human-content.com
Website: www.glaucomflecken.com/podcast

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22 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 138   
@DGlaucomflecken
@DGlaucomflecken Год назад
Wooo boy, first 3 episodes of the podcast are out. I appreciate all the feedback. Jonathan has noted all of it. From here on out you can expect a new episode every Tuesday with random skits thrown in throughout the week. Here's to an absurd amount of content in 2023 love you!
@Miss_Dis
@Miss_Dis Год назад
An absurd amount of content is the the right amount of content
@RarewareLover
@RarewareLover Год назад
Love the podcast, but pro-tip: you gotta keep your video titles under 50 characters or else mobile users get the “…” You can use abbreviations like “Episode Name / KKWTG
@thomasscott7829
@thomasscott7829 Год назад
Loving your videos. As someone with health problems and complications as well I appreciate the take you've taken on all this. One joke I've often told my wife is that I need a new body- this one is obviously a lemon. (Coincidentally I'd love to see that joke expanded on in a short... I think jimothy might be suitably agast at it?) Keep up the good work doc.
@nightbringar7558
@nightbringar7558 Год назад
There is an edit at 30:47 that is a bit jarring in terms of conversational flow. It felt like the conversation of "what number do you think of when someone says "You have months to live"?" wasn't complete. I might also just be the odd person out as I don't see any other comments on the edit.
@kimberlyh0108
@kimberlyh0108 Год назад
My late husband was diagnosed with metastatic pancreatic cancer in October, 2013. It was everywhere by the time they found it - lymph nodes, spleen, liver, spine. The first oncologist we had, who told us, broke the news to us ok, but then proceeded to give us false hope that with chemo he could survive a few years. In two weeks another oncologist who we saw for a second opinion (thank goodness) told me the truth, that he had weeks. He was on hospice within a month of diagnosis and he died two months to the day after diagnosis. Have the courage to tell us the truth!
@kyokoyumi
@kyokoyumi Год назад
Telling the truth is more than just "breaking bad news" it gets the parties involved to start the closure process while the person is still alive. It allows you to expect it and plan for it so that you know that everything is taken care of and the person on their death bed is able to go knowing their family is going to be fine and not go into debt or have other kinds of problems just to bury them. It doesn't make their death any less difficult but it does make the *process* easier. So many people never get the closure they need because they don't have time so years later they're breaking down and falling apart instead of properly remembering the person they lost and all of this can be mitigated with proper handling of the situation and by always telling the truth.
@micheleparker3780
@micheleparker3780 Год назад
Here, Here!!!
@Chawse8
@Chawse8 Год назад
my dad was the same. I wish I’d known how fast it was, I would have booked him an immediate flight first class for a weekend in Alaska, his bucket list. I didn’t know , and Im a nurse.
@brianthesnail3815
@brianthesnail3815 Год назад
My wife was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in her early 30s when we had been trying to have a baby for a few years. The oncologist was very brutal. He just blurted out that my wife had a 30% chance of dying and to 'forget having children'. He was basically a scientist first who looked down microscopes all day. He was a doctor a long way second with zero bedside manner. Luckily the consultant gynaecology surgeon in charge of my wife's case took a very holistic view, got second opinions, did a very restrained surgery to remove one ovary, painstakingly picked off the tiny tumors spread around her abdomen, then got her into chemo and did everything she could to give my wife a chance to have a child. We have two sons in their early 20s now. That is entirely due to the brilliant care she received from a consultant that didn't stop thinking about the person in front of her.
@pauljsm
@pauljsm 5 месяцев назад
Awesome outcome! 🎉🎉🎉
@tjh7117
@tjh7117 Год назад
Thanx for tackling this difficult topic. I'm a general internist and palliative medicine provider in Canada. In my practice, the ability to share hard news in a patient-entered and compassionate way is paramount. Breaking bad news is a skill that needs to be prioritized, taught, mentored.
@SuperVancouverBC
@SuperVancouverBC Год назад
Kristin's reaction "several days of feeling my own testicles" killed me🤣🤣🤣
@Miss_Dis
@Miss_Dis Год назад
Lady bro is probably the best name for her
@niknotnikki
@niknotnikki Год назад
Definitely! 😄
@DakStoSha
@DakStoSha Год назад
My sister died from chemo related issues in 2015, I’m now an OMS-I. Thanks for taking something I struggle with and making it an easy listen.
@Dr_Merza
@Dr_Merza Год назад
Hi Dr Glaucomflecken ^_^, my name is Hussein Merza, I am also an oncologist, I don’t know if someone mentioned it in the prior comments but the main reason urologist do not go after the testicle from the scrotum is that it has potential to seed and spread the cancer cells to another lymphatic chains. So they take it from the same route that testicle took to descend from abdomin in the infancy. Keep it up, I love ur show, u r making the difference 😊
@joaniedorsey6116
@joaniedorsey6116 Год назад
Just catching up on the podcasts. I'm a retired RN and spent half of my career as an oncology nurse. Oncologist are amazing humans as are oncology patients. This was a great episode. Thank you all.
@ianfearon8397
@ianfearon8397 Год назад
Thank you for being so open and sharing your incredible experiences. We go through the groin because the lymphatic drainage of the scrotum is different, and we can cause the cancer to spread to a different set of lymph nodes
@sandybrown4764
@sandybrown4764 Год назад
Organ-removal popping noises? Yes! Seeing my GYN, after a Pelvic Organ Prolapse surgery, I made the pop noise and asked him if it made that noise when he removed my uterus. He laughed and said that although mine did not, many of the larger ones DO! Dr. Don Dizon was a great choice, for a guest. Your interview brought out some interesting points. His telling his patients "You are not dying" brings up a good distinction. Even with cancer, there is plenty of living to be done, before you really are dying, similar to going into hospice.
@Jack_Redview
@Jack_Redview Год назад
So gotta admit, I’m really into your shorts and entered this here not really sure what to expect. At first when I heard cancer I thought okay, this is going to be heavy. But you guys are very listenable, and enjoy how you both carry each others story forward. I have zero connections with cancer and it isn’t really relatable for me, but you guys made this an enjoyable podcast while educating me on cancer Many thanks to the Jonathan that helped pull this off 🤣
@trudgingtheroadofhappydest3983
🇨🇦I have had uterine cancer. I’ve relied very much on all my doctors through the years. So grateful for the years of training and passion you all have. Please don’t give up time with patients for only doing RU-vid, etc. We need you in the rooms more. Love the humour.
@elainelise
@elainelise Год назад
There is an ICD 10 code for sucked into a jet engine, SUBSEQUENT ENCOUNTER!
@laurag9306
@laurag9306 Год назад
My daughter had an eight pound immature teratoma when she was twelve. It had spread beyond the ovary into the omentum and abdominal wall. Luckily the small malignancy was only found in the main mass. I am a nurse in the OR and in particular that same OR that she had her surgery. From the diagnosis to the next morning for surgery I was able to hold myself together until I went back with her into the operating room and I was the one who placed her on the operating table. I think my presence in there had confused anesthesia, residents, and my other work colleagues because I'm usually there to work. I broke down after I walked out the doors of OR 8 that day and I still work there and think about that day every time I go into that room. Forward five-ish years she is doing well and was able to dodge chemo, but have had to continue her oncology visits to continue to watch her remaining ovary that also has a small mass as well........ As she is getting older and she has a better understanding about her health it has gotten a little more challenging to talk about her future reproductive health. Cancer SUCKS! P.S. The medical staff at my place of employment who know you all LOVES your medical comedy! 🙂
@paulinariosdavila4497
@paulinariosdavila4497 Год назад
I have to say, I had no idea what to expect from Dr. Don when I saw that he was an oncologist. I hadn't thought before of the type of person that would be well-suited to dedicate his work to something so heartbreaking, but he clearly is made for the job. It's so wonderful to know that there is a lovely person full of compassion and warmth out there watching out for people during one of the darkest possible moments of life
@monti6144
@monti6144 Год назад
There are more info on fenbendazoleorg resource.
@JBthePAdashC
@JBthePAdashC Год назад
What in the damn hell?!?! 3 episodes in one day????!!!! I don’t have enough time to watch them all.
@bohochic2459
@bohochic2459 Год назад
If that's the worst of your problems.....seriously.
@JBthePAdashC
@JBthePAdashC Год назад
@@bohochic2459 I don’t know what to say to this. I’m not sure what you’re gaining from this sort of response.
@DGlaucomflecken
@DGlaucomflecken Год назад
Well you better find the time
@JBthePAdashC
@JBthePAdashC Год назад
@@DGlaucomflecken you bet your Glaucomflecken I will!!
@bohochic2459
@bohochic2459 Год назад
@Joe the PA - I am not expecting a response. I am also not trying to gain anything. Your post came across as "whiny" and "unapprecative." It just didn't seem necessary to even express it. If you want to watch them, you will find the time. It's as simple as that. Plus, you also have the choice to watch each one when you are able to do so. Did I miss something here? Simply asking a sincere question.
@tealolly93
@tealolly93 Год назад
This is humanity in medicine, and it is so important. Drs/HCP don't have all the answers, they struggle too. This was an emotional listen as I recall many different situations I've been a part of. Thank you for what you are doing.
@Silent_Sounds
@Silent_Sounds Год назад
this episode was genuinely profound. There were multiple moments I teared up. I work in a trauma facility with one of the largest oncology departments in my state, and this episode really made me appreciate all of those healthcare workers who put so much effort into ensuring a comfortable environment for their patients. The chemistry you two had with doctor Dizon was great, y'all did a great job at making a comfortable environment for your guest to take the stage. Really well done, thank you for sharing this with your viewers.
@user-vn8wy1bs3y
@user-vn8wy1bs3y Год назад
Ya'll are amazing. And changing the world. Thank you for existing!
@Tcheera
@Tcheera Год назад
A great opening day. I'm super exhausted today from being in the ER all day yesterday, but I started to anticipate the episodes and get more engaged. I really like the format, and I tend to get tired during a lot of podcasts but these have a great mix of things that balance well for keeping attention. The hour goes by very fast. Always have loved the tiktoks but I feel like I'm developing a very close knit parasocial relationship here, haha. During these times of disconnect, I think it's just very delightful to see some human beings being human beings. I think whether your fans are doctors or not (like me and some of my medically complex bros), unlike when doctors used to be the cold distant experts, I think for us the humor and uncertainty and more genuine and grounded content coming from a more mainstream source is great. My health and my life have been very uncertain. My certain doctors have usually been wrong, while my unsure doctors who are curious, humble, thoughtful, and willing to just be human and say "I don't know" have been by far the most helpful. It's great to see across so many. I love it! I wonder is it just the patient centered movements? Or who is drawn to social media? Is authenticity the new "aloof expert"? Or is this that true dunning-kruger effect where now finally we're getting the elites who realize just how much we don't know about medicine so it's coming across as a new brand of doctors we all wish we had a long time ago with our "weird lungs"? Regardless I'm fully digging it.
@DGlaucomflecken
@DGlaucomflecken Год назад
Thank you!
@TheAngryChinchilla
@TheAngryChinchilla Год назад
It's interesting you mention the unsure doctor vs the certain doctor. I'm a PA, but I talk to my patients very straightforward about my uncertainties, concerns, process of disease and why I'm ordering certain tests or treatments and I have patients all the time tell me I talk to them like a person and they really appreciate it. I think every provider should be this way, but this is who I am and a combination of how I was trained. Most important lesson I ever learned in PA school is "a patient who feels loved, cared about, and respected will follow your treatment plan. And the most effective plan is the one they follow. Because if you do not help them understand why, or they do not feel cared about, or respected, then you haven't helped anyone." Maybe we're getting better at training medical providers and maybe we have generations that are open to changing how we practice medicine. Either way, it seems like a win-win situation.
@Tcheera
@Tcheera Год назад
@@TheAngryChinchilla It's interesting you say that, because even though I ended up taking a research path -- I did also see doctors even in our community psychiatry fellowship doing this which I think was important. Some of the students and residents were more aloof than I would've liked given who the trainers were, but as a NIMH fellow at the time, I thought it was a great program and that part of it really stuck out to me and was different from everything we'd heard before. It probably helped me personally in how I approached my own health and advocacy later because they really pressed about "If a patient says they are having a problem with their medications, listen to them -- because they'll probably just stop taking them if you don't listen to them." I'm 46 now -- at the time it seemed revolutionary haha, but yeah it was really helpful. I have noticed more listening when it's possible -- but it still can be hard. Like that ER trip I just mentioned for instance -- they did kinda listen, but it was also super super rushed and while I managed, I think most patients would've been bulldozed by how rushed it was. I think I accepted it more because I just didn't want to be in the ER. However, it could've been very easy for important things to get missed if I'd been more vulnerable and without assistance. And I think that's going to be the next great battle at least in the US for medicine is the whole HMO / managed care movement of doctors trying to listen but... "HERE DO IT IN 12 MINUTES!" Honestly, I'll be surprised if AI isn't my doctor soon. I start talking, AI fills in the gaps imperfectly and is also the doctor and dispenses what the insurance prescribes based on it, whether it's right or not in 31 seconds. Gets a red flag for being 1 second late on efficiency.
@dappernecromancer5364
@dappernecromancer5364 Год назад
Some day I think it would be kinda neat to have an episode with a cybersecurity expert that focuses on health care systems because OH BUDDY that's its own particular kind of beast that /really/ needs attention from health care staff
@nancylee2120
@nancylee2120 Год назад
My husband would agree. He's an Enterprise identity (one aspect of security) software guy who worked for a hospital for a short time and was horrified by the vulnerability of computerized medical equipment.
@maryoconnor2527
@maryoconnor2527 Год назад
Ooooh that would be SO INTERESTING
@archimedesscrew3710
@archimedesscrew3710 Год назад
Very important subject that is not covered that often for End Of Life Care, Resus etc. Well done for posting.
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Год назад
Most non-medical people have an unrealistic idea of how well resuscitation works, based on TV and the movies. But in reality CPR only saves people about 10% of the time. It’s of course still worth learning and doing, because a 10% chance is way better than no chance.
@archimedesscrew3710
@archimedesscrew3710 Год назад
@@Sashazur Agreed. It's a difficult job, informing people that your efforts were unsuccessful.
@jqryan
@jqryan Год назад
I have worked with lots of Oncologists as I work in Clinical Trials Research on behalf of Pharmaceutical Companies. Oncolgoists and their staff-nurses and pharmacists are amazing people. Can't say enough nice things about them.
@I_Willenbrock_I
@I_Willenbrock_I Год назад
I want to be honest. This podcast is warm, nice and treats this serious subject with respect. It's off course helpful that you have... "hands on experience" so to say. Doctor Don was very nice to have as a partner with lots of experience in that regard. It really helps to see a professional, who doesn't sees himself as a half-God in white, but as a healer. The format is also very nice. I myself have family members, who struggled with cancer (dad had esophageal cancer in a very early stage) and he is considered cancer free and healed. For relatives, its also not always easy to digest such things. Keep it up and thanks for making such a difficult topic relatable and human.
@Chawse8
@Chawse8 Год назад
Peds hem onc RN here. I cried when I heard my pt had to have an enucleation. But then I asked the Doc if he could get a fake eye in whatever color he liked? And the Doc said yes, even green or blue. Or multiple ones. Matching for formal visits or Gramma, scary for Halloween. I was so much happier and shared with my patient!
@DrEsky914
@DrEsky914 Год назад
I have to take a stand in defense of Internal Medicine (AKA Body Medicine for Dr G fans!). Being able to look at the patient holistically is an extremely important skill and is not to my mind "undecided". We need more physicians who do Internal medicine for their patients and the best of these are able to support a healthy plan and approach to patient care despite chronic illness periodically triggering hospitalization. My best accomplishments in private practice were keeping patients which complex chronic conditions out of the hospital with appropriate medical management of their diseases and thus improving their quality of life.
@jessicaz4621
@jessicaz4621 Год назад
this is fantastic even from a normal public person who has a nurse for a mother and i can unsderstand most of what your talking about its really fantastic thank you
@JM-vh7oc
@JM-vh7oc Год назад
My breast cancer diagnose was kinda the same. The radiologist had me come in to his room to show me the images and why he was concerned. I had just started a new job and wanted to rule things out. Had the surgical biopsy literally on my first day of work. Because I didn't want to trouble anyone for a ride, I declined anesthesia so was wide awake but they did numb me up really well. They asked Path for stat look at the sample. Doc came back to me - still on the table - said... you have cancer. My original reaction was... well... shit! Took a bit for it to sink in. They also did a mirror image biopsy same day that showed hyperplasia. My decision was to have bilateral mastectomies and course of chemo. 30 years later... I am fine. So much mentally to go through. Actually had bigger problems due to reconstruction and massive infections. Finally had implants removed at year 15 due to rupture. Takes an emotional toll for sure. My medical oncologist was the best and most thorough doctor I've ever had.
@kirstenholder7270
@kirstenholder7270 Год назад
Thank you for this podcast, it has been so relaxing to listen to you all talking about things objectively.
@KxNOxUTA
@KxNOxUTA Год назад
I love this format. It's very insightful and fun. I am a tad worried about the way you both tease each other sometimes, to be honest, but other than that, the insights into medicine through different specialists is amazing. Also the whole struggles and challanges of trying to care for ppl and things sometimes being a learning process.
@wonky_shoebox7514
@wonky_shoebox7514 Год назад
Yay! Going through a heavy seizure period atm (epilepsy drug resistant) so listening to you brings me so much happiness
@Uufda651
@Uufda651 Год назад
I might have blood cancer, (or an autoimmune disorder- we're still diagnosing + my doc is always booked out ~6mo), which is an extra bummer since I'm in my early 20s. Props to the docs who have to face those harsh realities every day, and remain kind and unjaded through it all. I looked into going into medicine, but took a long hard look at myself, and determined I lack the emotional fortitude. So I'm going into accounting & analytics instead.
@MissVSGirl
@MissVSGirl Год назад
I was in 3rd year medical school and I was so sick on the day but I went to the school as usual on that day I waited till the end of the Ortho seminar, then to the emergency room in the same building. It turned out to be a sepsis and I ended up in the ICU a few hours later with septic shock with NORA therapy. My concern was what if I am not interpreting it right, I am a med student and I am supposed to know better, so what if I am just making a huge deal out of nothing. Trust yourselves and please take the day off!!!
@sarahrupert5320
@sarahrupert5320 Год назад
Ok, wow. I don’t normally listen to podcasts (I don’t usually have the attention span for them), but yours is really amazing. You’re both really great at it & I’ll be looking forward to other episodes now! As an Onc RN btw…THANK YOU for covering this topic. It’s so, so important. 👏❤️
@barbarak8158
@barbarak8158 8 месяцев назад
I have found my cancer patients to be the sweetest patients! I worked mostly with chronic lungers!
@michelesw1
@michelesw1 Год назад
How does Dr. Dizon stay healthy mentally and physically giving bad news maybe multiple times a day or week? I'm glad we had the penis story as a recovery from the somber mood from the previous conversation. laughed out loud at work
@joshualarson765
@joshualarson765 Год назад
At first, I thought this was news about the tv show breaking bad. Still a good video. -Crooked glasses FM.
@rockyduck9133
@rockyduck9133 Год назад
When you work in a hospital everyone is your work family and you really go out of your way to help them. Probably why you were diagnosed and in surgery so fast. We're hooked on adrenaline.
@Frau.Kanzlerin
@Frau.Kanzlerin Год назад
What a nightmare to get a cancer diagnosis in general, but also to be in med school when it happened. I'm told med students get paranoid about diseases as they learn about them, so to suspect you may have cancer must be additionally terrifying. 😅
@Louis--
@Louis-- Год назад
Was so confused by the change of genre to 'Breaking Bad' News but I'd just woken from a nap. This feels much more important than that.
@nadirguney3664
@nadirguney3664 Год назад
Praying for your full recovery!
@Sunlit_Reading
@Sunlit_Reading Год назад
I really love the humanizing that is brought to these topics and the warmth you both bring. I think it's really cool to have Kristin there as a voice for those that are outside of medicine. It would be great to see her lean into that more and ask more questions the layperson might have. She has a wonderful sense of humor, but I feel like it's 80% teasing 20% curiosity, and I wonder if we could hear more of her thoughts on these topics. I'm outside of medicine so she's who I identify with most :) Anyhow just my two cents and I think you're both wonderful and please disregard anything that isn't helpful.
@ashram12
@ashram12 Год назад
I've had cancer twice too! Both breast cancers, the first one in my twenties, and a relatively easy to treat cancer, the other one right now in my 40s, more aggressive. I'm just the "lucky" recipient of a BRCA1 gene. Anywoo, in my experience, doctors have been pretty bad at breaking bad news. I mean, they're not insensitive, they just sort of blindside me with the news. Like, the moment they come through the door they say things like "Did I tell you you have cancer?", or "It's triple negative".
@taylork785
@taylork785 Год назад
Looking forward to this and many more. Thanks Dr G!
@kevinm4701
@kevinm4701 Год назад
I got 50 seconds in. "Its fine!" and my wife was like why are you grinning so wide and i,m like glacomflecken the ophthalmologist.
@obieobrien5883
@obieobrien5883 Год назад
OMG you two are fantastic!! Tuck and roll!!!!!
@robemega
@robemega Год назад
I listened to this on my walk and now I’m here for the video version. So, I guess I like it a lot.
@lauren9667
@lauren9667 Год назад
Awesome podcast! Dr. Dizon is what every doctor should be like. Thank you!
@cansugun205
@cansugun205 Год назад
Thank you for this information!
@JH-lz4dh
@JH-lz4dh Год назад
I really enjoyed this.
@2AZSUN
@2AZSUN Год назад
These first few eps have been fantastic!! So glad you're posting them here as well as the other platforms. Looking forward to more and seeing where this takes us. Thanks so much for all the effort to put these together!!
@trigonometrisk
@trigonometrisk Год назад
Oncology is not very present in the Glaucomflecken videos (understandable), so I appreciate this episode!
@karenward267
@karenward267 Год назад
Wow. This is a difficult topic to discuss and I appreciate your dealing it. Thank you.
@debidallacosta5736
@debidallacosta5736 Год назад
This was amazing! Would love to hear you do a podcast with Dr Kurtis Kim and Dr Richard Hsu regarding compression disorders (MALS, Nutcracker, MTS, SMAS), and the difficulty of getting diagnosed and treated, their cutting edge surgeries and amazing successes, the comorbidities (such as EDS-also difficult to get diagnosed and treated effectively), the medical gaslighting and medical trauma that patients encounter, and potential accusations that parents experience...this needs so much conversation
@herika006
@herika006 Год назад
Highly recommend Hospice Nurse Julie as a guest on the podcast!
@jobethk588
@jobethk588 Год назад
I love these programs! How are you doing? You asked for feedback. I have no idea what the solution is but sadly when the good doc reads the subscriber stories at the end I notice he's reading the stories and not looking at the camera in the same way. It's a small thing. But you asked. Smile.
@denisemangan1413
@denisemangan1413 Год назад
It’s funny but our Radiologists are generally in a small room most of the day dictating their findings. This reminds me of the situation with the Radiologist not seeing the light of day. Radiologists do a report & send it to the General Practitioner or Consultant-but generally findings are not discussed with the patient.🇦🇺
@SmileToday-CryTomorrow
@SmileToday-CryTomorrow Год назад
I had tongue cancer twice. So many licking moments the days before surgery ;) Not what you think, but it does make you think about what you are going to miss out on while recovering.
@JM-vh7oc
@JM-vh7oc Год назад
Hope you are doing well. My nephew just went through that - really difficult treatment.
@salvadorhirth2919
@salvadorhirth2919 Год назад
One of the most difficult challenges with chemotherapy is to selectively deliver the drugs to the target cells. Multi drug resistence is another difficult problem. Even when a fraction of the cells in a tumor are at G-zero, so they would not likely absorb labelled nucleotides, perhaps L-cysteine labelled with the isotope Sulphur 35 could be delivered by an afferent artery when feasible, in a solution containing glucose. Since the half life of Sulphur 35 is roughly 87 days, and the beta radiation is very weak, the resulting chlorine after each S undergoes beta decay should form a HCl molecule which would break proteins assembled with the labelled cysteine. The rationalle is not using the weak beta radiation, but instead, the transmutation of S in Cl to shrink a solid tumor.
@daniellebrackett4905
@daniellebrackett4905 Год назад
Consider this comment my peer review validating the Lady's findings. I will need to deliver this same news in my home soon.
@ThatllShowEm
@ThatllShowEm Год назад
Lady G had some tough, accurate news to deliver. In my opinion, she's also the better actor.
@animoma
@animoma Год назад
Give me a shoutout. What do you call someones female sibling who had their foot cloned? My toe sis
@scbtripwire
@scbtripwire Год назад
As someone whose mother has inoperable lung cancer, I thought of her throughout this episode. I really appreciated Dr. Dizon's approach to giving cancer diagnoses and life expectency news... I can't stand thinking she's almost certainly not going to be around in 5 years... and the 5 year thing was told to us 2 years ago... 😢 I'm having trouble acknowledging that that clock is ticking, as you can see. ☹️ Regarding 55:43 when you switched from third person to first person... were you quoting the person's post? I get the impression you were reading in which case maybe mention you are quoting her just to ease the transition between perspectives in the storytelling? Love watching your videos!
@AznPr1des
@AznPr1des Год назад
i was expecting walter white from reading the title
@YILDIRIM25
@YILDIRIM25 Год назад
God bless you!
@kellysouthpaw09
@kellysouthpaw09 Год назад
Awesome episode!! If ever you are looking for a laboratory scientist to answer any lab/Blood Bank related questions - lemme know!
@kaanberkeakbas5233
@kaanberkeakbas5233 Год назад
Very informative! Thank you!
@lisa63artist
@lisa63artist Год назад
Before watching, I thought "Breaking Bad News" referred to the show Breaking Bad, and then I'm wondering if Dr. Dizon consulted on the character Walter White's cancer for the series, and then, while listening to the podcast, after figuring out no, I realized it kind of applies anyway, the whole communication thing. Because you don't want the patient to freak out so bad they start a meth production syndicate to fund not dying.
@DebAmlen
@DebAmlen Год назад
Thank you ❤
@andrewhegstrom2187
@andrewhegstrom2187 Год назад
Oooh, the E codes are hilarious in ICD-9. But I'm pretty sure you've been using ICD-10 for the last couple of years. I'm still not used to them myself after so many years of ICD-9. I'm sure all the Europeans will laugh because they've been using 10 for waaaay longer than we have, we just decided we needed it for billing.
@slk7659
@slk7659 Год назад
Great episode!
@rowanspindlecreek2658
@rowanspindlecreek2658 9 месяцев назад
Regarding the giving bad news and making eye contact, I'm Autistic and eye contact is very painful for me. In cases like mine where eye contact is unlikely, do you still try to do the eye contact? Or just give the bad news but looking for other listening ques?
@Yombleflobber
@Yombleflobber Год назад
I wouldn't directly assert that Kristen is funnier than Will, here, but their relationship dynamic is very cute, and I am enjoying watching/listening to the podcast!
@livewithmeterandnomeasureb1679
This is the one i wanted to check out. Coool a coool doctor podcast. ☮💙🙂
@livewithmeterandnomeasureb1679
Oh sorry this probably sounded dark. I originally wanted to be an end of life psychologist. (Hopefully Ill go back to school one day.)
@bossyt1178
@bossyt1178 Год назад
May god bless you!
@electrocanman
@electrocanman Год назад
You identified as a med student that you shouldn't have propagating testes? Heck, I was working in an aluminum smelter and knew I should be growing a third teste! Fortunately (?!?) mine was just some sort of varicose vein. Sorry yours wasn't that goofy.
@Seeingteacupsindragons
@Seeingteacupsindragons Год назад
God, no, but I had a neurologist just tell me my brain waves were, quote "weird" but not seizure activity when I was a teenager. No followup was performed. Still don't know what that means.
@patrick815
@patrick815 Год назад
Just subscribed to Your RU-vid Don !
@scottmccall4639
@scottmccall4639 Год назад
Grate video!
@thecatofnineswords
@thecatofnineswords Год назад
Murdered by Kristen!!! Oh, oh, oh. 🎉😂😊
@lainet3379
@lainet3379 Год назад
I thought the lady crying over a fake call had been on the receiving end of such a call.
@Optometrynerd
@Optometrynerd Год назад
You should interview Dr. Joseph Allen OD
@dfeuer
@dfeuer Год назад
I think they do go through the scrotum when it's not cancer, but when it is they need to go the other way for some reason.
@alyssae7632
@alyssae7632 Год назад
This is totally not about breaking bad
@melaninmonroe007
@melaninmonroe007 Год назад
SPIKE model
@octaviohernandez7139
@octaviohernandez7139 Год назад
Breaking bad news? New show about walter junior?
@safiyeyldz6264
@safiyeyldz6264 Год назад
Very infrmative, more info on fenbendazoleorg resource
@imonkeybee
@imonkeybee Год назад
Hey if you want to get any better recording software (I'm guessing this is Zoom?) you should check out OBS - it's free and what most youtubers/streamers use!
@JM-vh7oc
@JM-vh7oc Год назад
Dr G - did you have radiation / chemo as part of your treatments?
@le13579
@le13579 Год назад
Cryptic question: how do you know if your oncologist is not right for you ? (strongly assuming you have the benefit of choice). Btw. It's a beautifully tied scarf, Dr D.
@RegisteredNurseL.A.
@RegisteredNurseL.A. Год назад
I’m an oncology nurse. I would say if they are dead set on one treatment only, they rush your initial consultation, don’t explain what would happen with or without treatment, they seem uncaring, you don’t vibe with them, they don’t believe you’re in pain or that you have anxiety about all this or that mourning over your health changes is normal grief and it’s ok. I hope this helps
@Miss_Dis
@Miss_Dis Год назад
Woooooo
@joost00555
@joost00555 Год назад
Wait, you are a human content production? I thought my snowglobes were making medical jokes all this time.
@lauraeberly6019
@lauraeberly6019 Год назад
Good content except I couldn't tell if you were lying about both of your "bad news" because it wasn't that outrageous. I felt really uncomfortable listening and am still a bit confused? Please clarify after such an intense conversation!
@tealolly93
@tealolly93 Год назад
The acting bit toward the end lost me, felt too cavalier for this topic, even though I saw what you were trying to do. The guest Dr was gracious trying to give real, pertinent feedback, and it seemed like you wanted to cut him off early (could have been feedback problems). The first 45 mun were great!
@micheleparker3780
@micheleparker3780 Год назад
Fun with Cancer. Weeee.
@CommentsAllowed
@CommentsAllowed Год назад
I cringed at the sucking and popping sound comment.
@OneMondBand
@OneMondBand Год назад
Dr. G. - you're releasing podcasts way too fast. You need to give a week between releasing new podcasts. This way, you will have more people focusing (and maybe re-listening) to each podcast. Let the audience relish each podcast. Otherwise, you will overwhelm your audience, who will choose to listen to only one of the podcasts, or will determine that if you're releasing that many at a time, they're probably not of high-quality and worth listening to at all. You will also run out of material faster.
@AP-nj1mr
@AP-nj1mr Год назад
Way too long! I am out.
@lschmidt2405
@lschmidt2405 Год назад
In fact l'm thinking of unsubscribing
@rapunzel39
@rapunzel39 Год назад
Why?
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Год назад
The content is very different from what’s been on the channel so far, I guess that’s the explanation.
@charmainesmith5623
@charmainesmith5623 Год назад
He did say that the pod casts would be not like the comedy things he does. He said it would be real topics and talks
@rapunzel39
@rapunzel39 Год назад
That’s understandable. Some people may be uncomfortable or squeamish about the sometimes graphic details of surgery. In that case, I hope they choose to stay subscribed, not watch the podcasts, and just stick with enjoying the comedy skits.
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