INSTRUCTOR 4: Oh, you're trying to release it? DOCTOR 1: Do no harm. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I always have to hold my breath and just calm down for a few minutes before I walk into the room. You're toast. JAY BONNAR: I don't know a heck of a lot now, inter...clinically, about what to do when. It's just me. TOM TARTER: What don't you like about it, Mother? PATIENT 3: I have to go number two. But I do love emergency medicine. Well, thank you very much. It was kind of a necessary part of taking the job, but it's really pleasant to live here. "A lot of people just don't understand that everybody isn't stamped out of the same cookie cutter...", Tom: I've done everything—I've cut my hair, I've worn the white coats, cleaned up my act as much as I possibly can. We're doing the best we can. This is everybody congregating before we all go off to our respective jobs. I'm thinking a lot about becoming an obstetrician/gynecologist. The pacing creates a docu-drama feel, and characters are continued though the series. relationship with a patient, but Mr. Nie Chu Ping was not just any patient or any man. I never saw a living person with gases that bad. JAY BONNAR: Left side of the brain, or... JAY BONNAR: Left side of the brain, if it's... JAY BONNAR: ...if it's cortical. It made me feel very happy that I shared this important moment with them. They measure how well their business is doing like McDonald's would. TOM TARTER: I love emergency medicine because it's very exciting. I do miss patient care. I'm the one that's faulty. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I know that. I'm one of the doctors here. You know that you don't really know what you're doing, and so you're sort of randomly shooting the needle in. I'm going to get up! INSTRUCTOR 2: ...a renal arteriogram. Last week, I just had to start crying. His insight from his experience was very inspirational for me, actually. Ni gen jiang ta ma? The ABMS oversees the certification of new physicians to the various medical specialties and provides information about those specialties. Welcome to my site! I have a number of different facets to my career, currently. My girlfriend gave me a button, "Dr. Dave," and that's what I feel like: Dr. Dave, nothing more really. GRADUATION ANNOUNCER: Elliott Bennett-Guerrero. LECTURER 1: ...this whole collection of different cells, going through this thing called the thorax. Tom: Sure. You know, the work that I do now, I actually don't have a work-life balance; I work all the time. I feel like it was a few months ago. TOM TARTER: I'm sure you will. She's just absolutely the greatest. PATIENT 2: My leg is numb. I could never do that because I wouldn't care about any sort of product, I care about people. And if I take a break to get a cup of coffee or to go to the bathroom, I click off the watch. DAVID FRIEDMAN: This is the way my dad always does it. Support NOVA. That's your greatest gift to mankind. Doctor’s diaries – Part 1, so you want to go to medical school. I told this guy he was going to do fine. It's a long haul, and I'm very happy because I enjoyed the whole process and I made it here in good shape. GRADUATES (In unison) : I will strive to promote honor in the medical profession. Tom: I'd like to do some kind of activism. She's just absolutely the greatest. Q: You must be able to relate to people you see in the hospitals without insurance. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I think drawing blood is the most difficult thing I've had to do in my whole medical school career. You know, it's really a double-edged sword, because, with continuity of care, yes, you get that special relationship with the patient and a family member, on the other hand, there are obligations with that. TOM TARTER: Now I'm learning, actually, what it is that's going on inside. We live in the greatest country in the world, yet we're falling apart. Miss Bossler came to me about four or five years ago, and she only had one eye. They don't relate to working-class people and don't acknowledge working-class people as being worthwhile. I love emergency medicine. MR. BURKE: You'll do. His heart isn't working, and Dr. Johnson is pumping, he's actually pumping the heart himself. Q: Can you tell me a little bit about your own health? There are certain life experiences which come to us, courtesy our professions. DR. ALAN GOROL: Tight feeling, is that...yeah. Q: Did you imagine when you were in med school that you might be in this place financially after you became a doctor? Elliott, let me show you. Written by Anonymous I'd be worried that I had this horrible thing or that horrible thing. To help you find your favorite shows and great local content, we've selected a PBS station in your area. Okay, how about this one? I can't think of anything that's grounded me so much in my life as being a doctor. What's happening is they're taking some vein from his leg, and then some other vessels that are in the chest wall, and connecting them up to where the coronary arteries are, which give the heart blood. And I'm glad I don't have to do it again. I was trained as a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School. And I've had a couple of women kiss me after the baby's delivered, and you know, it makes your day when that happens. How are you? And that would be the worst thing one could do. Tom: I really am very happy to have done it. DR. JOHNSON: I don't know what more I can do. It's almost like analysis or something. You light up when you talk about it. LUANDA GRAZETTE: Yeah, I've got them too. idea, but I'm very attracted to that guy." Janice Flood Legal Counsel Susan Rosen Production Assistant Ryan Murdock Post Production Assistant Darcy Forlenza Associate Producer, Post Production Patrick Carey Post Production Supervisor Regina O'Toole Post Production Editors Rebecca Nieto Jason York Post Production Manager Nathan Gunner Compliance Manager Linzy Emery Development Producer Pamela Rosenstein Supervising Producer Stephen Sweigart Business Manager Joseph P. Tracy Senior Producer and Project Director Lisa Mirowitz Coordinating Producer Laurie Cahalane Senior Science Editor Evan Hadingham Senior Series Producer Melanie Wallace Managing Director Alan Ritsko Senior Executive Producer Paula S. Apsell Images (younger Luanda) © Dorothy Littell/WGBH Educational Foundation (younger Jay, younger David, younger Jane, younger Cheryl) © Eric Roth/WGBH Educational Foundation (younger Tom, younger Elliot) © Paul Yandoli/WGBH Educational Foundation (older doctors) Courtesy Betsy Cullen Photography (Watch Online image) © WGBH Educational Foundation. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Half the year I'm on call every third night, and I think what she's realizing is that not only does she not see me when I'm on call the one out of three nights, but the other two nights, especially the night when I'm post-call, as soon as I go home I'm just exhausted. TOM TARTER: Divorced; another casualty. DOCTOR 4: It's a boy. I'm an old hippie, and I've always wanted to make some kind of positive change. While they were working that up, they found out that she had cancer and that it had invaded the bone of her hip. He's actually a pretty hyper person, generally, by nature. line and everything like that. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I feel so burned out right now... JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: ...that the idea of staying in a dysfunctional hospital like this, for years on end, is really not appealing. Six hours. If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Hi. White Coat: Becoming a Doctor at Harvard Medical School by Ellen L. Rothman. Do you use a walker at home? I think, as an intern, I'm very conscious of how healthy I am compared to my patients. TOM TARTER: My therapist in medical school told me medical training is a marathon. They are not employed full time; they pick up the shifts they want, when they want, at different hospitals, for two or three times the pay I’m getting for tonight. The other thing I wanted to know is if you have any questions. The thing I like about Roger is that he grounds me. Doctor Who Cast: Where are they Now? MISS BOSSLER: I was insured up until I got divorced, and then that was part of the divorce settlement, I guess: my children are insured and I'm not. The story I'm going to tell you is really a story from an actual patient. And as you gain a little more confidence you will do a very nice job and you will be a superb clinician. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Who would have dreamed, who would have dreamed, last year, that you'd be closing up and I'd be, you know, able to do the lines. And then we came in the first day and it was worse then I ever expected it could be. And for several months I was actually considering ob–gyn as a career choice, and I think for that reason it particularly hurt me when I didn't do as well as I thought I was going to do. Your job will be to take a history and do the appropriate physical, and getting a real sense of that, you actually, not only put your hands in the right place, but you felt what you were supposed to feel. RECEPTIONIST (Harvard Community Health Plan) : Hi, how are you? Hello! American Board of Medical Specialties www.abms.org Since 1933, the American Board of Medical Specialties has served as the umbrella organization for the 24 medical specialty boards in the U.S. Our cameras tracked them from the first days of medical school to the sleepless nights of internship,... JAY BONNAR: It's not that I don't care about patients, but that I am absolutely strung out and absolutely can no longer think anymore. After I left Bloomington Hospital, I took some jobs at hospitals here and there, essentially working for an agency that placed me at different facilities. TOM TARTER: I mean, we get to a point where we can clinch the diagnosis without having to explain why the guy is wearing a pink shirt or something. Tom: Yeah. KAREN: The intelligence, the brilliance is a real turn on. Your free time is important, precious and limited. This is Karen, the third in the series. And I want to keep it alive. Now, your nose and my finger. I mean, it's like I can't even access the information I used to know. TOM TARTER: Looks like liver to me. INSTRUCTOR 1: Just remember one thing. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I felt that, you know, gee, I really learned something in my first two years of medical school, and now here I come to the wards, and I feel like I know nothing. Mittelpunkt der Serie ist die junge Ärztin Margarete „Gretchen“ Haase, die Karriere in dem Krankenhaus ihres Vaters machen möchte. In this video clip from NOVA's 2001 "The Tattooed Doctor," Tom looks back at painful times during med school. So it's very stressful. Our Venue: The Cruz Building. You've gotta do what you gotta do to get by. Unfortunately, someone has to do it, and often that's me. And so I called his son, when his son got home, and I told him to bring him in to the emergency room. Doctor's Diary Doctor's Diary Videos Gewinnspiel. CHERYL DORSEY: Hi, how are you? I'm from a poor family, broken home, and I didn't go to any special schools. Secret: never do the screw that hard. Here's a basic example: Every emergency physician deals with a patient who abuses prescription pain medicines, who is trying to get pain medicine to use or sell. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: Do you understand what's happening right now? And it was kind of strange because, even though when I interviewed here and I toured the place, I really felt at home, I still had never really pictured myself in the environment. Let's wait and see what happens here. It's funny, I've never really had a patient that I've gotten to know who's died. MR. RIZZO: No, I don't think so, didn't feel any. And I think, to me, that's the one realization that's been a little hard, as I age. How are you? Slate , July 4, 2007. www.slate.com/id/2169480/, "Teaching Doctors to Care" by Nathan Thornburgh. It blows my mind completely. KARIN (Elliot's wife) : I thought it would be nice for him to have a hobby and go meet people, but then it took over. And in academic medicine particularly, there's interesting cases. But it's been a labor of love for me, and I couldn't imagine doing anything else. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Dr. Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, anesthesiologist and clinical trialist. Okay, very regular. I don't know why there's so many divorces and doctors. He was going to wear his kilt. LUANDA GRAZETTE: Well I'm sure they have a stake in whether or not you're... MR. BURKE: My baby's 38 years old. Gen wenzhen hao ma? I promise there will be no problem. Try to smell good all the time. You lose touch with your own strength in a way, if you keep staying in that environment and keep questioning yourself for long enough, you begin to think, I'm the one that's ignorant here. I mean, seriously, you are concentrating every single minute you are in the O.R, unlike in medicine, or a lot of other things where you spend a lot of time around the hospital just, kind of, talking to the nurses, having a coffee break. CHERYL DORSEY: Oh. And cooking? That's how you get to change; that's the only way we can do it. I'm still a little new at this, so it may take a moment to find, if you'll bear with me. If there's anything you'd like to know from me? DAVID FRIEDMAN: Yeah. (8) IMDb 8.1 2002 13+. Together? I'm going back, see what goes on. I'm Tom Tarter. I'm sure that if you asked any of them, they would tell you that they need you around for counseling and advice... One of the things that I really like about cardiology, actually, is that most of the time you are dealing with older patient population. Doctors Episodes Episode guide. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Right now I'm at the Framingham Union Hospital, which is outside of Boston. JAY BONNAR: Right now it's January, and I am in Ward Medicine, which means that I take care of patients admitted to the hospital with basically any problem that doesn't require them being on the surgical service. It was probably a very poorly advised thing for the two of us to get married to start with. In terms of medicine, I came out of medical school knowing nothing. Q: Given all the difficulties in your life, are there still things for which you're thankful? Having your hand on a case and actually helping when you feel needed is probably among the top 10 experiences to have in the world. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: The national board is a three-part exam, which we're required to pass in order to become licensed physicians in this country. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Procardia? KAREN: It wasn't long before we knew that we were destined to be together. I'm going to help you. It took me about 15 years of medical training to really feel comfortable in the emergency department, to feel that I was a competent physician. DOCTOR 3: Slide the thing off. But I would say it's to the detriment of my personal life. MR. LASSER: I'm doing all right, if you untie me. TOM TARTER: That's right, ex, my ex-wife. I contacted the credit company and said, "Would it be possible to get some kind of forbearance, given that I was court-ordered to give this car to this woman?" But that's a hard thing to live with. And we're all used to taking tests and knowing... ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: Getting 90 percent. TOM TARTER: It's hell being away from my family. A dramatic reality series that delves deep into the lives of the people who save lives in the trauma center and emergency room in a large urban hospital. My temperament is well-suited for anesthesiology. Doctor's Diary ist eine Arztserie aus dem Jahr 2008 von Bora Dagtekin und Steffi Ackermann mit Diana Amft und Florian David Fitz. But by the same token, these people. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: What are you worried about? JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: It's a challenge. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I'm not wasting my time. What's happened to your credit rating? Car accidents, where people are busted up into all kinds of pieces that you wouldn't want to even think about because someone was drunk and driving, and that just blows my mind; I've seen nothing make as much misery as alcohol. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: You never had surgery before. But it's so hard to watch it. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: Hi. And then they have...on the sides, they keep these books, and people will write, "Dear heavenly father, please guide us and direct us as to the right decisions to make for our precious little baby." I love her like nobody I've ever met before.". DAVID FRIEDMAN: To me, I kind of like seeing, you know, who they've become and.... We were all just figuring out what we were going to be then. Bridget Jones’s Diary is turning 20 years old this year, but Ms. Jones and her friends are just as cool as they were in the early ‘00s. Nobody cares for me. I used to bring work home. Please believe me. PATIENT 1: For the last...about a month or so. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: How are you feeling right now? MISS BROWN: And I've been praying for you, and I know you've been praying for me 'cause you said you would. I haven't seen you guys in so long. CHERYL DORSEY: It's fairly stressful, actually, because you have a...of course, it's a simulated event, but, I mean, he's, of course, a doctor, so he's a very knowledgeable patient. DAVID FRIEDMAN: Dr. David Friedman, ophthalmologist and public health researcher. Hang on. Nice to see you. Although you get to the hospital very early, you tend to leave earlier. JAY BONNAR: I knew I couldn't be a businessman. Go in peace. And so, if you're trying to leave the hospital at 6:00 to go to your son's baseball game and your patient has deteriorated and has gotten very sick, you know, there's a strong sense of obligation and guilt about, well, should you do something with your son or should you stay in the hospital and deal with the patient who's sick? And I like working with older people. I think being in the operating room is one of the most intense experiences one can ever have. Our cameras tracked them from the first days in class... DAVID FRIEDMAN: She was way over this way, to free herself up. I've seen people come in, their skin is the color of a Chiquita banana, and you take one look at them, and you know they have absolutely no liver left. But I think as you get better at this stuff, that becomes possible—might be able to get two or three hours of sleep, which could really make a big difference. I wouldn't want to do anything else. I was just going to sit there and keep stabbing him, trying. DAVID FRIEDMAN: Oh man, this needle could kill a horse. JENNIFER: Oh, thank you. I felt welcome. It's not quite as big as my house in Indiana, but it has a bed and a TV. I think part of why the medical community, in general, doesn't communicate well with the public is because most doctors were hand-selected from upper middle class families. It is like driving on an icy road for five hours. LUANDA GRAZETTE: I'm going to miss being so much a part of this Harvard medical student experience and...I'm going to miss all of it. And so why don't we compensate doctors who do primary care more and attract more people into the field? It's a horrible thing to do. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: It's like a bad dream or something. I'll probably just be the person standing there handing doctor something or being an extra hand. Yikes. How do you get glasses to people effectively, efficiently and cheaply? You can only look at the other...sorry about that. STEPHANIE: I think he looks like a Renaissance prince. My third marriage did not work out. DAVID FRIEDMAN: Both of them, both of them, yeah. The email came in while I was working the night shift in an ICU at Mayo Clinic. Doctor's Diary - Männer sind die beste Medizin: kostenlos mit einem Klick in der Cloud aufzeichnen und anschließend zeitversetzt abrufen. If I had a magic wand that could change it, believe me, I would. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: If you have to go, just go. And now, if we take a look at the more detailed scheme that you have, and I'm sure you understand very well, on page eight... TOM TARTER: First-year medical school is absolutely something that one cannot be emotionally prepared for. But I got read the riot act for giving home-brewed medications that weren't approved by the hospital. It just says, "This guy isn't your typical doctor.". I really like them. It's not really a pain; sometimes, it's more like a...I guess a tightness, or maybe a pressure. A lot of people don't even know how emergency departments are run. 15th Dec 201821st Apr 2020 thelifestylepill. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I'm going to be doing a residency in internal medicine at Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. I should be more positive. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: Doctor of medicine: ad gradum Medicinae Doctoris. So this is going to be here for a long time and so am I, yeah. Q: Financially, it's been tough for you. It's okay, you've got time. Pain's pretty good, under control. ELLIOTT BENNETT-GUERRERO: I spend about two days a week working in the operating room, and then I spend the rest of my time working here, at the Duke Clinical Research Institute, which is part of Duke University. In addition to the Editors' Picks features at left, you can read in-depth interviews and see more video in Doctors' Lives from the original program website. For instance, I once had a patient who had bad sleep apnea, and on top of that, he had hay fever. I mean when you are in the O.R., even when the patient is supposedly stable, you need to be watching the monitors. CHERYL DORSEY: I now serve as president of Echoing Green, a non-profit organization. If I did nothing but stand there and hold the retractor or just stand there and watched, I would really find it rewarding. KAREN (Tom's wife) : Year and a half, almost a year and a half. American Medical Association www.ama-assn.org The AMA's website is three sites in one—it provides separate directories for patients, physicians, and health-care officials. It's a lot of fun, I really enjoy it. Can you hear me? I'm one of the students with cardiology, and we've been asked to come in and take a look at you because we understand that you have a history of some heart disease in the past. All I can say about the question of whether I would do it all again is I'm glad I don't have to consider that. ETHEL HOFFMAN : I don't remember good, dear, however, hi. LUANDA GRAZETTE: I was raised by my grandmother, so I guess I've always had interactions with older folk. And I spend six hours every day not looking for books, or walking across the street to the library, or something like that, but I spend six hours a day of actively studying, which means at this desk, at a book, or in the library at a video tape. STUDENT 2: Cranial nerve number twelve...no, seven. And we were suckers for it, and we just let her try everything that she was interested in. NARRATOR: Seven doctors, 21 years, and saving lives is only part of the story. TOM TARTER: Hi there, sir, I'm Doctor Tarter. STAFF MEMBER: Yeah, but it's Sarah, and she's slit her wrist, not side to side, but up and down. Life After Medical School: Thirty-two Doctors Describe How They Shaped Their Medical Careers Edited by Leonard Laster. And that's real nice. I'm trying to get used to it. And learn more about various M.D. Some of them make good dinner table conversations, some put a smile on our face years after they occur and some make us feel a deep pain inside. Those are tough. My mother thinks I'm ridiculous. DOCTOR 1: Well, Jay's the one you're mostly going to be talking to. Uh, uh, pull it back. And I smoke. If you can stay still for a few more seconds? LUANDA GRAZETTE: Is your belly usually this big? Emergency department doctors have to work within the boundaries of a hospital. If she has a real deviation of the tongue, what does that mean? If only I could be like them. And then I decided I'd just go in very early in the mornings and get the extra work done I needed done, and when I came home I was done, and I was just here for the family. DR. depressions in the anterior leads, got a K.U.B., and with the T.N.G., her blood pressure dropped a little bit. DR. PIERCE: I'm Dr. Pierce, and this is Elliott Bennett. Regional RTL Hessen RTL Nord RTL WEST … The first part will discuss how doctors are taught the biomedical model of medicine and how it affects their views on alternative medicines from different cultures. They keep 6 to 8 feet between themselves at home. As the president of Echoing Green, my job, mainly, is to be a spokesperson for the organization and to fundraise for the organization. I'd love to get involved in some kind of activism, whether it's in the health-care field or just political activism. INSTRUCTOR 4: Unscrew the screw...other way. Now, I need you to... JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: You have to go number two? DOCTOR 3: You still feel a pulse? And I'm going to go (makes choking noise). Here we go. RESIDENT 1: We're the two residents in the coronary care unit. It was sad. Here's our stomach. Tom:Sure. And I thought I could do that better outside of a medical setting than I could within one. PATIENT 2: My leg, from here to the tip of my toe, is numb. However, he greatly feared becoming disabled and losing his independence in that process towards death. It was produced by London Weekend Television from 1969 to 1970.. I mean, I feel less than competent. This has been the most emotionally trying period of my life. I get to go from case to case; I get to help each person through a moment of crisis. What's really nice is that as you get a little bit more experience and as the attendings and the residents get to know you, you get to do more and more at each delivery. It must be exhausting. Q: I can tell. JANE LIEBSCHUTZ: I'm Dr. Jane Liebschutz. It should take about, you know, less than an hour. One-hundred-sixty-two-million people are thought to have low vision because they don't have glasses. And, well, we met about a year ago. I'm Dr. Liebschutz. TOM TARTER: I'm really sorry to hear that. Yeah, you bet. Send Feedback | MELISSA: Right. In spite of my sadness now, his spirit is with me strongly and will be so. Doctor's Diary - Männer sind die beste Medizin (TV Series 2008–2011) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Who hasn't spoken? It wasn't until we had to deal with it on a day-to-day basis, and now we're having to deal with it a lot more, with this hospital stay. Something had to give, and, of course, it wasn't going to be the corporation, it was going to be me. Emotionally, I think it's very difficult. It's a big needle; you don't put it all the way in, but it goes back into the space behind the eye. But I think a lot of people...it's really a long grueling process, and, in the end, a lot of physicians aren't totally happy with what they do. You need a lot of onions for this. It's a very instant gratification, you know? I have visited all my own patients in the hospital, wrote notes on several of them, checked their labs, drawn some blood tests on patients that needed them to be done, and I've just now wheeled up my second admission for the night and will be going shortly to examine her.
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