Randy worked as a paramedic for 35 years in a major metropolitan area.
Armchair Anonymous: Foreign Object in Butt III
An 80-year-old widower inserted a 6-by-8-inch wooden banister piece rectally, and the ER doctor had to go literally elbow-deep to remove it while the nurse hid the bloody evidence from the arriving nephew.
Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
Armchair Anonymous: Foreign Object in Butt III
An 80-year-old widower inserted a 6-by-8-inch wooden banister piece rectally, and the ER doctor had to go literally elbow-deep to remove it while the nurse hid the bloody evidence from the arriving nephew.
TL;DR
Dax Shepard and Monica Padman host another round of "Foreign Objects in the Body" with four callers sharing wild medical stories. Randy, a retired paramedic, recalls a 14-year-old with a Super Soaker lodged rectally [1] — Randy "Randy responded to a 911 call from a 14-year-old boy who had inserted a Super Soaker water gun — barrel, tank and hose — into his rectum. T…" 03:48 . John, an Ohio ER nurse, describes a man who visited two hospitals with three bratwursts, then a toothbrush holder, and ultimately needed a colostomy [2] — John "John saved his most disturbing story for last: a patient who identified as a cat and wanted to experience what it felt like to give birth t…" 26:18 . "Lucy," a Pacific Northwest ER nurse, tells of an 80-year-old widower whose large wooden banister piece required an elbow-deep extraction [3] — Lucy "After the extraction, Lucy left the wooden object in a specimen bag on the counter. Minutes later, the patient's unsuspecting nephew arrive…" 41:50 . Josie rounds it out with a Munchausen's patient who inserted razor blades into her vagina, super-glued it shut, and then swallowed a hidden razor blade [4] — Josie "Munchausen's patients aren't treated like typical self-harm cases. The psychiatrist's protocol: no inpatient psych, minimal interaction, do…" 54:50 . The single most useful takeaway: always tell your ER nurse the truth — honesty saves everyone time and potentially your bowel.
Dax Shepard and Monica Padman invite four Armcherries — all in healthcare — to share their wildest foreign-object stories from the field, including a retired paramedic, two ER nurses, and a post-op floor nurse.
-
Dax Shepard kicks off the episode with his characteristic theme riff and introduces Monica Padman before flagging this particular episode as one listeners should keep away from their children — not for explicit language, but for the sheer sensory horror of the subject matter. Monica agrees, noting two stories in particular that will be impossible to unhear. Before the first caller joins, the episode runs through three sponsor integrations: American Beverage's Good2Know ingredient transparency site, Quince's premium-for-less clothing line (including Dax's endorsement of their European linen shirts at $34), and a public awareness segment about Peyronie's disease directing listeners to TalkAboutPD.com. The sponsors serve as a surreal tonal counterpoint to the medically extreme content about to follow.
-
Randy interrupts his Florida road trip to share a story from his decades-long career as a paramedic in a major metropolitan area. The call came in unusually described: 'self-inflicted trauma involving a foreign object.' When they knocked on the door, the mother answered insisting they had the wrong address — until they confirmed her son had made the call. Upstairs they found a 14-year-old, blanket drawn up, in serious pain. Once his mother left the room he was more forthcoming: a Super Soaker 10,000 — barrel, water tank and all — had been inserted rectally via a hose attachment that he'd presumably been using as a makeshift enema or bidet. Randy and his partner attempted removal with KY jelly, failed, detached the water tank from the tube with a blade to reduce the bulk, and transported the boy to hospital where he was sedated and the object removed under anesthesia. Randy told him simply: 'I was your age once' and that experimentation was common. Dax and Monica reflect on the unique cruelty of being 14 and having your mother discover not just that you masturbate, but how. [1] — Randy "Randy responded to a 911 call from a 14-year-old boy who had inserted a Super Soaker water gun — barrel, tank and hose — into his rectum. T…" 03:48 Randy closes by sharing that his daughter Megan, a film editor in California, is a devoted listener who encouraged him to submit.
-
Between callers, Dax and Monica deliver two sponsor reads. For Helix Sleep, Monica shares that she's had her mattress for years and it still feels brand new, while Dax highlights his customized side-sleeper cooling configuration. They promote helixsleep.com/armchair for 20% off. The SoFi read leads with Monica citing the national average bank savings rate of 0.39%, then promotes SoFi's high-yield checking and savings as earning over 8x that figure with eligible direct deposit — plus a $300 welcome bonus and early paycheck access.
-
This short sponsor segment for Arm & Hammer Baking Soda Toothpaste uses a coffee-order metaphor to pitch simplicity. The spot describes how baking soda particles dissolve to break down plaque and whiten teeth, positioning the product as the no-nonsense alternative to complicated oral care routines. It earns the label 'number one dentist-recommended baking soda toothpaste.'
-
John's story begins with a patient arriving by ambulance with abdominal pain and a small amount of bleeding, initially denying any foreign object. A rectal exam produces clear plastic on the doctor's glove — the casing of a bratwurst — and a CT scan confirms three of them, arranged in a pattern that looks like a fidget spinner. The patient had been home alone, wife out of town, and one bratwurst felt good, so he tried two, then three. Surgery was required. Days later, the surgeon casually mentioned that the same man had previously been treated at the other hospital in town. John's second and third images reveal an apple (cored and strung with a retrieval string) and a toothbrush holder — the latter requiring the surgeons to open his belly, remove dead bowel, and fit him with a permanent colostomy. [1] — John "John's 2013 patient lied through the whole first visit, but a CT scan revealed three bratwursts. That already led to surgery. Then John's c…" 14:34 Dax draws an immediate parallel to his own addictive escalation logic, noting that 'one pill felt great, so two must be better' is exactly the same algorithm. John then drops a bonus story about a patient who identified as a cat, wanted to experience giving birth to kittens, inserted three live ones, and died of sepsis. [2] — John "John saved his most disturbing story for last: a patient who identified as a cat and wanted to experience what it felt like to give birth t…" 26:18
-
Pacific Life's spot uses a confidence metaphor — 'listening to your gut, moving forward even when the path ahead is clear' — to position the 160-year-old insurer as a generational promise-keeper. The ad lists Pacific Life Insurance Company (Omaha, Nebraska) and Pacific Life and Annuity (Phoenix, Arizona) and directs listeners to consult a financial professional.
-
Lucy sets the scene: a big-city trauma center in 2021, an EMS call for an 80-year-old with stable vitals and abdominal pain — a thoroughly routine presentation. The medic pulls Lucy aside to share two things: the patient had confessed en route that he'd inserted something rectally two days earlier, and his wife had recently died. Lucy immediately reads the room and focuses on compassion over curiosity, assuring the stoic elderly man that they'll get it out. He declines pain medication. The ER doctor finds the object on the first attempt but can't get a grip due to suction and slipperiness; the patient simply says 'just do it' as the doctor attempts a second time, going fully elbow-deep. [1] — Lucy "An 80-year-old man whose wife had recently died waited two days before calling an ambulance about a large wooden banister piece in his rect…" 34:25 Moments later there's a pop, and the doctor is holding what Lucy describes as a 6-by-8-inch piece of wooden banister, roughly bishop-shaped, covered in blood and stool, and not perfectly sanded. The doctor bags it and walks out. An hour later, security calls: the nephew is here. Lucy races to the room, positions herself between the door and the specimen bag, tells the nephew she has 'absolutely no idea' what's causing the pain, and slides out while dropping the evidence in the trash. [2] — Lucy "After the extraction, Lucy left the wooden object in a specimen bag on the counter. Minutes later, the patient's unsuspecting nephew arrive…" 41:50 George's dignity survives intact.
-
With the extraction story complete, the trio reflect on the unmistakable pattern: every improvised-material foreign body case — wood, glass, non-commercial objects — has involved a patient over 65. Lucy attributes it partly to a lack of sex-positive education and embarrassment about visiting an adult store, and partly to the psychology of suppressed curiosity finally boiling over. Dax speculates many of these men have been ruminating on the idea for years and simply reach a tipping point. Monica floats the darker possibility: maybe their wives were partners in this for years and now they're alone. [1] — Lucy "Every story in the episode converges on the same demographic: older men, often with wives away or deceased, finally acting on long-suppress…" 44:59 The conversation is equal parts analytical and darkly comedic, with Dax wondering aloud whether George personally turned a banister piece on a lathe as a gift for himself.
-
Josie receives handoff report on a young adult female in the emergency department: multiple razor blades inserted vaginally, labia super-glued shut, now unable to urinate. The bladder scan confirms severe retention. The OR team puts her under general anesthesia to safely separate the glued tissue (solvents would have burned the mucous membranes), remove the blades, and insert a catheter — no lasting wound, no required stitches. Josie takes over care on the post-op floor. [1] — Josie "Josie's patient arrived with multiple razor blades inserted vaginally and her labia super-glued shut — unable to urinate. She needed emerge…" 50:45 The patient's chart flags Munchausen's syndrome, and a psychiatrist has left a specific treatment protocol: no inpatient psych (would reinforce behavior), minimal interaction, no emotional engagement, no ADL assistance, camera room but don't tell her, and no one-on-one staff. Josie struggles against every caregiving instinct she has. Then, minutes before discharge, the patient calmly tells Josie she swallowed a razor blade — and shows her exactly where she'd hidden it: behind the thin plastic lining of a 3-ring binder that passed Josie's thorough inspection. Chest X-ray is unambiguous: blade in the esophagus. Discharge canceled; an EGD removes it. Josie and Dax reflect on how Munchausen's patients — especially those with healthcare backgrounds — are the most sophisticated operators in the system. [2] — Josie "Munchausen's patients aren't treated like typical self-harm cases. The psychiatrist's protocol: no inpatient psych, minimal interaction, do…" 54:50
-
With the final caller signed off, Dax circles back to the moment he correctly identified John as being in Ohio from almost no visual information — a green wall, a ceiling, and John's face. Monica teases that she 'gave it' to him, but Dax insists something clicked intuitively. He attributes it to years of traveling for the Car Show and various film shoots, hypothesizing that unconscious regional pattern-matching is now a skill. Monica plans to run a formal test on the next fact-check episode, though Dax half-jokes he'd rather not risk his one confirmed superpower on a test he might fail.
-
Dax closes out with an Allstate ad that uses the universal humiliation of locking your keys in your car as the hook: if checking first is a good habit, so is checking Allstate for an auto insurance quote that could save hundreds. Listeners are encouraged to add an Allstate Roadside Plan, with insurance provided by Allstate North American Insurance Company and roadside assistance by Allstate Motor Club Incorporated.
- Munchausen's syndrome
- A psychiatric condition where a person deliberately causes or fakes illness or injury primarily to receive attention and care from medical staff or family.
- Rectal foreign body
- A medical presenting complaint in which an object has been inserted into the rectum and cannot be self-removed, requiring clinical intervention.
- Flared base
- A design feature on anal sex toys — a wide flat base — that prevents the object from being fully drawn into the rectum by suction.
- Colostomy
- A surgical procedure that diverts the colon to an opening in the abdominal wall, used when a section of bowel must be removed or bypassed; waste exits into an external bag.
- EGD (Esophagogastroduodenoscopy)
- An endoscopic procedure where a flexible scope is passed down the throat to visualize and retrieve objects from the esophagus, stomach, or upper small intestine.
- Sepsis
- A life-threatening systemic infection response where bacteria enter the bloodstream, causing organ failure; mentioned in the context of a patient who died after keeping live animals internally.
- Casing / casein
- The thin plastic or natural casing that encases a sausage such as a bratwurst; the clear plastic the doctor noticed on his glove was the bratwurst casing.
- Urethral sounding
- The practice of inserting objects into the urethra for stimulation, referenced when Josie described a patient repeatedly inserting pens into his urethra.
- CT (Computed Tomography)
- A medical imaging scan that uses X-rays to create cross-sectional images, used here to identify the shape and position of foreign objects inside patients.
- Speculum
- A medical instrument inserted into a body cavity to allow visual examination; referenced when Dax asked whether one was used to locate the razor blades vaginally.
- Suction / back-pressure
- The natural vacuum effect created by a closed rectal cavity that makes manually gripping and removing a foreign object significantly harder.
- Chief complaint
- The primary symptom or reason a patient states upon presenting to an emergency department, used by triage staff to prioritize and route care.
- Differential
- Short for 'differential diagnosis' — the clinical process of weighing multiple possible causes for a patient's symptoms before settling on a diagnosis.
- Stoic
- Enduring pain or hardship without showing feeling; used by Lucy to describe the 80-year-old patient who declined pain medication and simply said 'just get it out.'
Chapter 2 · 03:03
Randy the Retired Paramedic: The Super Soaker Incident
Randy interrupts his Florida road trip to share a story from his decades-long career as a paramedic in a major metropolitan area. The call came in unusually described: 'self-inflicted trauma involving a foreign object.' When they knocked on the door, the mother answered insisting they had the wrong address — until they confirmed her son had made the call. Upstairs they found a 14-year-old, blanket drawn up, in serious pain. Once his mother left the room he was more forthcoming: a Super Soaker 10,000 — barrel, water tank and all — had been inserted rectally via a hose attachment that he'd presumably been using as a makeshift enema or bidet. Randy and his partner attempted removal with KY jelly, failed, detached the water tank from the tube with a blade to reduce the bulk, and transported the boy to hospital where he was sedated and the object removed under anesthesia. Randy told him simply: 'I was your age once' and that experimentation was common. Dax and Monica reflect on the unique cruelty of being 14 and having your mother discover not just that you masturbate, but how. [1] — Randy "Randy responded to a 911 call from a 14-year-old boy who had inserted a Super Soaker water gun — barrel, tank and hose — into his rectum. T…" 03:48 Randy closes by sharing that his daughter Megan, a film editor in California, is a devoted listener who encouraged him to submit.
Claims made here
Randy worked as a paramedic for 35 years in a major metropolitan area before retiring to Florida.
Randy responded to a 911 call from a 14-year-old boy who had inserted a Super Soaker water gun — barrel, tank and hose — into his rectum. The boy called without his mother's knowledge, hoping the paramedics could quietly remove it. They couldn't, took him to hospital, and mom found out anyway.
Randy's most memorable call involved a 14-year-old boy who had inserted a Super Soaker water gun (barrel, tank and hose attachment) rectally and required hospital sedation for removal.
Randy retired from a 35-year paramedic career and figured out the secret fast: own a house that needs work, take up golf, and stay relentlessly busy. If your muscles aren't needed, they simply go away — and so does your sense of purpose.
Chapter 3 · 10:48
Sponsor Break: Helix Sleep & SoFi
Between callers, Dax and Monica deliver two sponsor reads. For Helix Sleep, Monica shares that she's had her mattress for years and it still feels brand new, while Dax highlights his customized side-sleeper cooling configuration. They promote helixsleep.com/armchair for 20% off. The SoFi read leads with Monica citing the national average bank savings rate of 0.39%, then promotes SoFi's high-yield checking and savings as earning over 8x that figure with eligible direct deposit — plus a $300 welcome bonus and early paycheck access.
Claims made here
John has been an ER nurse for approximately 14 years.
John gives Dax almost nothing to work with: a green wall, a ceiling, and his own face. Dax calls Ohio. He's right. Neither he nor Monica can fully explain it, though Dax suspects years of traveling for car shows and film work trained his eye for subtle regional cues.
John's 2013 patient lied through the whole first visit, but a CT scan revealed three bratwursts. That already led to surgery. Then John's colleague at another hospital recognized the same man had been there too. His final visit — a toothbrush holder that killed part of his bowel — cost him a permanent colostomy.
John has learned to open foreign-body conversations by telling patients he doesn't care what's up there — he just needs the truth to act faster. The bratwurst patient's denial cost him an extra CT scan, sedation, and surgery. Honesty isn't about shame; it's about saving your bowel.
John the ER nurse treated a man who escalated from one bratwurst to three because 'one felt good so two must be better,' eventually requiring surgery.
When John revealed a patient escalated from one bratwurst to three, Dax immediately connected it to his own addictive thinking. The same logic — 'one felt great so two must be better' — applies whether the subject is pills or sausages. It's a surprisingly honest window into how escalation works.
Chapter 5 · 21:55
John the Ohio ER Nurse: Three Bratwursts, a Toothbrush Holder & a Colostomy
John's story begins with a patient arriving by ambulance with abdominal pain and a small amount of bleeding, initially denying any foreign object. A rectal exam produces clear plastic on the doctor's glove — the casing of a bratwurst — and a CT scan confirms three of them, arranged in a pattern that looks like a fidget spinner. The patient had been home alone, wife out of town, and one bratwurst felt good, so he tried two, then three. Surgery was required. Days later, the surgeon casually mentioned that the same man had previously been treated at the other hospital in town. John's second and third images reveal an apple (cored and strung with a retrieval string) and a toothbrush holder — the latter requiring the surgeons to open his belly, remove dead bowel, and fit him with a permanent colostomy. [1] — John "John's 2013 patient lied through the whole first visit, but a CT scan revealed three bratwursts. That already led to surgery. Then John's c…" 14:34 Dax draws an immediate parallel to his own addictive escalation logic, noting that 'one pill felt great, so two must be better' is exactly the same algorithm. John then drops a bonus story about a patient who identified as a cat, wanted to experience giving birth to kittens, inserted three live ones, and died of sepsis. [2] — John "John saved his most disturbing story for last: a patient who identified as a cat and wanted to experience what it felt like to give birth t…" 26:18
Claims made here
The bratwurst patient required a colostomy after bowel death caused by a retained toothbrush holder.
The bratwurst patient visited two hospitals in the same area across multiple incidents and ultimately required a colostomy after his bowel died from a toothbrush holder obstruction.
John saved his most disturbing story for last: a patient who identified as a cat and wanted to experience what it felt like to give birth to kittens — with three actual live kittens. She died of sepsis after keeping them for days. Dax's only ethical line: you cannot involve other animals.
Chapter 7 · 33:20
Lucy the ER Nurse: The 80-Year-Old Widower and the Wooden Banister
Lucy sets the scene: a big-city trauma center in 2021, an EMS call for an 80-year-old with stable vitals and abdominal pain — a thoroughly routine presentation. The medic pulls Lucy aside to share two things: the patient had confessed en route that he'd inserted something rectally two days earlier, and his wife had recently died. Lucy immediately reads the room and focuses on compassion over curiosity, assuring the stoic elderly man that they'll get it out. He declines pain medication. The ER doctor finds the object on the first attempt but can't get a grip due to suction and slipperiness; the patient simply says 'just do it' as the doctor attempts a second time, going fully elbow-deep. [1] — Lucy "An 80-year-old man whose wife had recently died waited two days before calling an ambulance about a large wooden banister piece in his rect…" 34:25 Moments later there's a pop, and the doctor is holding what Lucy describes as a 6-by-8-inch piece of wooden banister, roughly bishop-shaped, covered in blood and stool, and not perfectly sanded. The doctor bags it and walks out. An hour later, security calls: the nephew is here. Lucy races to the room, positions herself between the door and the specimen bag, tells the nephew she has 'absolutely no idea' what's causing the pain, and slides out while dropping the evidence in the trash. [2] — Lucy "After the extraction, Lucy left the wooden object in a specimen bag on the counter. Minutes later, the patient's unsuspecting nephew arrive…" 41:50 George's dignity survives intact.
Claims made here
Lucy the ER nurse estimates she has seen between 20 and 30 rectal foreign body cases in her 12-year career.
The man who inserted a wooden banister piece had waited approximately two days before seeking emergency care.
The wooden banister piece extracted from the 80-year-old patient was approximately 6 inches wide by 8 inches long.
Every rectal foreign body case Lucy has seen involving dangerous materials like wood or glass has been a patient over age 65.
Lucy the ER nurse estimated she has seen between 20 and 30 rectal foreign body cases in her 12-year career.
An 80-year-old man whose wife had recently died waited two days before calling an ambulance about a large wooden banister piece in his rectum. The ER doctor went elbow-deep to remove it. The object was unsanded and bloodied, roughly the shape of a chess bishop — but enormous.
Lucy noted that rectal foreign body cases often arrive in clusters, with multiple presenting in close succession for reasons she cannot explain.
The 80-year-old widower waited approximately two days after inserting the object before calling 911, likely hoping it would resolve on its own.
The ER doctor had to go fully elbow-deep to retrieve the wooden banister piece from the 80-year-old patient after failing on the first attempt.
Lucy's 80-year-old patient had inserted a piece of wooden banister described as 6 inches wide and 8 inches long into his rectum.
After the extraction, Lucy left the wooden object in a specimen bag on the counter. Minutes later, the patient's unsuspecting nephew arrived. Lucy physically stood against the bag, hiding it with her body, told the nephew she had 'absolutely no idea' what was causing the pain, then slid out and dropped the evidence in the trash.
Every story in the episode converges on the same demographic: older men, often with wives away or deceased, finally acting on long-suppressed curiosity. Younger patients use proper sex toys; every case involving glass, wood, or other dangerous materials has been someone over 65 who didn't know — or couldn't admit — there were safer options.
Lucy observed that young patients typically insert commercially made sex toys, while every case involving dangerous materials like wood or glass has been a patient over 65.
Chapter 8 · 46:40
Dax, Monica & Lucy: Demographics, Age, and Why Older Men Use Wood
With the extraction story complete, the trio reflect on the unmistakable pattern: every improvised-material foreign body case — wood, glass, non-commercial objects — has involved a patient over 65. Lucy attributes it partly to a lack of sex-positive education and embarrassment about visiting an adult store, and partly to the psychology of suppressed curiosity finally boiling over. Dax speculates many of these men have been ruminating on the idea for years and simply reach a tipping point. Monica floats the darker possibility: maybe their wives were partners in this for years and now they're alone. [1] — Lucy "Every story in the episode converges on the same demographic: older men, often with wives away or deceased, finally acting on long-suppress…" 44:59 The conversation is equal parts analytical and darkly comedic, with Dax wondering aloud whether George personally turned a banister piece on a lathe as a gift for himself.
Chapter 9 · 49:20
Josie the Post-Op Nurse: Razor Blades, Super Glue & Munchausen's
Josie receives handoff report on a young adult female in the emergency department: multiple razor blades inserted vaginally, labia super-glued shut, now unable to urinate. The bladder scan confirms severe retention. The OR team puts her under general anesthesia to safely separate the glued tissue (solvents would have burned the mucous membranes), remove the blades, and insert a catheter — no lasting wound, no required stitches. Josie takes over care on the post-op floor. [1] — Josie "Josie's patient arrived with multiple razor blades inserted vaginally and her labia super-glued shut — unable to urinate. She needed emerge…" 50:45 The patient's chart flags Munchausen's syndrome, and a psychiatrist has left a specific treatment protocol: no inpatient psych (would reinforce behavior), minimal interaction, no emotional engagement, no ADL assistance, camera room but don't tell her, and no one-on-one staff. Josie struggles against every caregiving instinct she has. Then, minutes before discharge, the patient calmly tells Josie she swallowed a razor blade — and shows her exactly where she'd hidden it: behind the thin plastic lining of a 3-ring binder that passed Josie's thorough inspection. Chest X-ray is unambiguous: blade in the esophagus. Discharge canceled; an EGD removes it. Josie and Dax reflect on how Munchausen's patients — especially those with healthcare backgrounds — are the most sophisticated operators in the system. [2] — Josie "Munchausen's patients aren't treated like typical self-harm cases. The psychiatrist's protocol: no inpatient psych, minimal interaction, do…" 54:50
Claims made here
The Munchausen's patient had super-glued her vaginal opening and labia together, causing urinary retention that was confirmed by bladder ultrasound scan.
The Munchausen's patient required general anesthesia in an OR to safely remove the super glue and razor blades from her vagina because chemical solvents would have caused severe mucous membrane burns.
The psychiatric treatment protocol for Munchausen's syndrome involves minimal staff interaction, no emotional engagement, no assistance with activities of daily living, and no inpatient psychiatric admission, to avoid reinforcing self-harming behavior.
A razor blade hidden in a binder cover was swallowed by the Munchausen's patient and was clearly visible on a chest X-ray lodged in her esophagus.
Josie's patient arrived with multiple razor blades inserted vaginally and her labia super-glued shut — unable to urinate. She needed emergency OR surgery under general anesthesia. Then, minutes before discharge, she revealed she'd hidden more razor blades inside a binder cover and swallowed one. She had Munchausen's syndrome.
Josie described the episode's first female foreign-object patient: a young woman with Munchausen's who inserted multiple razor blades into her vagina and super-glued her labia shut.
Munchausen's patients aren't treated like typical self-harm cases. The psychiatrist's protocol: no inpatient psych, minimal interaction, don't get emotional, don't help with daily living, and don't even tell her she's on a camera. Every instinct a nurse has is the wrong move. The goal is to make hospital care as unrewarding as possible.
Minutes before discharge, the Munchausen's patient revealed she had hidden razor blades inside the cardboard cover of a 3-ring binder and swallowed one, requiring an esophageal scope procedure.
Dax noted that healthcare workers, particularly nurses, have the highest rates of Munchausen's syndrome because they are skilled at navigating hospital systems.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
-
Medical condition discussed in a sponsor segment for TalkAboutPD.com, describing scar tissue buildup under the penile skin.
-
Clothing and lifestyle sponsor offering premium linen shirts and other products at 50–80% less than comparable brands.
-
Mattress sponsor offering 20% off via helixsleep.com/armchair.
-
Sponsor offering high-yield checking and savings accounts with up to $300 welcome bonus.
-
Car insurance sponsor encouraging listeners to get an auto quote and add a roadside assistance plan.
-
Toothpaste sponsor described as the number-one dentist-recommended baking soda toothpaste.
-
Insurance sponsor mentioned in a mid-episode ad read about financial confidence.
-
Brand of water gun that a 14-year-old patient had inserted rectally in Randy's paramedic story.
-
Medical drama TV show praised by both John and Lucy as the most realistic since ER.
-
State correctly guessed by Dax as John the ER nurse's location based on minimal visual clues.
-
Mentioned by Randy as a destination on his road trip to Florida with his in-laws who have never visited.
-
Florida beach destination where Randy and his family are headed on their road trip.
-
City where Randy stopped at his son's house to join the podcast call during his road trip.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Randy worked as a paramedic for 35 years in a major metropolitan area.
John has been an ER nurse for approximately 14 years.
Lucy the ER nurse estimates she has seen between 20 and 30 rectal foreign body cases in her 12-year career.
Every rectal foreign body case Lucy has seen involving dangerous materials like wood or glass has been a patient over age 65.
The bratwurst patient required a colostomy after bowel death caused by a retained toothbrush holder.
The man who inserted a wooden banister piece had waited approximately two days before seeking emergency care.
The wooden banister piece extracted from the 80-year-old patient was approximately 6 inches wide by 8 inches long.
The Munchausen's patient had super-glued her vaginal opening and labia together, causing urinary retention that was confirmed by bladder ultrasound scan.
The Munchausen's patient required general anesthesia in an OR to safely remove the super glue and razor blades from her vagina because chemical solvents would have caused severe mucous membrane burns.
The psychiatric treatment protocol for Munchausen's syndrome involves minimal staff interaction, no emotional engagement, no assistance with activities of daily living, and no inpatient psychiatric admission, to avoid reinforcing self-harming behavior.
A razor blade hidden in a binder cover was swallowed by the Munchausen's patient and was clearly visible on a chest X-ray lodged in her esophagus.
Dax Shepard had a catheter that required a numbing gel pre-insertion, but the plunger stuck and then rapidly injected all 5 ounces simultaneously into his urethra, causing him to scream.
Good2Know is a site launched by American Beverage that lists over 140 common beverage ingredients with safety information.
SoFi high-yield checking and savings accounts earn over 8 times the national average savings rate of 0.39% with eligible direct deposit.