Hey everyone! In this vlog I take you through a week in my life on Heme/Onc. Note: Nothing in this video is intended as medical advice.
Пікірлер: 11
@csc1641 Жыл бұрын
I am alive today because of my Oncologist. Thank you for dedicating your life to helping people like me. Good luck in your journey in medicine. Keep positive. I had Triple Negative breast cancer (hopefully past tense) and had 8 rounds of chemo, 2 surgeries in 24 hours, 24 rounds of radiation and on chemo pills for 6 months. I was diagnosed the week Covid was ramping up (March 2020). I did really well on chemo and radiation but suffered terribly with depression. I am working daily to get back to normal.
@vilaharrison40663 ай бұрын
I'm new to all of this after being diagnosed with melanoma in 1982. My cancer was at the lowest skin level after skin surgical removed by my dermatologist. After my second surgery, I was declared OK without any radiation or chemo. Now, next month I will meet my very first full time assigned cancer doctor that I have ever had. Times have really changed now. By the way, his grandfather, a surgeon, did surgery on my paternal grandfather for a stomach hernia I remember. So history repeats itself as they say.
@robertogonzalez60832 жыл бұрын
i'm pretty interested in oncology and i think this is the first heme-onc rotation vlog that i've seen. pretty cool!
@ataulkarim8809 Жыл бұрын
Bro your vlogs are high level kinda premium quality vlogs, loved them obvio ❤️
@houstonpauledmondson51022 жыл бұрын
That cookie looked incredible
@christinesalami77124 ай бұрын
Really love it ❤
@MichaelGarcia-bt2kx2 жыл бұрын
First comment!
@christinesalami77124 ай бұрын
Please which hospotal did you do your hemonc rotation❤
@CLAIREHOWE-pc9rj6 ай бұрын
I start hamotoligy appointment nxt year abnormal blood im nervous
@Hawaiimaderichard Жыл бұрын
What does a mass mean in lung
@danitagoins3250 Жыл бұрын
I want to be a hemonc because my dad has sickle cell and I have the trait. He gets treated so badly by the staff as the hospital and they don't know how to take care of him. Such an injustice.