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June29 - Welcome Back and Instructions for the Day
June29 - Welcome Back and Instructions for the Day
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Video Transcription
Good morning, everybody, how are you? Good morning. Good morning. Ah, I feel like I'm a camp counselor, it brings me back to when I was 18. Good to see everybody. How is everybody doing this morning? A lot of smiley, friendly faces there, please, please, please, coffee up, we got another exciting day for you. Thanks again for a wonderful day yesterday. Couple of things on the list, we went through a bunch of the Post-it notes, I already see ones there already, please remember to throw your Post-it notes up there with the pearls of learning that you did. We did get one question from there that I'll ask my colleagues here. So the question goes, you know, there's a good feedback loop of acid making in the stomach, when somebody takes an antihistamine, let's say for allergies or anything, what does that do to the stomach and acid production? Colleagues, experts. Sure, go ahead, Dr. Laiteau. When you take Benadryl, it's an H1 blocker, and the histamine receptors in the gut are H2 receptors, so that's why Zantac hits H2, and Benadryl hits H1, so it won't really help your acid, is the answer, is that okay? Thank you, perfect. And then we have another one, and this one goes to a specific commendation to Dr. Calloway. So Dr. Calloway, you received a note of gratitude and appreciation because someone bought a Squatty Potty, and somebody's wife told them that they were nuts for buying that, and you validated that they were correct. So they want to thank you for that, so they could take it back to their house. So amen, kudos on that. We got a bunch more. We're going to share those with you later, so keep posting, keep doing your thing. Today is a day, we're going to go through, we got the day in the life session, we're going to do our pathology live virtual in, and then we're going to do the group rotations. So this is where your badges with the colors and the stickers and those things that we talked about yesterday on the back go into place. Don't worry about it. The only thing that I will let you know is if you're in the red, if you have a red sticker on, you're going to stay right here in this auditorium. If you have a yellow or a blue sticker, you're going to go out and where the dining hall area is, we partition that off, and it'll be in two separate rooms. We have staff that'll direct you if you're blue or yellow. Don't worry, you won't miss anything because everybody rotates on schedule, so you'll continue to go through there, but that's where you'll start. And then we have the bioskills assessment. So for those of you who haven't done the bioskills, you're going to be in there. And for those of you who have, you're going to be in here, and we'll split it that way. Sound good? Cool. All right. So let's get started with the day-in-the-life session. I'm going to ask my colleagues if you could please come up here as the panel members.
Video Summary
In this video, the speaker greets the audience and thanks them for a great previous day. They address a question about antihistamines and their effect on stomach acid production. A doctor explains that antihistamines like Benadryl target H1 receptors in the gut, not H2 receptors that are responsible for acid production, so they won't help with acid. The speaker then acknowledges Dr. Calloway for validating someone's purchase of a Squatty Potty. The agenda for the day is discussed, including a day-in-the-life session, pathology live virtual, group rotations, and a bioskills assessment. The speaker invites panel members to come up for the day-in-the-life session.
Asset Subtitle
Keith L. Obstein, MD, MPH, FASGE
Keywords
antihistamines
stomach acid production
H1 receptors
H2 receptors
Squatty Potty
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