Lyrics EnglishPod.com - Upper Intermediate - Emergency Room

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Song title
Upper Intermediate - Emergency Room
Date added
29.01.2024 | 10:20:02
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The lyrics of the song are provided for your reference EnglishPod.com - Upper Intermediate - Emergency Room, and also a translation of a song with a video or clip.

Dialogue

A: Help!
Are you a doctor?
My poor little Frankie has just stopped breathing!
Oh my gosh, Help me!
I tried to perform CPR, but I just don’t know if I could get any air into his lungs!
Oh, Frankie!

B: Ellen, get him hooked up to a monitor!
Someone page Dr. Howser.
Get the patient to hold still, I can’t get a pulse!
Okay, he’s on the monitor.
His BP is falling!
He’s flatlining!

A: NOOOOOO!
Frankie!
Doctor!
Do something!

B: Someone get her out of here!
Get me the defibrillator.
Okay, clear!
Again!
Clear!
Come on!
dammit!
I’m not letting you go!
Clear!
I’ve got a pulse!

C: Okay, what’s happening?

B: The patient is in acute respiratory failure, I think we’re going to have to intubate!

C: Alright!
Tube’s in!
Bag him!
Someone give him 10 cc’s of adrenaline!
Let’s go, people move, move!

A: Doctor, oh, thank god!
How is he?

B: We managed to stabilize Frankie, but he’s not out of the woods yet;
he’s still in critical condition.
We’re moving him to intensive care, but...

A: Doctor, just do whatever it takes.
I just want my little Frankie to be okay.
I couldn’t imagine life without my little hamster!

M: Hello everyone!
Welcome to another great lesson with us here at EnglishPod.
My name is Marco.

E: And I’m Erica.

M: And today we’re gonna be talking about an ER, an emergency room.

E: Exactly, we’re bringing you our very own ER drama here at EnglishPod.

M: Yeah, doctor shows are very popular with people.
Medical terms and all that staff.

E: Yeah, so, we’re gonna teach you some words that you might hear commonly in, uh, medical shows on TV or in movies.
Um, this is really common language in television.

M: Or even in at a hospital, right?

E: Well, yeah!
But… But let’s hope our listeners don’t have to face this.

M: Okay, so, let’s preview some words in “vocabulary preview”.

Voice: Vocabulary Preview.

M: Alright, so, what’s our first word?

E: Okay, the first word is CPR.

M: CPR.

E: CPR.

M: So, that’s pretty easy.
What does that mean?

E: Um, well, it… It’s short for Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation.

M: Okay.

E: Uh, that means anything to you?

M: Hehe.
Well, cardio is related to the heart.

E: Aha

M: Pulmonary refers to the lungs.

E: Yep!

M: Resuscitation means to come back to life.

E: Yes!
So, basically, CPS is… Um, you know, when someone stops breathing…

M: Uhu.

E: You put your mouth on their mouth and you breathe inside their lungs.

M: Okay, to give them air.

E: Ex… Yeah.

M: Okay.

E: So, CPR.

M: That’s CPR, okay.
So, let’s take a look at our next word - BP.

E: BP.

M: So, BP is short for…

E: Blood Pressure.

M: Blood pressure.

E: Yeah.

M: That’s just the way that doctors use it in the emergency room.

E: Exactly, pretty simple.

M: Okay, so blood pressure.
And our last word - Acute Respiratory Failure.

E: Acute Respiratory Failure.

M: So, what is that exactly?
It sounds complicated.

E: Um, basically, it’s really serious… that you stop breathing.

M: You stop breathing.

E: Yeah.

M: Okay.
So, if you going to Acute Respiratory Failure then the doctor or somebody has to perform CPR.

E: Right!

M: Alright, cool.
Okay, so, we’ve… So, we’ve previewed these three great words, now let’s listen to our dialogue for the first time.
It’s gonna be really fast and you gonna have a lot of drama in it, so, uh, don’t worry if you don’t understand everything.

E: Yeah, we’re gonna come back and teach you some of the important language.

DIALOGUE, FIRST TIME

M: Wow!
So much drama over a little hamster.

E: Yeah, a little pet, hey?

M: A little pet, the little hamster.

E: Well, um, you know what, I can relate to this owner and, um, I’m gonna tell you a little bit more about that later.

M: Yeah, I know you have a really good story about this.

E: Yeah, but in the mean time, let’s look at some great language in “language takeaway”.

Voice: Language takeaway.

M: Alright, so, let’s take a look at our first word - intubate.

E: Intubate.

M: Intubate.

E: Intubate.

M: So, this is a medical procedure.

E: Exactly!
Um, when a patient can’t breathe properly sometimes the doctor takes a log tube…

M: Uhu.

E: And puts it in to their mouth, um, and down their pipes, I guess, down their breathing tube…

M: Right.

E: So that they can breathe better.

M: Okay, so, that’s to intubate.

E: Yes.

M: Okay, so, once they’ve intubated the patient, they start to bag him.

E: Yeah, bag him.

M: Bag him.

E: Bag him.

M: Does that mean they like put a bag over that person’ head or something?

E: No, no, no, no, no… So, there is a bag attached to this intubation tube and you squeeze it to put air into the lungs.

M: Okay, so, you squeeze this bag and it puts air…

E: Yeah.

M: Through the tube.

E: I think this is just medical slang.

M: Yeah, I guess, bag him…???

E: Yeah, but you hear it all the time on TV, so…

M: Right.

E: It’s important our listeners know it.

M: Okay.
Let’s look at our next word - critical condition.

E: Critical condition.

M: Critical condition.

E: The patient’s in critical condition.

M: This condition means it’s serious.

E: Right, if a patient is in critical condition, um, they’re either really really hurt, um, or really really sick and they could die pretty soon.

M: Okay.
So, you don’t want to be in critical condition.

E: No.

M: Let’s take a look at our next word - stabilize.

E: Stabilize.

M: Stabilize.

E: Stabilize.

M: So, when the doctors stabilize a patient they take that patient out of danger.

E: Exactly!
When a patient is stabilized, um, they probably won’t die in five minutes.

M: Okay.

E: But they could still be really sick.
They could be in critical condition, right?

M: But it’s under control.

E: Exactly!

M: Okay.

E: Yeah.

M: Stabilize.

E: Uhu.

M: Let’s look at our last word - ICU.

E: ICU.

M: ICU.

E: Intensive Care Unit.

M: Okay, that’s what it means.

E: Uhu.

M: Intensive care unit.

E: Yep.

M: So, that’s a place where patients who are in critical condition are taken.

E: Right.

M: So, what’s the difference between ICU and a regular room?

E: Well, I don’t know I’ve never been in one.

M: Hehe.

E: Um, but I think like patients are monitored, ah, regularly and I think there’s, you know, maybe more… maybe there’re… uh, more nurses and fewer patients, so, there’s just a higher lever of care.

M: A higher lever of care.

E: Yeah.

M: Okay.
Okay, so, it’s time for us to listen to our dialogue again.
Now try to catch all of these medical terms that we’ve just talked about and then we’ll come back and explain a few phrases.

DIALOGUE, SECOND TIME

M: Okay, so, there’re some really good phrasal verbs in this dialogue.

E: Yeah, a couple of good phrasal verbs.

M: Okay, so, let’s take a look at these phrasal verbs in “putting it together”.

Voice: Putting it together.
M: Alright, so, what’s our first phrasal verb today?

E: Hook up.

M: Hook up.

E: Hook up.

M: So, to hook up.

E: So, when we… When we talk about hooking something up, um, we are usually talking about electronics.
Right, Marco?

M: Yeah, you usually hook up your TV…

E: Yeah.

M: Or your computer.

E: Yeah.

M: So, why don’t we listen to some examples of how we would use hook up?

Voice: Example one.

A: I finally got a Nintendo V. Come on, help me hook it up to the TV.

Voice: Example two.

B: I don’t know how to hook up this new DVD-player.
Can you help me?

Voice: Example three.

C: I just hooked up my new HDTV.
Wanna come over and watch a movie?

E: Great, so, you can see that there’re few different, um, variations of this pattern here with the word hook up, because it’s a phrasal verb.

M: Exactly.

E: And I think the same patterns could apply to our next phrasal verb.

M: Hold still.

E: Hold still.

M: Hold still.

E: Hold still.

M: So the doctor needed the patient to hold still.

E: Right, to stop moving.

M: Stop moving, exactly.

E: Uhu.

M: Okay, let’s listen to some more examples of hold still because again it’s a really great phrasal verb that you can change up a little bit.

Voice: Example one.

A: If you don’t hold still, I can’t see if you have something in your eye.

Voice: Example two.

B: Hold still while she cuts your hair or else she might make a mistake.

Voice: Example three.

C: Hold still!
You have a bee on your back!

M: Okay, hold still.
Great word.

E: Yep.

M: Hehe.

E: Alright, one final phrase for you - out of the woods.

M: Out of the woods.

А: Если ты не будешь стоять на месте, я не смогу увидеть, попало ли что-нибудь тебе в глаз.

Голос: Пример второй.

Б: Не двигайся, пока она тебя стрижет, иначе она может совершить ошибку.

Голос: Пример третий.

С: Держись!
У тебя на спине пчела!

М: Хорошо, держись.
Отличное слово.

Э: Да.

М: Хе-хе.

Э: Хорошо, еще одна фраза напоследок – из леса.

М: Из леса.
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