I suppose I’ll be that guy, kid comes in “depressed” according to the parents and has all these symptoms that they can’t figure out what it is. The burn on his wrist is from cigarettes and when house looks at his wrist he figures that the kid is smoking. After all of that the conclusion is a bad case of cold turkey nicotine and the kid makes a full recovery. Show is called House M.D I forget what episode this was
Never smoked tobacco but dipped for many years. I tried to quit cold turkey but the withdrawal headaches were to severe to function through the work day.
I liked the guy who came in screaming and House gave him an injection and he quieted right down. A Nurse asked him what he gave him, and House named a paralytic. She asked "So he's still in pain"? to which House calmy responded "Yes, but now he's quiet".
usually they’re not blanket saying NO, they are just saying he should follow procedures coz he usually just has a hunch and does things that are way out of protocol in an attempt to potentially prove a diagnosis. if there’s one thing you should know abt house, it’s that he does not follow procedure.
He doesn't want them to trust him. He hired a team to challenge him on purpose so he can better work through things. There's an episode with a janitor showing him struggling to think without Foreman as a contrarian.
It's not that they don't trust that he's right. The problem is that he is objectively insane, on drugs, and doesn't give a shit about ethics. The syringe he was holding was going to wake up the kid, who had severe burns and was in an induced coma because that was the only relief from the pain. He would wake up to one of the most painful injuries possible, against the wishes of the parents and most definitely the kid. Meanwhile, he points out the tiniest detail while holding a torture syringe and the other doctor has no clue what the hell a tiny mark would mean.
@@jordanbailey8676 Nope, no matter how hard I try I can't find any sign that roofing tar contains nicotine. The nicotine is not a component of the tar, the tar and the nicotine are separate components of tobacco leaf. If you're going to take the time to correct somebody, take 2 minutes for a google search and make sure you yourself are actually correct.
Every plot in this show House: This is an interesting observation Every other doctor every time: Idiot, doesn’t matter, why even point it out!?! House: Determines diagnosis with the observation. Every other doctor every time: 😱
@@sidekick36 i still have a scar on my arm from when I was a kid in the 90s and some drunk guy was upset there was a happy six year old at the bowling alley my parents ran, lol
The reason he was burned was because he got into an ATV accident (because of a seizure or something) and burned his torso etc, turns out the thing that caused the seizure was him quitting smoking.
The point is he wasn’t right about THIS. Foreman fighting him is how he noticed the burn. Cuddy always reminds him that his team is how he really succeeds. On the original team Cameron, Chase, and Foreman all had their own dynamic that helped him figure things out. It was always harder for him when no one challenges him.
@@portalinathere’s that time in the plane where he gets passengers to be surrogates of Chase, Cameron and Foreman. House needs his team for his thought processes
He isn't though...every episode its house trying to get a procedure done, battling with other doctors and admin to get it done, then he realises it's something else. Then he thinks it's something else, fights again. Then finally...he gets it. He wouldve killed so many people if people just went with his first decision. Every episode.
I love how the entire series is about a doctor who is pretty much always right in his diagnosis of patients and everyone else opposes him until they see he’s correct. Every episode.
Not really? He's (almost) always right in the end - after two or three wrong diagnosis. Also there's literally an episode where he works alone and in the end Wilson (?) spells it out for House how / why he does in fact need the team.
House is sometimes wrong, which is why he likes having the other doctors around, they make sure he thinks of everything. House may have given the kid the syringe, but doctor foreman stopped him and he noticed the kids fingers and the burn- surrendering the syringe.
He noticed the burn before he was gonna inject the kid. He didn’t need Forman to stop him. He stopped himself when he saw the burn. Yes house went in there for the wrong reason but he knew the kid didn’t need the shot when he turned his arm to inject him. He didn’t need Forman in there to stop him, he stopped himself
No he definitely needed the opinion of his associates, otherwise he could've overlooked it. Even though House was able to diagnose the problem, he still needed their input and understands the importance of consulting team members.
I know people always are like “why do you question house - he’s been right so many times” but the show actually tells us why in the later seasons. House ended up “firing” a potential doctor for his team (whatever the term is) because they always agreed. House knows how important it is to be challenged and doubted; it keeps him on his toes and makes sure he doesn’t fall into “I’m always right” territory. It is very likely his team in the earlier seasons were hired specifically because House knew they’d always challenge him and argue with him
it is ok on doubted and challenging house because need some opinions of others he needs a doctor who always ask and doubt him so they can find the right diagnoses and also train them a bit for being for making right calls
Maybe its because i havent wayched the actual show yet, but of all the clips ive seen, house hasnt been wrong once, like its fair to be concerned about his practices at first, but after being right so often, so many times, youd think that maybe he knows what hes doing, that theres a method to his madness, like just let him do what he he wants, in these clips hes either been right, or noticed he was wrong before doing anything, and then solved the issue, so why question him?
He's actually wrong quite a lot actually. The thing is, his department is based on solving extreme and rare cases that baffle the medical field. The idea is he'll go through all variables until he comes to his ultimate conclusion. But there have been times he was certain it was something else until the patient had an adverse reaction and he had to double back.
@@1CrypticNC ok, as I said, my only exposure to this series is through these yt clips, so I just assumed he's just the cynical but smart guy who's just usually right, like a rick from rick and morty type character.
Actually 90 percent of the episodes are him being wrong at first. The average episode is "hmm he has this" "Uh oh his condition is getting worse because we were wrong and possibly because we made it worse" "Eureka! He actually has this!"
Think of it like boiling water: the water itself doesn’t escape, but the steam does. So, even a small drop of gasoline can "burn" because it continuously produces vapors that catch fire. Saying a drop of burning gasoline is invalid is like saying a pot of boiling water can't produce steam because water isn't steam.
“A drop of burning gasoline” If the gasoline catches fire and drips on your wrist, you would, without a doubt, be burned. Are you trying to suggest that because the vapor burns, your skin would be safe??’if that’s the case, someone could just swim in gasoline and light a match. By your logic you’d be safe… I guess you think the fire will just safely burn above you. 🙄 With the temperature at which gasoline burns, your wrist would be f’d. It’s really not that hard to understand.
I’m pretty sure it’s a cigarette burn from the dad cuz the kid was smoking and trying to quit but it made him sick and depressed so he was taking antidepressants offline which aren’t safe and made him really sick and now hospitalized I’m pretty sure he yells at the dad and gets him on the right meds
The reason for textbook is because if things go wrong you could get sued real bad.... And also when you go off textbook you're often more likely to make more mistakes.... Yes the book isn't perfect.... But the rules actually cause many less mistakes than ever before But it's just not as exciting for TV
And when the hospital is sued because sole doctor injected a patient with something because ‘he had the answer’ you’ll see why they follow the textbook. You do actually realise this is a tv show right? Like that stuff would probably be noticed by a Doctor immediately
I mean yeah, there are plenty of cases where he is wrong. But how many time has he seen something the other on his team considered inconsequential, and yet that something lead to the correct diagnosis ? I mean after the 300th time, you'd expect for the team to be all in when House points out something.
@@urg6923and we can see him being wrong in this very clip House didn't know what was wrong with the kid until he saw the burn mark, add on the discolored spot on his fingers and you can figure out that the kid was smoking, and was suffering from withdrawals from nicotine
Stains on the fingers imply smoking. Secret knowledge for finding it out in kids, since they often worry so much about their breath they forget about their hands.
It was from smoking cigs that’s why he looked at the fingers. He was putting it out on himself probably to hide or something idk. Haven’t seen this episode
@@spadedace9507 ah yes but we all know he never figures it out at the end He is the best dame doc they have At this point they should know he will figure it out Dude why the fuck am I arguing about a fucking tv show with some randome on the internet I don’t give a fuck
I got a site to watch this show on if anyone wants it, the how is House(last name of doctor with the syringes) its really good but patient’s seize nearly every episode so a lil invariably played up for shock factor. Idk if its normal, I usually watch anime, but i love this show
Love all the people commenting this despite House being wrong in the clip itself. He gets it right eventually but he is almost always wrong to begin with