This immersive 360 degree video takes you inside a hospital emergency department and shows you - using "pop-up text" - the best practices learned by medical staff in New York City and Philadelphia for treating critically ill COVID-19 patients with respiratory failure.
View on an ordinary computer screen, smartphone, or with a virtual reality headset such as the inexpensive Google Cardboard - [ Ссылка ]
Please help us improve future videos by taking our short survey: [ Ссылка ]
How to Watch on a VIRTUAL REALITY HEADSET (including smartphones)
Use your smartphone to view in 360 with an inexpensive VR headset such as the Google Cardboard: [ Ссылка ]
• First download the YouTube App on your phone.
• Android Phones: [ Ссылка ]
• iPhones: [ Ссылка ]
• Load this video into the YouTube App.
• Press the PLAY button, and then press the "VR goggle icon" in the bottom right hand corner.
• Close your phone into the headset.
• Looking through the eyepieces, you can turn your head LEFT, RIGHT, UP, and DOWN to watch the immersive video.
• If you have a dedicated VR headset (e.g. Oculus, HTC Vive, etc), there are a number of apps to play 360 YouTube content:
• DeoVR for the Rift.
• Vive and YouTube VR for the Oculus Go.
How to watch on a FLAT SCREEN (computer)
• Load the YouTube video.
• Choose the highest resolution your computer can comfortably play (e.g. 1040sHD) from the gear icon on the bottom right corner.
How to Watch on a SMARTPHONE or TABLET without a VR HEADSET
• Smartphones and tablets have internal motion detectors that allow you to experience some of the immersiveness of the video without a headset.
• Load the video in the YouTube app, press PLAY, hold the screen in front of you and you can turn the phone to look UP, DOWN, LEFT, and RIGHT.
Video © 2020 Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork Presbyterian Hospital, and The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania.
DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this video content is for informational and educational purposes only. The video content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. For more details, see the disclaimer in the video.
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/nj18ZWnprBs/maxresdefault.jpg)