Family Doctor Admits Patient Claimed to Communicate With His Dead Mother
"I've definitely had difficult encounters and if someone was being unprofessional, I definitely documented that. I told you one of my patients uh started telling me that she's communicating with my dead mother and that's why she was there to see me, not for a medical condition. That was strange."
About this episode
A practicing physician provides medical commentary while reviewing scenes from popular television shows including The Office, Friends, Parks and Recreation, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, The Big Bang Theory, and MASH. The doctor, who delivered approximately 30 to 40 babies during residency training, offers insider perspectives on medical accuracy in entertainment media while sharing personal clinical experiences. Key revelations include the physician's own experience passing kidney stones in youth due to excessive soda consumption and poor hydration, estimating that 60 to 70 percent of mothers defecate during delivery based on residency experience, and disclosing that antibiotics for strep throat only reduce symptom duration by approximately 16 hours. The doctor recounts being repeatedly mistaken for a child while working hospital shifts as a young resident, and describes an unsettling patient encounter where someone claimed to communicate with the physician's deceased mother. Throughout the commentary, the doctor critiques unrealistic medical procedures depicted on screen, from improper CPR techniques to absurd surgical scenarios, while explaining actual medical protocols. The physician emphasizes patient autonomy, proper infection control, and evidence-based practice, frequently expressing frustration with Hollywood's inaccurate portrayal of medical care. Notable observations include surgeons receiving targeted ads similar to those served to people researching cannibalism, and the revelation that most fever reduction in children is unnecessary unless other conditions are present. The episode blends medical education with entertainment critique, offering viewers authentic insight into healthcare practice while debunking common medical myths perpetuated by television.
Key takeaways
- Physician estimates 60 to 70 percent of mothers defecate during delivery based on delivering 30 to 40 babies in residency training
- Doctor reveals antibiotics for strep throat only reduce symptom duration by approximately 16 hours, contradicting patient expectations of rapid recovery
- Medical professional discloses personal experience passing kidney stones in youth, describing intense pain and bleeding from small stones caused by excessive soda consumption
- Practicing physician reports being repeatedly mistaken for a minor while working hospital shifts, facing questions about grade level and comparisons to Doogie Howser
- Doctor recounts patient claiming to communicate with physician's dead mother as reason for medical visit, documenting incident as unprofessional behavior
- Physician observes surgeons receive targeted advertising for medical tools algorithmically indistinguishable from ads served to people researching cannibalism
- Medical professional criticizes electronic health record systems requiring four passwords changed every 30 days with 20-character combinations including multiple special character types