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Doctor Mike Reacts To The Good Doctor | Compilation 

Doctor Mike
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I'll teach you how to become the media's go-to expert in your field. Enroll in The Professional's Media Academy now: www.professionalsmediaacademy...
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The Good Doctor is one of my favorite medical drama's on television, and over the years I've had the privilege of reacting to a bunch of episodes on this channel! Here's a supercut of all the episodes I've gotten to react to so far. It's time for a binge of Freddie Highmore as Dr. Shaun Murphy!
00:00 Season 1 Episode 1 - Burnt Foot / Pilot
14:30 Season 1 Episode 2 - Mount Rushmore
27:00 Season 1 Episode 18 - More
39:40 Season 2 Episode 1 - Hello
53:25 Season 4 Episode 1 - Frontline Part 1
I LOVE reading your comments and take your suggestions seriously. If there’s a subject you want me to discuss or something you’d like for me to react to, leave a comment down below. Many of my videos have been born out of suggestions directly from you, so don’t hold back!
-Doctor Mike Varshavski
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Contact Email: DoctorMikeMedia@Gmail.com
* Select photos/videos provided by Getty Images *
** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional **

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14 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 3,7 тыс.   
@undereyebags
@undereyebags Год назад
patient: malignant? that means it's killing me, right? shaun: *yes* 😃
@LIVE_LOVE_YIPPEEE
@LIVE_LOVE_YIPPEEE Год назад
i was full on laughing-😂😂
@muichiro69
@muichiro69 Год назад
*yes, very glad you know that* 😃
@joshiesyoutubelife2858
@joshiesyoutubelife2858 Год назад
@@LIVE_LOVE_YIPPEEE same LOL-
@the_random_viever9172
@the_random_viever9172 Год назад
He could tell the worlds ending with such an enthusiasm.
@zezale6807
@zezale6807 Год назад
i am a sturgeon dr han, i i am a sturgeon!!
@xLostInFirex
@xLostInFirex Год назад
"He might be a surgeon, I don't know yet" - this needs the "I A M A SURGEON!" clip after it lol
@i.is.kid.
@i.is.kid. Год назад
I AM A SURGEON big chungus
@white_knuckle_jorkin
@white_knuckle_jorkin Год назад
I didn't even see your comment and I just about commented the same thing-
@sanraii
@sanraii Год назад
OMFOFMO NO STOP
@warlegends3928
@warlegends3928 Год назад
It’s not from this clip, it’s in a different clip.
@xLostInFirex
@xLostInFirex 11 месяцев назад
@@warlegends3928 yea, I know, just would've been a hilarious edit :)
@Leablz2
@Leablz2 5 месяцев назад
I fell asleep to your video with a painful ear inflammation, and woke up to your video still playing with no pain - I feel healed, thanks Mike.
@DoctorMike
@DoctorMike 5 месяцев назад
Copay waived :)
@lisaturtle1106
@lisaturtle1106 5 месяцев назад
@@DoctorMike😂
@pandagames12345
@pandagames12345 4 месяца назад
should have sued dr mike 🤣🤣🤣
@TheOneWhoSimps
@TheOneWhoSimps 4 месяца назад
Wowowow you better keep that to yourself unless you want an unexpected medical bill coming your way 😅
@Your_problem625
@Your_problem625 2 месяца назад
He literally worked his magic💀
@teavran
@teavran 7 месяцев назад
I've been "trained" to make eye contact when having conversations through pure peer pressure. YEARS of learning to mask and masking well and all it has giving me is increased anxiety, non-existent self-esteem, and being tired all the time from masking.
@jvssocialmedia2459
@jvssocialmedia2459 3 месяца назад
Do you believe you would have been better not increasing chances of positive social interactions and bonds forming?
@fannipiros2580
@fannipiros2580 2 месяца назад
Yes. Masking is tiring, and makes people anxious and uncomfortable. My mom finally got her diagnosis after 60 years. Now she learns unmasking. She is so much happier. Calmer. And to be honest, I'm not missing her weird, unblinking eye contact, or her stiff hugs. She was extremely uncomfortable and that made us, her children uncomfortable too.
@tomlxyz
@tomlxyz 2 месяца назад
​@@jvssocialmedia2459do you think eye contact is the make or break in making friends?
@loopylou6841
@loopylou6841 2 месяца назад
Honestly it's ok to drop the mask. I had a breakdown BC of masking undiagnosed for over 30 years, just be You! 🕊️
@iciclecold2991
@iciclecold2991 2 месяца назад
Yeah, masking sucks. I now have a job working from home so I no longer have to. I have friends who don't care that I don't mask. Most of them on the spectrum too or have other disabilities, but even my normie friends don't care that I don't mask.
@Helena-yl6ds
@Helena-yl6ds Год назад
Austistic people (like myself) don’t need to have any special talent or skills to be valuable. We’re still people. We don’t need therapy to act how society wants us to act, we need therapy to learn how to communicate our needs and live in a world not built for us.
@thegr8curve
@thegr8curve Год назад
💯 we should be entitled to be just as mediocre as anyone else can be. Other humans don't "earn" the right to exist because of some externally judged value or talent, they just have it. The same goes for Autistic people and every other neurodivergent and disabled person
@AsteriusArt
@AsteriusArt Год назад
Agreed!! By the way, I very much appreciate seeing someone else say they're autistic in the comments, since most people seem to be saying they have a child/relative with autism. There's nothing wrong at all with having an autistic relative, I just feel more seen when speaking to a fellow autistic :)
@gayjoebiden
@gayjoebiden Год назад
Yeah. Autistic people dont need special care at all, theyre just normal people. Stop wasting money on them
@goulitry
@goulitry Год назад
This is a very valid point but even so, from observing the 4 of my family members that have autism, I have noticed that they all have a special interest of sorts, like my brother is really good at memorising video games, my sister is really good at specific art, my dad is good at keeping animals and fish, and my other sister is really good at creative writing
@hrafnsvart
@hrafnsvart Год назад
i've got aspergers and it used to happen all the time where parents of other kids at school would complain to everyone that i need therapy or that i need to be medicated or whatever. stuff like autism and aspergers are just really poorly understood by the general public
@goostatoo
@goostatoo Год назад
I just love how one second he’s critical and logical and the next second his screaming his head off in the name of chest compressions ❤
@zapstarfr
@zapstarfr Год назад
That's doctor Mike for you!! He's honestly a great content creator in general
@jazflanagan8693
@jazflanagan8693 Год назад
Chest compressions! Chest compressions! Chest compressions! Lol I noticed the same thing. 😂
@coolworms7297
@coolworms7297 Год назад
lmao hes taught me to get super annoyed at incorrectly done CPR in media and games
@agooddoctorfan651
@agooddoctorfan651 Год назад
@@coolworms7297 bro same 🤣
@christerbostroem
@christerbostroem Год назад
@@coolworms7297 As an electrician who has had to take a first aid course every year since I was an apprentice (17yo) I forget that a lot of adults don't know how to do CPR. We have more than chest compressions, like what to do with bleeding etc. but... And a common mistake is when giving mouth to mouth, don't think that you need to blow up a balloon, they just need a little air. If you blow too much, you can fill their gut causing stomach acid to flow into their lungs. Honestly, if your job does not provide it, at least watch some videos on youtube about first aid, someone might need it.
@thelazygamingpanda3973
@thelazygamingpanda3973 7 месяцев назад
I love how calmly Shaun introduced himself in the first episode. A kid is really hurt and he’s just like “hi I’m Shaun Murphy nice to meet you” And the way he dismisses people. “Stay away from other people and come back if you can’t breath Kay byeee”
@happysqWid
@happysqWid 6 месяцев назад
That edit at 26:45 when Mike is about to say lifting weights "never hurt anybody" made me laugh out loud. Shouts out to the editors for getting his back
@mistynightlight9951
@mistynightlight9951 Год назад
My grandfather was a doctor and had autism. When he was working at a hospital he would call his wife (my grandmother) and ask her to go to the basement, pull out a specific book, go to a specific page number and read that page. He’s gone now but this show reminds me of him so much. I also have autism but I’m not as gifted as he was
@user-gp3qb7kd8q
@user-gp3qb7kd8q 11 месяцев назад
Just remember, not having his “gift” doesn’t make you any less valuable. I’m sure you make him proud with everything you have achieved ❤
@mistynightlight9951
@mistynightlight9951 11 месяцев назад
@@user-gp3qb7kd8q thank you, this made my day ❤️
@photlam9769
@photlam9769 10 месяцев назад
​@@user-gp3qb7kd8qtrying to make a person who is a tard feel better about themselves is treating them like they are a tard. Treat them like you would any other person
@user-gp3qb7kd8q
@user-gp3qb7kd8q 10 месяцев назад
@@photlam9769 What in the world are you even going on about? Are you insinuating that I don't treat an individual with respect, because that is absolutely absurd and you are out of line.
@photlam9769
@photlam9769 10 месяцев назад
@@user-gp3qb7kd8q I'm saying having to take the time to reassure them about this is something you wouldn't do for other people. You are treating him differently when I'm sure all he wants is to fit in WITHOUT having to deal with people like you trying to tell him everything is ok when he knows he is
@natalieandrew7573
@natalieandrew7573 11 месяцев назад
As someone who’s autistic, there’s something really fantastic about how Freddy Highmore portrays Shawn’s specific struggles with autism.
@soho6435
@soho6435 11 месяцев назад
exactly! He definitely did his research and he's an amazing actor
@LifeAsItIs478752
@LifeAsItIs478752 11 месяцев назад
its amazing how I just was seeing a bunch of ppl on twitter complaining he did a horrible job portraying autism and its like... guys, autism is a spectrum that presents in many different ways. All the things they were saying 'is not autism' is exactly how my brother presents and he thought it was fricken cool to see on the screen.
@soho6435
@soho6435 11 месяцев назад
@@LifeAsItIs478752 LITERALLY
@StitchOfficial
@StitchOfficial 11 месяцев назад
Some people say he did a bad job but broo he's so relatable even though he's just playing a role
@JokersD0ll
@JokersD0ll 11 месяцев назад
@@StitchOfficialI got diagnosed at 9 with autism and adhd I related to Shawn so much I loved Shawn, so so so much got obsessed with the show and needed to make sure I could watch all of the episodes did have a mental breakdown when I couldn’t I made it apart of my task to finish every single episode and I did lol in 1 week
@amzeus
@amzeus 9 месяцев назад
As someone that live with autisum (diagnoised at age 42) and two boys with ASD i love the portrayal of Shaun Murphy, it helpped my wife understand a little bit of how my thought process work Really enjoy your work
@pap-fr
@pap-fr 3 месяца назад
Okay LMAO e
@not_mana
@not_mana 3 месяца назад
​@@pap-fr??
@ellezelizard8177
@ellezelizard8177 8 месяцев назад
28:27 doctor:"his foot is dying" Paitent who is EXTREMLY high: "oOoh noOo"
@LexieMay-co2dv
@LexieMay-co2dv 2 месяца назад
Ikr😂
@Pnol_10
@Pnol_10 Год назад
My brother is autistic, but im learning a whole new side of him now my mother is very sick (uncuriable lungcancer). It's sad and heartbreaking, the situation with my mom, but the way he is handling this situation is a whole new level. He is kind, 'positive', very calm and he is teaching us to live day by day. Im learning a lot from him and im very thankful that he is my brother!
@myfriendjustin8381
@myfriendjustin8381 Год назад
That’s how I feel about my brother! He’s autistic as well and just goes through life with a sort of innocence and joy I could never understand. He’s 11 years younger than me so he’s more like my son than anything. I’m going into special education and he’s offered to help me get a better insight into what it’s like living with autism. I even thought about writing a book about his experience. He’s the reason why I want to devote my life helping neurodivergent children. Without early intervention, my brother probably wouldn’t be the happy person he is today
@samitkashyap5948
@samitkashyap5948 Год назад
So sorry for your mother
@plan3t_m4rs
@plan3t_m4rs Год назад
yes I do that as well, my mom has several mental illnesses and is in a psychiatric hospital for a few months. I see no point of being sad (or at least showing that I’m sad)
@ELXXXVIIIMMV
@ELXXXVIIIMMV Год назад
Your grammar is uncurable
@Pnol_10
@Pnol_10 Год назад
@@ELXXXVIIIMMV Im not from Amerika, so excuse me...... Bit rude
@courtney51454
@courtney51454 Год назад
As a person with autism trying to get into the medical field, the good doctor has a special place in my heart ❤
@PeanutStrawberry
@PeanutStrawberry Год назад
What is it you feel they did well in regard to his portrayal What they didn't do well? What you would have liked/loved to see them show/do but didn't? What would you like to see more? Sorry for the barrage of questions... I'm an inspiring writer (neurodivergent myself, although I'm not on the spectrum), so I try to learn as much as possible from real people when it comes to proper rep on tv. Trying to avoid common pitfalls those films and shows normally fall into. :P
@hallohierskye
@hallohierskye Год назад
Same here ❤❤❤
@citrusz6561
@citrusz6561 Год назад
I'm wishing you the best of luck!🤞🙏
@courtney51454
@courtney51454 Год назад
@@PeanutStrawberry well personally I related to a lot of things that Shaun had went through the farther issues even though mine was a little different than his, his mannerisms were very intriguing to see as I related to them myself , obviously the bad thing about his portrayal is the fact that he of course had to have savant syndrome which is very rare and unrealistic for most autistic people although I understand that it is a possibility it’s just highly unlikely for someone to meet an autistic savant. And personally I would have liked to see more of what his educational experiences were like. I cannot say this with confidence though as I have not seen the entire show. (Because for me the educational experience for me was some of the worst in my life)and it would have been interesting to see how he was treated in med school. Hopefully I answered all of your questions I cannot see the rest of the questions because as I’m typing this the rest of your question was cut off. Ty for commenting :) 😁👍
@franciscovargas7507
@franciscovargas7507 Год назад
i have autism aswell :D
@Doberbull
@Doberbull 9 месяцев назад
Mike: “Could be a surgeon. I don’t know yet.” Shaun: “I AM A SURGEON!”
@Womenballin
@Womenballin 9 месяцев назад
I met the guy who plays the “arrogant” doctor at capital hill on a school trip once in high school. He took the time to take photos with us and was overall a very sweet guy❤❤❤
@skylaradams426
@skylaradams426 Год назад
Training kids with autism to act neurotypical is controversial. On the one hand, it could prevent bullying and help make sure they aren’t discriminated against. On the other hand, it is ok to be autistic. They shouldn’t have to change in order for society to accept them. Also, the behavioral therapy has recently become more humane, but I have a friend who was traumatized by the “treatment”
@yumiarigama
@yumiarigama Год назад
Yes! The first thing that I said was "Or we can just teach people to be more accepting? I mean I know it's not easy, but it's something that's definitely worth trying.
@MrsHLecter
@MrsHLecter Год назад
I'm an adult female with ASD, diagnosed later in life, but my parents always knew I was a bit different. They send me to some form of social skill training at age 9. I definitely felt singled out and even more odd to have to do that when others didn't but I can say now that it did probably help me. I learned to make eye contact and that helps me when I have to apply for a job for example. So depending on the severity of the patient, I think early intervention can be useful and not be traumatic (uncomfortable yeah) and still allow kids to be themselves. I had this training long before I even knew I was autistic.
@Oltrya
@Oltrya Год назад
yeah, it's basically just encouraging masking which is DEEPLY exhausting and just brings us closer to meltdowns or shutdowns quicker.
@justinweatherford8129
@justinweatherford8129 Год назад
I wasn’t diagnosed until my 30s. Messed up thing is that my daughter’s psychiatrist had also been my high school teacher. He said that they knew I was autistic back then. It would have been nice to know why I had been bullied most of my life. That doesn’t mean that I’m not still bullied, but at least I have a better understanding about why.
@harleyBear_
@harleyBear_ Год назад
Helping autistic people to “act” neurotypical is to also help people with autism have a better quality of life not because of society but to be able to function not for society but for them selves
@malindasanders15
@malindasanders15 Год назад
My 3 yr old grandson is autistic. He makes direct eye contact and he can pick up on social cues just by looking at your face. He will stare you down lol. He has delayed speech and issues with food textures. He takes speech therapy. He's been in ST since September and he has became very verbal! He's a very independent little guy ♥️
@Krystal-O
@Krystal-O Год назад
My daughter was the exact same way! She's not autistic but has the same quirks. Didn't speak until ST, like she didn't want to or try. And definitely the food textures too! Gets veeery overwhelmed by over stimulation. They march to the beat of their own drums ☺️
@rubayaafzal2658
@rubayaafzal2658 Год назад
That's because autism is a whole spectrum and not everybody behaves the same way. The signs Dr. Mike stated are general/common things people look out for with regards to autism.
@malindasanders15
@malindasanders15 Год назад
@@Krystal-O he use to cover his ears when he hears loud noises or being around loudness in general. He doesn't do that anymore. You're right, every child does have their own quirks! Got to love them ☺️
@malindasanders15
@malindasanders15 Год назад
@@rubayaafzal2658 this is true. My grandson's 5 yr old cousin is autistic too and he's nonverbal. Loudness doesn't bother him. Food textures don't either.
@Eli-me2vs
@Eli-me2vs Год назад
And I’m 15, And I have no sense of social cues, or social norms. My eye contact is either nonexistent or a death stare. I have daily meltdowns over sensory issues or communication struggles. I can’t stand a lot of stimuli and loud noises make my head feel like it’s exploding. My speech is very monotone and I struggle with basic communication. I have barley any friends and all my communication is really just info dumping my interests. And I’m not autistic Autism is a spectrum and it effects everyone differently, it’s never a one size fits all, and like someone else said, the things Dr. Mike said are common traits associated with it. We all have our quirks or struggles, and I guess this shows how extreme it can be sometimes.
@birdonfire937
@birdonfire937 9 месяцев назад
54:32 all I heard was "your temperature is 101" I was like holy sh*t, (I'm from Australia so we use Celcius) then I realised it was farinhight, you wont believe how stupid I felt.
@clarityvibes72
@clarityvibes72 9 дней назад
LMAO
@bettyjensen2039
@bettyjensen2039 6 дней назад
i do that almost all the time 😂😂😂😂
@nancyjankowski5536
@nancyjankowski5536 5 дней назад
it is ok
@MP-yh7jv
@MP-yh7jv 28 дней назад
Love the "a little bench press and deadlift never hurt anyo..."
@Ricklet0ons
@Ricklet0ons 2 дня назад
Meanwhile in texas:
@ItsMeGPZ
@ItsMeGPZ Год назад
"could be a surgeon. Don't know yet." im dying
@xcelestialdemon8245
@xcelestialdemon8245 Год назад
HE IS A SURGEON
@spookhy699
@spookhy699 Год назад
DR. HAN
@mightymouseftw4363
@mightymouseftw4363 Год назад
He could be a sturgeon
@pixurumaa
@pixurumaa Год назад
dr. han: 😐
@CASA-dy4vs
@CASA-dy4vs Год назад
I am….A SURGEON
@momof2240
@momof2240 Год назад
I taught a kid once who was on the autism spectrum. This kid could remember random numbers like nobody’s business 😂😂. He was a brilliant child.
@TheSuperappelflap
@TheSuperappelflap 11 месяцев назад
i remember at one point my dad set like a 32 character long randomly generated alphanumeric wifi password. every time me or my brothers had people over they would ask me for the wifi password cause i was the computer guy of the bunch. after a few weeks i had the whole thing memorized. its not necessarily required to be autistic though. back when i was little and people still had regular phones in their houses, every kid knew the phone numbers of all their friends houses and their own phone number so you could call home to ask to stay over somewhere and play. i still remember the number for my parents house and last time i used that mustve been around 2005. i also memorized my own mobile number and both my parents numbers so i can call them in an emergency if i lose my phone or cant use it for some other reason and have to ask for someone elses phone. you can also put an emergency contact card in your wallet if you cant remember numbers well.
@zerjiozerjio
@zerjiozerjio 9 месяцев назад
It’s so interesting because in his eyes and tone of voice, I can see the impact of all the trauma Dr. Mike faced as a medical professional during the pandemic. My heart really goes out to you all.
@shannonmay7927
@shannonmay7927 2 месяца назад
I have always adored how Freddy portrays autism. My daughter is autistic with savant syndrome in artistic ability. She has always struggled with sounds, loud noises, acoustics. Panic attack in 3..2..1! Bravo Freddy Highmore, thank you for bringing integrity, respect and love to these incredible individuals. And removing the stigma.
@eclipseschannel6559
@eclipseschannel6559 Год назад
I'm autistic. Got diagnosed at 13-14. I always acted irrationally and had large outbursts and struggled to look people in the eyes. I couldn't understand people's emotions and got into a lot of trouble for not learning quick enough or making shitty social decisions. I fell into a depression trying to make myself "normal". I taught myself through movies and books and videos. Now I struggle with loads of mental health disorders that I'll have to live with for the rest of my life because I never let myself be me because of bullying and social standards. Autism doesn't need to be fixed. Be yourself, it won't matter at the end of the day.
@TheSuperappelflap
@TheSuperappelflap 11 месяцев назад
you dont have to have mental issues the rest of your life just because you had a sucky childhood. try meditation. or therapy. or medication. or get a dog. whatever works for you. for me, i moved to a new town, stopped selfmedicating, focused on proper diet and exercise, meditation, making some new friends, and now i dont feel depressed anymore all the time. some days still suck but i just try to survive those and know there will be better days in the future.
@leddyleds
@leddyleds 9 месяцев назад
Truth, this is a reality for tons of autistic people, whether diagnosed as teens (like yourself) or later in life. It messes you up to realize as you’re older that all the things that made you “wrong” and “too different” your whole life was just a neurodivergence tons of others have.
@jhallin5185
@jhallin5185 9 месяцев назад
ya well, everything from adhd to slight social awkwardness is considered autism now. as a guy with adhd diagnosed in the early 80s before it was fashionable, what level of minor inconvenience were you diagnosed at?
@n5225aj
@n5225aj 6 месяцев назад
​@TheSuperappelflap thats not how it always works, you cant cure chronic illnesses and medication and therapy doesn't work for everyone. if it were that simple nobody would be ill like that
@thesteviejade
@thesteviejade 6 месяцев назад
That really breaks my heart. This world is so dark. People don’t understand autism at all and seem to forget that having it doesn’t change the way they treat you. I’ve had a similar experience growing up and now how issues as an adult. I just wanna say there are people who get it, people who care, and resources to help. Don’t let the past dim the light that is before you. It’s not easy to find joy after heartbreaking time likes that, but you can do it. 🖤 thank you for your post
@user-ez7hc1kq4x
@user-ez7hc1kq4x Год назад
I’ve learnt that nurses have been taught from extensive first hand experience, whereas many residents and fresher doctors have learned academically meaning sometimes they don’t understand the signs and symptoms as well as nurses, because they are talking from the checklist of symptoms they’ve learnt rather than people they have treated. Nurses are so underrated.
@dylansmith5606
@dylansmith5606 Год назад
Obviously
@LilJbm1
@LilJbm1 10 месяцев назад
Yes... but the same can be said about fresh nurses except they don't know as much or are as smart as the fresh doctors. It's kinda unfair to compare like that. Compare an experienced nurse to an experienced doctor. The doctor wins every time.
@umariwtf
@umariwtf 10 месяцев назад
@@LilJbm1that’s the point of first hand experience… they said that’s why nurses are underrated, BECAUSE they have first hand experience. clearly they were not talking about baby nurses
@howlinghills3024
@howlinghills3024 3 месяца назад
I've found in general that is a big difference in MD and DO as well. Md's are more box tickers. Do's are more conversational.
@taiwandxt6493
@taiwandxt6493 Месяц назад
​@@LilJbm1 Not really. It really just depends on what you are talking about. As an ER Nurse, I can tell you that a fresher Nurse will almost always beat a fresher doctor in regards to patient interaction. The reason why I say this is because our education and training revolves around patient interaction and not like box ticking like what doctors typically study for. Our education and training is critical in order for doctors to recognize and accurately diagnose a patient and write prescriptions because we know best from the moment we get out of school on how to get information out of patients. We also spend far more time with patients during our clinical rotations compared to medical students and we know better in how different symptoms manifest within different kinds of people. Doctors are trained to recognize what symptoms correspond to what conditions, but we are trained to recognize those symptoms in how they appear in patients and provide the doctors and NPs with that information. Doctors do not boss Nurses around, contrary to popular belief, in fact I actually boss the Residents and some of the more experienced doctors in the ER because I am the one that has the most information about my patients at any given time. Here is an example of a Nurse and Doctor interaction. Nurse: "Dr. Smith, Patient A came in yesterday complaining about persistent headaches. This morning the man came back in having experienced a seizure, as well as is currently exhibiting slurred speech when I attempted to speak with him and balance issues when walking to use the restroom. He could very well have some sort of Glioma, think we should schedule a CT scan." Doctor: "Symptoms seem to be consistent. I'll schedule him for a CT scan tomorrow morning, and I'll see what Dr. Karr in Radiology thinks." Nurse: "Alright, I think it would be best to keep him here and monitor him further."
@DowntownTasty
@DowntownTasty 6 месяцев назад
My mom worked on the COVID floor. People were quite grateful. I remember the neighbors would mow our lawn or do other nice things for us.
@jenniferbrackin8277
@jenniferbrackin8277 8 месяцев назад
My son is autistic and I bought tons of books and learned what to do. No classes were available at the time. I also got him a kitten when he was young to teach him to be gentle and today at 23 he is a successful adult with an amazing job. There is so much to do that can help if you put in the time and work. His early life was like whack a mole when knowing what he was struggling with
@crunchy_kitkat
@crunchy_kitkat Год назад
I have autism and i'd like to add that early intervention programs have helped a lot and i'm pretty good at masking but it was also a very difficult experience for me, and eye contact itself is quite stressful for me. it felt like i was being punished for being myself and it's taken a long time to overcome the people pleasing and anxious behavior arising from this treatment that makes me easier to manipulate and abuse.
@dianamatthews5965
@dianamatthews5965 Год назад
I'm sad and sorry that people have manipulated and abused you.
@cuca_
@cuca_ 11 месяцев назад
Masking is actually a risk factor of mental health struggles and even suicide
@TheSuperappelflap
@TheSuperappelflap 11 месяцев назад
@@cuca_ its also a useful skill to get what you want from normal people and make it less likely for them to physically harm you. im pretty sure if i hadnt learned to pretend to be a normie the kids that bullied me would have tried harder to end me.
@HumanBeingOrSomething
@HumanBeingOrSomething 11 месяцев назад
⁠​⁠@@TheSuperappelflapMasking is mostly harmful, it’s really hard to unmask most of the time. And if you do it a lot you will eventually get burnt out. It is useful, but it’s also really harmful.
@cuca_
@cuca_ 10 месяцев назад
@@TheSuperappelflap well we still shouldn’t present masking as some wonderful positive thing. It’s not. Yes sometimes in extreme circumstances it’s the only way to survive, but masking has terrible repercussions on our psyche
@Gemma-lx7hm
@Gemma-lx7hm Год назад
I remember when I was 17 I had my appendix taken out. I was SOO confused as to why they kept asking me my name, date of birth and what surgery I was really worried that if I explained it wrong they would perform the wrong surgery. Only to later realise this was a ‘time out’. BUT no one told me, I thought they were relying on my explanation, I was beyond stressed.
@Haribo7432
@Haribo7432 Год назад
Yea but you didn't end up getting the surgery intended for the next patient!!
@bearsbeetsbattlestargalactica6
Haha yes I had my gallbladder removed when I was 14 and remember this as well. They had to give me something for pain before surgery because I gave myself a panic attack and had a horrible headache. Us poor babies
@erenjaeger6125
@erenjaeger6125 Год назад
When I was 13 I got knee surgery, they asked me about 5 times which knee they were supposed to be operating on, and it concerned me a lot 😂
@dillongage
@dillongage Год назад
At 17 I feel like you should've known better 😂 you might have an anxiety disorder.
@rnathanielryaan2034
@rnathanielryaan2034 Год назад
@@dillongage good job diagnosing someone across the internet, 17 but in pain waiting for surgery will impair judgement
@PsychoSocialLogicalTester7
@PsychoSocialLogicalTester7 8 месяцев назад
No one Dr Mike listing symptoms for a life threatening illness Me: Check, check, check, check, and…check!
@Orbixas
@Orbixas 4 месяца назад
Did you dieded
@SuperGirl-nc2xb
@SuperGirl-nc2xb 9 месяцев назад
I have autism but because my family didnt understand mental health or think that it was even real, I wasn't diagnosed with autism until I was sixteen years old. For a long time, I knew that there was something wrong with me because of how hard it was for me to make connections. Sometimes I even thought I was a psychopath because I had a lack of empathy. My mother could be crying but I would never know why she was, and I knew that I should be sad for her but I would feel nothing. Shouldn't everyone want to comfort a loved one? I just didn't understand simple things like that. But after my diagnosis, it made me feel a lot better because I finally had an answer for all my habits that my parents deemed were not normal.
@danmilew
@danmilew 11 месяцев назад
“you saved that boy’s life” “Yes… I’m hungry”
@iCybqr
@iCybqr 11 месяцев назад
51:00 “They haven’t even made the incision yet and she’s flatlining” Had me on the floor
@krysanne8986
@krysanne8986 5 месяцев назад
BCBA here. Early intervention is sooo helpful for children with autism, especially those who struggle to communicate. It breaks my heart when I meet adolescents and teens who have no formal method of communication and spend their days frustrated that they can't get their wants and needs met because their caregivers can't always figure it out.
@elisabetta8403
@elisabetta8403 9 месяцев назад
the cut "a little dead lift and bench press never hurt nobody" has me laughing
@lillyh9886
@lillyh9886 Год назад
The covid episode REALLY hits home for me… my dad passed a couple of weeks into the pandemic from covid which later developed into pneumonia. Tbh, it was probably one of the most traumatizing events in my life, the doctors sent him back to our house despite him being incredibly sick, and took him off of his blood pressure medication (despite it literally saying on the prescription to never do this). He passed three days later in the middle of the night, and I had to do cpr (my sisters and I are lifeguards, but I really didn’t want them there bc it was kind of graphic). Obviously by the time the ambulance arrived, there was absolutely nothing they could do. The hardest part about this was watching my dad start to get better, then massively deteriorate in one night. The night of it happening, my mom and I had decided that we would bring him to the hospital the next day no matter what (my dad had insisted on not going back). So for everyone out there who may have gone through something similar, I just want to say that I know it is really, really hard to keep pushing on, and I know that it can be hard finding someone to talk to, but at least for me, finding the things that still bring joy to your life and focusing on it can really help ❤
@zipp4everyone263
@zipp4everyone263 Год назад
Sudden loss is always incredibly tough. When my mom died from a sudden heartattack all i could do was to try and comfort my sister who was the one that found our mom. I cant give you any tips on what to do or how to feel as its so incredibly personal and i honestly dont know. I just hope that you try and find the rays of light that was and try to not dwell on the darkness that came after it. Thats at least what i try to do and i hope it can help someone else. Kudos on the CPR btw, being trained or not, seeing your family members like that can shock anyone into forgetting even the most well trained things (i couldnt remember my name, my moms name or even my number when i arrived at the ER), good job!
@fanafelgminecraft5789
@fanafelgminecraft5789 Год назад
im sorry for your loss
@SilverstreamPJ28
@SilverstreamPJ28 Год назад
I'm so sorry for your loss 💔
@whitneynilan1257
@whitneynilan1257 Год назад
So sorry to hear of your traumatic experience. Prayers for you and your family.
@reptile797
@reptile797 Год назад
Some morons would say COVID isn't real and that your dad died from something else
@KatParker88
@KatParker88 Год назад
Everytime Dr.Mike guesses the ailment and gets it right I love how happy he gets it's cute haha!
@HungTran-dv5me
@HungTran-dv5me 8 месяцев назад
I'm sure Dr Mike,watches the episode 1st,b4 he view and critics it to his viewers,so he doesn't get it wrong,or look clueless to us viewers.
@shannonmay7927
@shannonmay7927 2 месяца назад
My husband had a massive brain aneurysm during Covid. I couldn’t see him but once. It was hell
@tashalovestotoro
@tashalovestotoro 5 месяцев назад
Every time I hear a flat line in any show with medical situations all I can hear is doctor Mike saying “CHEST COMPRESSIONS!!!”
@mauseratti226
@mauseratti226 Год назад
"COULD BE A SURGEON I DON'T KNOW YET" MY BOY! MY BOY. WE AIN'T NEVER GONNA FORGET, HE IS INDEED A SURGEON.
@JustHannah01
@JustHannah01 10 месяцев назад
As an autistic person i love the way freddy highmore plays shawn. Of all the portrayals of autism ive seen shawn is definately the most accurate (in my opinion).
@tell-me-a-story-
@tell-me-a-story- 25 дней назад
Matthew from The Chosen is also really good.
@tell-me-a-story-
@tell-me-a-story- 25 дней назад
Matthew from The Chosen is also really good.
@Electranica
@Electranica 15 дней назад
I behave almost exactly like Shaun does. I like this show because Shaun is very relatable personally. How people judge you just because youre autistic and the way he talks, thinks, I do the same (but ofc I dont see the medical stuff lol)
@fatiq8297
@fatiq8297 14 дней назад
I agree
@britishbirdie9113
@britishbirdie9113 3 дня назад
The only real problem with the good doctor is how the writing doesn't let Shaun grow and adapt, however I relate to Shaun, his meltdowns are like mine! quite explosive and my triggers are often similar to that of Shaun's. I am trying my very best to change certain things about how I react and how I cope with myself, but it is hard. In a way, I also think similarly to him (but about other topics not medical stuff) where I kinda visualise the path of thought in my mind- I like how the show portrayes that too. Shaun should be allowed to learn and grow from his mistakes and when people call out problematic behaviours (not inherently autistic behaviours. I mean more social, he should be able to learn from others telling him it's not okay. Autistic people are able to learn from other people- I mean in the base of it, it's how a lot of us mask. I don't mask but I did learn and grow.) I don't speak like Shaun and I have a lot of empathy, so much so that I've cried because someone on the radio was extremely happy after winning a lot of money, her voice had such emotion that it hit me like a truck, I was in the car with my mum and she kinda laughed about it.
@SA-rj4kc
@SA-rj4kc 4 месяца назад
i love the doctors for all they do, its nearly always under appreciated...
@33Dagwood
@33Dagwood 9 дней назад
2:01 not me stepping on an earing while watching this "I NEED TO CALL 911!" also me "🫤... oh well... nap time😄"
@chelsearn
@chelsearn Год назад
I was an ICU nurse during all of Covid and just those fictional scenes made me want to cry and my heart rate went up. I don’t watch this show but it seems pretty accurate.
@jessice293
@jessice293 Год назад
I hadn’t noticed until recently the visceral response my body had to covid scenes in medical shows..
@ScootsMcPoot
@ScootsMcPoot Год назад
I'm a janitor at a hospital, well was. Currently have medical problems. But, I got covid 4 times. In 2 years, ended up damaging the things in your lung that absorbs oxygen I guess. Thelittle tunnels in your lungs. Got scar tissue build up. I've had 5 surgeries, and had to stop cancer treatment to make sure that don't kill me first lolol. I don't know how nurses didn't get sick more often, I was just a janitor and vaccinated.
@UltimateTheZekrom
@UltimateTheZekrom Год назад
thank you for all of your hard work saving many lives🙏
@angl4372
@angl4372 11 месяцев назад
Thank you
@otter.mayhem
@otter.mayhem 6 месяцев назад
Thank you so much for everything you sacrificed and everything you still carry with you for your healthcare service during that time. Truly. ❤
@nanadeborah8717
@nanadeborah8717 Год назад
Thank you for your commentaries. I am a retired RN who spent 45 years in hospitals as a float with certifications in cardiology,neurostroke,burn unit and medsurg. When the baby docs came on it was quite a learning curve for them. I remember one who was discharging an end stage COPD patient. He went over the discharge meds. The patient stated he needed a refill for ativan. The doctor asked why he needed it and the patient explained that he needed it to breathe. Unfortunately,this occurred during this baby doc's first week. He began upset and sternly told the patient that lorazepam was not a medication for breathing assistance. I understood that he thought this 51 year old was drug seeking. I calmly said to the doctor,that feeling short of breath because of the severe COPD causes anxiety which causes more shortness of breath. It clicked and he was given a one month refill. Thank you for standing up for nurses. It's much appreciated.
@pistol0grip0pump
@pistol0grip0pump Месяц назад
Thank you for your 45 years of service to your community and the patients that came through your hospital, and thank you for what you did for that older gentleman, it's sadly all too common (Especially with the current epidemic) where junior doctors jump the gun to "It's drug seeking behaviour" and dismiss or even discharge patients with legitimate and valid reasons for needing that medication which can have sometimes serious consequences to their health, not to mention their mental & emotional state, quality of life and of course their trust & confidence in doctors and other medical professionals. You've got a wide breadth of knowledge and experience from your career, do you do any volunteering, training or education to help pass on that knowledge to the younger generations coming into the profession? Though especially after a very impressive 45 years of service I'd say you deserve every day & night of retirement, hopefully somewhere where the weather is warm and the drinks are cold 🙂 Thank you again for being a nurse, think of all the lives you've both saved, improved but also people at their last days you made more comfortable and at ease, it's a very honorable and impressive thing to do for society 🙂
@s.stinnett3972
@s.stinnett3972 2 месяца назад
And I LOVE how Dr. Mike talks to Shaun through the screen like he’s actually one of his colleagues! 🥰🥰🥰
@shadowenderscar
@shadowenderscar 8 месяцев назад
I've never watched it but my mom did and she loved it. I'm autistic as well so I recognize the behaviors Dr. Shaun exhibits, especially the inconsistent eye contact cause I was always awful at it lol
@lizzyrae7444
@lizzyrae7444 Год назад
I have a diagnosis of NVLD. It's been described as being a "cousin" to aspergers. I just passed my nursing boards and start school again in a month. I love your support of us neurodivergents ❤
@bs-gi3gs
@bs-gi3gs Год назад
Congratulations on passing dear stranger 🎊 ❤❤
@DrDelicateTouch03
@DrDelicateTouch03 Год назад
Congrats on passing!!
@daurissacrank3270
@daurissacrank3270 Год назад
Congratulations
@rhiannonh5202
@rhiannonh5202 Год назад
That’s awesome! Congratulations 🥳 Just a heads up that ‘Asperger’s’ is no longer recognised in the DSM (mental condition manual used in most of the world) as there was no distinct differences between people diagnosed with Asperger’s and people diagnosed with Autism. Asperger’s also had a pretty problematic history as it was named after a doctor who was a N@zi/N@zi sympathiser. His work in discussing what we now know as Autism (then Asperger’s) included a lot of horrible and unethical testing and even euthanising kids with certain health conditions or disabilities including these Autistic children. Hope you don’t take this the wrong way, I wasn’t aware of this history until fairly recently and quite upset to learn of it and that I was still using outdated and problematic diagnoses. Hope this is helpful 😊 and again congratulations, we need more neurodivergent folks in medicine 🥳
@RichielaurensIII
@RichielaurensIII Год назад
@@rhiannonh5202 it was also only studied in boys and does not take into account girls affected
@sterlingodeaghaidh5086
@sterlingodeaghaidh5086 Год назад
As an autistic person who is an EMT, I watched these reacts a while ago before I went to classes and I didn't really think about it. Those images showing highlights of his veins, and stuff. Its real, rather sorta. It's almost feels like instinct, picking up on details like that and just instantly having a gut action as to what to do, even if you cant recall why immediately. Its a blessing and a curse.
@jimthescrub
@jimthescrub 9 месяцев назад
I started taking an EMT class a few months ago just before I turned 17. Now quite a lot of the stuff Dr. Mike says actually makes sense.
@MaddieMisanthrope
@MaddieMisanthrope 9 месяцев назад
I think the main reason for all the "crazy" and "impossible" diagnoses they do is because the same guy that created "House M.D." (David Shore) also developed this show. Shaun Murphy and House are very similar just in very different ways - Murphy has autism and savant syndrome while House is just referred to as a savant while possibly being on the spectrum. So not only are they are both savants, both also have something that interferes with normal daily life. (Autism for Murphy and chronic leg pain/drug addiction for House)
@user-cs4bg1by2p
@user-cs4bg1by2p 27 дней назад
It would not surprise me were House autistic.
@jodiecarlson6955
@jodiecarlson6955 Год назад
I know it's not a totally accurate show, but I just love Dr. Murphy, he is so literal and funny! And if you choose to keep watching, he has some amazing growth socially as the seasons continue.
@gwenmorrison4581
@gwenmorrison4581 Год назад
Loved the video! I just wanted to add something super important, which is that Autism can present in so many different ways, and this portrayal is just one of them. I'd love to see some more videos from you on Autism, Doctor Mike! I was diagnosed "late" (at 29), and there were so many misconceptions I had while growing up, about who I was and what was "wrong" with me. Diverse Autistic representation is so important!
@rhiannonh5202
@rhiannonh5202 Год назад
A few of us have mentioned this, would love to see Dr Mike do a video with someone who is actually Autistic to debunk some myths and misconceptions (that I have actually seen maaaany doctors themselves have). Think it would be a super interesting video!
@MaximeLafreniere433
@MaximeLafreniere433 Год назад
I was not diagnosed as late as you, but still late and all of this applied to me still. I didn't even know it existed until I was 13, and that's when I was starting to piece things out.
@ezoni8438
@ezoni8438 8 месяцев назад
Autism isnt a thing that needs to be cured, its how society treats us that needs to be cured.
@dylancastellanos87
@dylancastellanos87 7 месяцев назад
Exactly. We're not the problem here.
@jamminj8822
@jamminj8822 4 месяца назад
So Dr. Mike, just recently found you and loving your content, so informative and fun. Now my wife is a huge Good Doctor fan... now we both get to watch you!!! I bookmarked this to watch with her.
@operationbluntwrap
@operationbluntwrap Год назад
I had mal-rotation. It wasnt found until I was 16. My body had built a sack to kinda push my intestines into. It took years for a doctor to listen but my grandpa's doctor knew exactly what was going on after I met him finally. The surgeon had my mom sign papers to use my file and xrays in his classes, he said he'd never seen anything like it. I went to so many doctors about it too, no one ever believed me enough to look. Ill turn 39 this year, sure glad he found it.
@YungFrenchToasty
@YungFrenchToasty Год назад
As a current brain cancer patient, the show gets wrong that just an MRI can give an accurate diagnosis without a biopsy
@bertsteerswimmer
@bertsteerswimmer Год назад
I think a lot of that “boring” stuff gets cut for time and keeping the attention of viewers
@alorockss
@alorockss Год назад
The episodes after the brain cancer one focus on the diagnosis of tumors and brain cancer with more ways to diagnose it, so they don't get it wrong, they just don't go into every detail in every episode. And also it's part of the plot that they don't do all the other methods at first cause it needs drama. . . . . (Spoiler) At the end the Dr gets more tests done and gets diagnosed with treatable cancer after the insistence of Shaun. But it was part of the plot to just believe the scan because the doctor with the cancer is a neurosurgeon and they need to show how doctors are the worst patients ever lol
@Durping1001
@Durping1001 Год назад
it depends on the form, place and stage of the cancer, but in a average case you are correct, but they cut all the in depth stuff since it would cost like 2x as much time everytime they would do a medical procedure, wich in most cases are boring to watch while not adding anything to the story.
@Kait_B_
@Kait_B_ Год назад
But the diagnosis without the biopsy WAS inaccurate. Once they did the biopsy, they foud out it was a different type of cancer.
@Metroid250
@Metroid250 Год назад
You're right, it is inaccurate. But because the doctor is a surgeon, he just took that and filled in the blanks with his prior expertise. That's why doctors are the worst patients - they think they know the answer before even looking for it. The biopsy on the later episodes gave the more accurate diagnosis. 😊
@fidesedquivide3486
@fidesedquivide3486 9 месяцев назад
Early arrival! Yes, my son just started his residency. Always about an hour earlier than his supposed arrival time. He wants to be ready for attending and his senior residents arrive. I know he is very serious about his work.
@scrumpledmilkskin
@scrumpledmilkskin 6 месяцев назад
The "Yes, he has autism, but-" really got me like, TF YOU MEAN TO SAY YOU WOULDN"T CONSIDER HIRING HIM IF HE DIDN'T HAVE SAVVANT SYNDROME JUST BECAUSE HE'S AUTISTIC!?!? The writers probably thought they were doing something with this but it really just came across as underhandedly ableist.
@goulasedgar9766
@goulasedgar9766 Месяц назад
In a job where empathy and your ability to communicate is important, this is a fair consideration
@scrumpledmilkskin
@scrumpledmilkskin Месяц назад
@@goulasedgar9766 What do you mean by that?
@Bannana_Boy
@Bannana_Boy 16 дней назад
​@@scrumpledmilkskinDoctor, he means doctor
@scrumpledmilkskin
@scrumpledmilkskin 16 дней назад
@@goulasedgar9766 empathy is an important consideration but that's not what he said. Also, autistic people range in their empathetic abilities just like allistic people so that's not even a justification for that statement
@mr.waterbucket
@mr.waterbucket Год назад
I would love to see another collaboration with Devin from Legal Eagle! I suggest Season 6 Episode 16 of the Good Doctor. In that episode Shaun gets sued for medical malpractice, so I'd love to see your guys' thoughts/reactions to it!
@hanakoisbestgirl4752
@hanakoisbestgirl4752 Год назад
Agreed
@deidrehaye7061
@deidrehaye7061 Год назад
Yes, please!!
@Winchester0806
@Winchester0806 Год назад
Devin and Mike are both logical thinkers and they worked really well together on the Grey's Anatomy malpractice episode.
@neliaharrison2650
@neliaharrison2650 Год назад
Yes 🎉
@gem1607
@gem1607 Год назад
@@Winchester0806 i still laugh at “the prosecution rests”
@croom332
@croom332 Год назад
20:45 I've been spending A LOT of time at the hospital lately, visiting my father whose heart is falling. The old grouchy nurses who have like 30 years of experience seem to run the place. Almost nothing gets done correctly or on time unless one of them is involved. A young doctor and nurse were putting an oxygen tube on my father and didn't hook it up right. 15 minutes later one of the senior nurses came in and instantly noticed it was fucked up and fixed it. A few weeks later on a separate visit, we're waiting for him to be discharged and the same nurse who messed up the oxygen tube won't let him leave because he needed to wait for a prescription or something, and there was some issue with paying for it because it's ~$500 a month. The same nurse who fixed the oxygen tube comes by to check on him and is like "why are you still here you were supposed to be gone hours ago" leaves and comes back with a card for a free 3-month supply of the medication and we were out the door 5 minutes later. It kills me when the nurses are trying to tell the doctor something and they won't listen because they feel superior to the nurses. The nurses most likely have a far more intimate knowledge of the patient, and probably have a better rapport with them too.
@noranizaazmi6523
@noranizaazmi6523 8 месяцев назад
Nurses definitely interact a lot more with patients, honestly i remember reading about things that nurses won’t tell you in Reader’s Digest and it was interesting
@meredithmitchell8921
@meredithmitchell8921 5 месяцев назад
Someone I’m very close with isn’t a nurse, but works closely with patients and constantly has to fight that as a professional and literal expert in her field, that what she recommends is the best course of action. More often than not, the doctors ignore her or outright degrade her in front of the caregivers of the patient, in multiple cases, (I’m not going to include all the details for obvious reasons, but multiple doctors said she was wrong/ignored her and hey, guess what, she ended up be 100% correct but SHE got berated by the doctor for “undermining him”) thankfully, that’s starting to change, but it’s still so awful that some doctors care more about their own ego than actually helping patients.
@LexieMay-co2dv
@LexieMay-co2dv 2 месяца назад
To be honest with u, that was to long of a speech.
@Maioly
@Maioly 4 месяца назад
I have autism, was undiagnosed until I was 31. Struggled a lot through life thanks to it, and my mother loving shows like this for as long as they existed and that made my life extra hard because I did not act like the stereotypical savant of these types of shows; grew to despise this kind of media as a result.
@xylo795
@xylo795 9 месяцев назад
Im having a bad anxiety attack right now and this video is super relaxing to me thank you
@fgh-wy9sg
@fgh-wy9sg 11 месяцев назад
As someone on the spectrum myself, I can definitely 100% say that it often happens that we see thing many people don't. Especially when it's very minor abnormalities or patterns
@genuinely_lina
@genuinely_lina Год назад
The part where the daughter was asking to see her mom hospitalized with Covid brought flashbacks. It was horrible to have my immuno-compromized mother hospitalized and not knowing if I was going to see her again. Longest 16 days of my life!! (and to think people were there for months.)
@BeefStakewithButterandGarlic
Hahah
@jrmckim
@jrmckim Год назад
My best friend died alone after fighting covid for 3 months. She was alone the whole time. I'm glad your mom made it home safely
@genuinely_lina
@genuinely_lina Год назад
@@jrmckim Thank you. 🙏🏼 I’m sorry to hear about your friend.
@s.stinnett3972
@s.stinnett3972 2 месяца назад
Folks on the spectrum are so brilliant and no-nonsense…I LOVE it! My favorite patients to work with! ❤❤❤
@Crappycar.edits.
@Crappycar.edits. 7 дней назад
59:13 my mom single handedly did that and she still can’t make sourdough properly 😂
@puppet6589
@puppet6589 Год назад
Hey Mike, can we appreciate that these “surgeons” can do radiology, doctoring, and surgery, also they boot out any patient that isn’t from Hollywood lol
@K1NG0FW0LV35
@K1NG0FW0LV35 Год назад
as someone on the autism spectrum (specifically aspergers syndrome) who grew up with kinda troublesome parental figures and a pet for emotional support I relate to Shaun. My experience with Autism how I like to put it is like watching life through a TV screen trying to figure out how best i'd fit into the script... what role I could fill... what person I could become... what I could leave behind when I reach the series finale. I also have trouble letting go of my childhood feeling that I don't want to grow up too fast but also I feel like im lagging behind in life. My social skills are also Iffy... I have trouble starting conversation and carrying them but if I get into the groove of talking I just talk and talk and talk until the person im talking to gets annoyed or cuts me off... I constantly feel awkward interacting with people.... i've found it is much easier to communicate through text / behind a screen than it is to talk to someone face to face.
@normalhuman9878
@normalhuman9878 Год назад
Bro are you me because you just described me perfectly
@thestrangeone12209
@thestrangeone12209 8 месяцев назад
nice, i also have asperger’s so I understand your struggles, pain, and obstacles.
@tinabranch321
@tinabranch321 3 месяца назад
There are autistic kids who can do puzzles upside down. They are able to see and use a part of their brain that we can’t. The brain in still a mystery. They may not have typical human interactions but they are incredible in their own life.
@gastersansulsans2881
@gastersansulsans2881 3 месяца назад
Interacting with people who aren't similarly neuro divergent face to face is probably one of the harder things I've had to learn to do. I'm still not very great at it but there was a time when I didn't understand metaphors as a child. Even as an adult my emotions and understandings aren't always... correct? I've had people close to me die and felt no sadness whatsoever the listened to a random song and bawled for hours. It's hard to explain how differently things affect me from the average person. I haven't really watched this show but seeing how his very literal point of view is portrayed reminds me of how viewed the world as a kid, everything was either true or untrue right or wrong correct or incorrect. It took a lot of therapy and growth to get as far as I've come and I still struggle. I'm high functioning and I've met some people who were non verbal or have other various complications. The idea that relatively speaking I have it pretty good and I still struggle absolutely blows my mind. People who keep pushing through their hardships and the people who help those of us that struggle get nothing but respect and love from me.
@hmoadhajali
@hmoadhajali Год назад
Dude, out of all the other doctors that review content I appreciate you the most. Specifically I like how you make a distinction between the reality of the situation and how this character could have super powers that allow him to do something that real humans just can’t.
@supreme5580
@supreme5580 Год назад
Pardon my ignorance. Who else is there? I remember a female Doc/creator I can't remember the name
@BrookeGekiereNewcomb
@BrookeGekiereNewcomb Год назад
Dr. Mike is the best
@jaysandwich
@jaysandwich Год назад
Seconded
@andersedwards1557
@andersedwards1557 Год назад
Fax
@brandtsweet7374
@brandtsweet7374 Год назад
Truth
@SFS2017
@SFS2017 Год назад
Yessssss
@Pyro4nic
@Pyro4nic Год назад
He is the good doctor
@alittlepieceofearth
@alittlepieceofearth 8 месяцев назад
I watched this show initially, but having worked in a hospital, there was a lot that I just couldn't overlook. There is just no way any hospital would take on the liability of a doctor who has so little capacity for self-regulation. It is stunning how hard some of his superiors fight to keep him around after a melt-down or some other incident, when they shouldn't.
@paulafields3711
@paulafields3711 19 дней назад
It was so much fun listening to your commentary! And very informative. Perfect combination. 🥇😎
@allandill2033
@allandill2033 10 месяцев назад
Craziest part is that he could diagnose, gather and insert a chest tube before EMS arrived.... in an airport. I couldnt suspend my disbelief enough
@f.o.m.a8131
@f.o.m.a8131 Год назад
"could be a surgeon" fast foward a month on tiktok " I AM A SURGON-"
@SassyParks
@SassyParks 6 дней назад
My son is 19 and was diagnosed late last year.
@Eren-dl5cs
@Eren-dl5cs 3 месяца назад
Just a reminder if you know or have someone with autism in your family or close circle that doesn’t give u the right to say what autism is and what the right things to do are.
@thalesanastacio760
@thalesanastacio760 Год назад
"Could be a surgeon, i don't know yet"..no Dr Mike, he IS A SURGEON!!
@yyhrva5605
@yyhrva5605 Год назад
I am a Sturgeon
@shawnaseverinski3219
@shawnaseverinski3219 Год назад
Not sure if you are aware but this is based on an actual Korean Dr. Apparently he truly is this gifted. It would be great to see if you can maybe react to his actual story
@1utube01
@1utube01 6 месяцев назад
Daniel Dae Kim transformed his career moving from in front of the camera to behind, by adapting this for American TV.
@latoshabudde4570
@latoshabudde4570 5 месяцев назад
Thank you Dr Mike now I have to go binge watch The Good Doctor lol
@AliciaYPhoenix
@AliciaYPhoenix 4 месяца назад
I once told a person (a relative, kinda) that it would be better to cough into his elbow than his hands. But he got all pissy at me, saying that coughing into your elbow does nothing. Even explaining that he was now putting whatever germs he coughed out on everything he touched and that your elbow touches much less could not convince him.
@Psilomuscimol
@Psilomuscimol 4 месяца назад
Cough inside shirt. Have it tight around your mouth/face then there shouldn't be any issues. Except if you only have one layer on then it gets on your chest.
@Ilgenfixit80
@Ilgenfixit80 Год назад
His American accent is SO good! Almost imperceptible that he's British.
@TheSuperappelflap
@TheSuperappelflap 11 месяцев назад
american accents are really easy to do. english isnt even my first language, and americans think im from Chicago lol. a proper british accent is much harder. scottish is easy if you can roll your R's properly.
@ZhariaTheFury
@ZhariaTheFury 11 месяцев назад
Fun fact! Both Lisa Edelstein (Lisa Cuddy from House MD) and Robert Sean Leonard (James Wilson from House MD), have appeared as guests in the Good Doctor series, which is also created by the same man who created House MD. That leads me to believe that the Good Doctor does, in fact, take place in the same universe as House MD, and (spoilers below for those who haven't finished House MD) . . . . . ...it means Wilson lived after all, Cuddy found a new job in the medical field, and everyone is happy! Now, all we need to confirm this (and to have the og PPTH trio back together), is for Hugh Laurie to make a guest appearance in a future episode ;) fingers crossed!
@hosav
@hosav 2 месяца назад
They are not the same characters though:(
@marmarino2070
@marmarino2070 2 месяца назад
Keep dreaming 😂😅
@Trilingualeks
@Trilingualeks 9 месяцев назад
We were all making sourdough bread because we weren't going to the stores and there was a yeast shortage, so the only way to make bread at home was to essentially make our own yeast. Also banana bread and other quick breads because baking soda/powder was available.
@Elainetorex
@Elainetorex 2 месяца назад
I always loved watching you but I never thought I would be one of the people you help. I didn't know I'd be a patient, especially for so long. After being diagnosed with two chronic diseases. Thank you so much for being a bright light in the health field that's often filled with darkness and mourning.
@andrewg3238
@andrewg3238 Год назад
Possibly the most impressive thing about this show and House to my way of thinking is both the lead actors were able to pretty successfully hide their British accents. I have to admit House used to drive me slightly bonkers with what seemed like an over diagnosis of Lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus) as the cause of the persons ills.
@LinaMed
@LinaMed Год назад
*britich accent* It's never a lupus ! And I agree, I was so shocked the first time I saw an interview of Hugh with a British accent, he was 100% American to me 😂 And freddy Highmore speeks French and Spanish very well, thats even more impressive ! 🤯 (I saw an interview of him once on French TV and my brain couldn't register that is was really him, speaking fluent French 😂)
@evarensman4137
@evarensman4137 Год назад
@@LinaMed europeans get different languages in highschool, so most of us speak french, spanish and german. Not fluently tho!
@Tirryna
@Tirryna Год назад
The black girl resident in this show is also British...it's amazing! Our American standard accents are super hard for British actors :3
@TheSuperappelflap
@TheSuperappelflap 11 месяцев назад
@@Tirryna american accent is super easy. english is my second language and americans think im a native when i speak to them over the phone. had a guy once from Chicago who asked me if i watched the ball game last night from whatever the Chicago baseball club is called. i was like, sir, i live in Holland, id have to get up at 3am and get ESPN's streaming service to watch your ball game. a proper british accent is much harder to imitate, i cant settle on one accent. scottish accent is also easy if you can roll your Rs properly
@BadBoyBobby85
@BadBoyBobby85 4 месяца назад
Its never lupis
@rhiannonh5202
@rhiannonh5202 Год назад
Dr Mike, I appreciate you trying to let people know some information about Autism, especially letting people know that thereare over-exaggerations in the show and that not all Autistic people are savants. However, given the immense lack of understanding that exists in the medical community as well as the public about Autism, it would have been great to have a conversation (or analyse this program alongside) an actually Autistic person. I would love to see you do a video debunking myths about Autism with someone who is part of the community. Unfortunately, medical professionals who are neurotypical have attributed to many problematic stereotypes and extremely harmful treatment options (such as ABA) over the years, and it is hard for this to be addressed because these deficit-related beliefs are passed down from older medical professionals to training professionals and the cycle continues on and on. It would be great to see an awesome medical professional, such as yourself, learn from the Autistic community about what living with Autism is actually like and what the actual difficulties associated with this disability are, and that it does not have to be spoken about in a deficit lens 100% of the time. I went undiagnosed into my early 20s because of some of the stereotypes that persist in the general and medical community and it has led to a lot of mental distress, I hope in the future this is less of a persistent issue and more young kids get the diagnosis and supports they need to thrive! :)
@gwenmorrison4581
@gwenmorrison4581 Год назад
I agree so wholeheartedly! I really hope Doctor Mike does something more in-depth and informative about Autism!
@AngryPug76
@AngryPug76 Год назад
Autistic to autistic, That’s not this channels theme. Dr. Mike breaks down how medically accurate medical shows are. He doesn’t break down the characters but the medicine and how hospitals work. He doesn’t need to change that because there’s an autistic doctor anymore than he’d someone in a wheelchair if he was breaking down Dr Kildare. There are many other videos by autistics breaking down Shawn already. There’s no reason to do that here in place of medical facts. That’s an idea though. I’d love to see breakdowns of old medical movies from the 1930s like the Kildare series from a modern medicine perspective.
@rhiannonh5202
@rhiannonh5202 Год назад
@@AngryPug76 yeah I get that and fair enough about Dr Mikes reviewing shows segments. But given we all know how much misinformation is out there about Autistic people and also the Autistic communities views on this program it would still be a cool video to see brought to Dr Mike’s wide audience in the hope that some people get a bit of education and understanding about folks like us. Breaking down old medical movies would be cool too though, or even docos, to see how medicine and the understanding of certain conditions has changed over time.
@AngryPug76
@AngryPug76 Год назад
@@rhiannonh5202 Yea, but Dr Mike is a medical doctor. Like the scene he pointed out with the guy having a break down, that’s a job for a psychiatrist. He’s not qualified. This approach normalized The Autistic Doctor to just being one of the doctors who had different obstacles to overcome from the other doctors who also had their own obstacles to overcome, which was far more supportive than anything else he could’ve done. How do we get his attention to get him to review 30s and 40s doctor dramas? We can’t be the only two who want that. Then again since we’re autistic i guess we technically could be.
@damipad4
@damipad4 Год назад
How is ABA harmful?
@kiminelson9416
@kiminelson9416 9 месяцев назад
You have to remember mike , we don’t know how he thinks and we are led to believe he has super powers lol
@michellebowler265
@michellebowler265 2 месяца назад
He plays this character really well to the point i actually thought he had ASD
@2tired2think-
@2tired2think- Год назад
I love his reactions to things 😂
@andersedwards1557
@andersedwards1557 Год назад
True
@shielapetty1334
@shielapetty1334 4 месяца назад
I love watching your commentary. I have been in the medical field for over 25 years (non clinical) but in administration. I didn’t realize how many more snafu’s were in these MD shows that I missed. Much more fun to watch with you! Esp the Good Doctor.
@captimpressive6580
@captimpressive6580 5 месяцев назад
Picture of Raytechs when talking about Laps? Aaaaarrrrgggh!!!
@michele0324
@michele0324 Год назад
8:43 Forcing an autistic child to make eye contact so "conversations seem more normal" is telling the child their comfort carries less weight than how they're perceived. It's literally teaching them to mask. Surely we can do better. We have to. ❤
@stardustflavor4165
@stardustflavor4165 10 месяцев назад
I agree. I'm autistic and being "corrected" (yelled at, hit, etc) for not making eye contact, stimming, going mute or talking too much, and "rewarded" for doing stuff correctly harmed me more than it helped, and this was wirh my family, I imagine going to "early intervention therapy" must be similar, and from what I've heard, it's about training autistic kids as if they were dogs, and that's f*cked up. I hope it gets banned and people stop saying it's a good thing
@user-eu4we4eg3v
@user-eu4we4eg3v 10 месяцев назад
​@stardustflavor4165 that's definitely not normal. If you get hit fir not making eye contact that's super messed up.
@stardustflavor4165
@stardustflavor4165 10 месяцев назад
@@user-eu4we4eg3v yeah, it's messed up, but now I don't live with the person who did it, and learned that it was, in fact, not normal to be punished for something like not making eye contact
@michele0324
@michele0324 10 месяцев назад
@@stardustflavor4165 Good to hear you're no longer living with the abusive person. ❤️
@stardustflavor4165
@stardustflavor4165 10 месяцев назад
@@michele0324💕
@danmilew
@danmilew 11 месяцев назад
“That means it’s killing me” “Yes 😁”
@CheatingZubat
@CheatingZubat 4 месяца назад
Malignant, that means it's killing me? "YES" ....HAHAHAHA.
@DeinonychusRexx
@DeinonychusRexx 8 месяцев назад
Watching the last bit of this is so rough. I worked in healthcare throughout covid and that start of it was so hard. I remember going into work most days and just start crying.
@animealex6772
@animealex6772 10 месяцев назад
I love it when you talked about pulmanary hypertension. My mother has that illness and now i understand a little bit more. Thanks Doctor Mike
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