{
  "source": "yt3",
  "clips": {
    "linkedin_a": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "She Called 911. She Did Not Know What Her Daughter Had Taken.",
      "screen_body": "The 5 red flags that tell you when to call 911\nversus when to wait it out.",
      "hook": "A parent called 911 and told the dispatcher her daughter was having 'a bad trip.' The clinical picture when the team arrived was more specific than that.",
      "deliver_hook": "Clinical framing from the first sentence.",
      "core_message": "In 2026, the question an ER team asks first is: is this product contaminated with fentanyl? That question changes the treatment path. It drives the Narcan decision. The parent who called 911 did not know the difference between a Delta-8 edible and a fentanyl-contaminated vape. She did not know the five red flags that tell you when to call versus when to monitor. Those five flags are: heart rate above 100 at rest, confusion that does not clear in 30 minutes, vomiting that does not stop, inability to answer simple questions, and breathing that is slow or shallow. A parent who knows those five things can give the 911 dispatcher the clinical picture. That information changes what the responding team brings.",
      "deliver_core": "Clinical precision. The five flags are the deliverable.",
      "cta": "Follow Charles for more clinical education on recognizing substance emergencies at home.",
      "deliver_cta": "Purposeful close.",
      "caption": "She called 911 for a 'bad trip.' Here is the clinical picture the ER team found and the 5 red flags every parent should have memorized. #ERnurse #substanceeducation #parenteducation #THC #nursecharlesmedia",
      "hook_variant_a": "The 911 call said 'bad trip.' The ER presentation said tachycardia, confusion, and acute THC toxicity from a 2,000mg gas-station gummy.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Five red flags tell you when a substance situation at home is a 911 call and when it is not. Here they are from a 30-year ER nurse."
    },
    "linkedin_b": {
      "duration": "45s",
      "screen_headline": "The One Piece of Information That Could Have Prevented the 911 Call",
      "screen_body": "The parent saw the package two weeks earlier.\nShe did not know 2,000mg was clinically significant.",
      "hook": "The parent had seen the product package in her daughter's bag two weeks before the 911 call. She did not know that 2,000mg was a number worth asking about.",
      "deliver_hook": "Quiet and specific. Let the scenario land.",
      "core_message": "That is the gap. Not neglect. Not failure. A number on a package with no clinical context. The 1995 D.A.R.E. curriculum did not include dosage math. No one told this parent that a 2,000mg Delta-8 gummy is 200 to 400 times the medical starting dose for an experienced adult and that it is sold legally at gas stations with no testing requirement. Two weeks earlier she had the opportunity for a conversation. She did not have the clinical vocabulary to start it. That vocabulary is what I am building in this content. One piece of information changes one moment and one moment changes an outcome.",
      "deliver_core": "Restrained but meaningful. No hyperbole.",
      "cta": "Follow Charles for clinical vocabulary that fills the parent education gap.",
      "deliver_cta": "Brief and purposeful.",
      "caption": "She saw the package two weeks earlier and did not know the number mattered. This is the clinical vocabulary that could have changed that Thursday night. #ERnurse #THC #parenteducation #Delta8 #nursecharlesmedia",
      "hook_variant_a": "Two weeks before the 911 call, the parent had the package in her hands. She did not know what 2,000mg meant. This is the education that fills that gap.",
      "hook_variant_b": "The gap is not awareness. The gap is clinical vocabulary. This parent knew something was off. She did not know what the number on the label meant."
    },
    "reels": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "The 5 Red Flags Every Parent Needs to Know",
      "screen_body": "Before you call 911 or decide to wait:\nknow these 5 clinical thresholds.",
      "hook": "If your teenager took something tonight and you were not sure whether to call 911 or wait it out, would you know which five signs mean call right now?",
      "deliver_hook": "Specific scenario, immediate relevance. Draw them in.",
      "core_message": "Here are the five clinical red flags from 30 years of treating substance emergencies. One: heart rate above 100 at rest. Get a pulse oximeter, they cost $15. Two: confusion that does not clear after 30 minutes. Three: vomiting that does not stop. Four: cannot answer simple questions correctly. Their name, the year, who you are. Five: breathing that is slow or shallow. That is the fentanyl-specific flag. Under 12 breaths per minute, you call 911 and mention Narcan. Save this. These are the five things that tell you when waiting is not an option.",
      "deliver_core": "Clear, numbered, unhurried. Each flag gets a breath.",
      "cta": "Save this for later. Follow Charles for the full clinical education series.",
      "deliver_cta": "Natural and direct.",
      "caption": "5 clinical red flags from 30 years in the ER. If your teenager took something, here is how you know when to call 911 right now. Save this. #nursecharlesmedia #ERnurse #parenteducation #redflag #substancesafety",
      "hook_variant_a": "Five signs that mean call 911 right now. Not in the morning. Now. From an ER nurse who has seen every version of this.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Before you decide to wait it out, know these 5 clinical thresholds. From 30 years of treating substance emergencies at Emory Healthcare."
    },
    "tiktok": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "She Said 'Bad Trip.' The ER Said Acute THC Toxicity.",
      "screen_body": "5 red flags that mean call 911 right now.\nFrom an ER nurse. Not Google.",
      "hook": "She told the 911 dispatcher 'bad trip.' When my team saw the clinical picture, the diagnosis was acute THC toxicity from a 2,000mg gas-station gummy. Here is what that actually looks like.",
      "deliver_hook": "Fast contrast hook. TikTok front-loading.",
      "core_message": "Tachycardia, heart rate above 120. Confusion and inability to answer orientation questions. Repeated vomiting. Diaphoresis. This is not just 'really high.' This is a clinical presentation. The parent called it a bad trip because she had no clinical vocabulary for what she was seeing. The five red flags that tell you it is a 911 situation: fast heart rate, confusion that will not clear, non-stop vomiting, cannot answer simple questions, breathing slow or shallow. Number five is the fentanyl flag. Do not wait on number five.",
      "deliver_core": "Clinical and rapid. TikTok wants information density.",
      "cta": "More on this: search 'bad trip 911' on TikTok for more clinical context from this channel.",
      "deliver_cta": "Casual keyword drop.",
      "caption": "She called it a 'bad trip.' Clinically it was acute THC toxicity from a 2,000mg gummy. Here are the 5 signs that mean call 911 right now. #ERnurse #badtrip #THC #gasstation #nursecharlesmedia #parenteducation",
      "hook_variant_a": "The 911 call said bad trip. The ER presentation said 2,000mg Delta-8 acute toxicity. Here is how to tell the difference before you call.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Five red flags from an ER nurse that mean stop waiting and call 911. You need to know these before tonight."
    },
    "youtube_shorts": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "What a 2,000mg Gas-Station Gummy Looks Like in the ER",
      "screen_body": "The clinical progression. The 5 red flags.\nAnd what the parent did not know going in.",
      "hook": "A parent called 911 saying her daughter was having a bad trip. Here is what the ER team found when they arrived and why the word 'trip' does not capture what 2,000mg does clinically.",
      "deliver_hook": "Grounded, case-based. YouTube wants the full story.",
      "core_message": "Tachycardia, heart rate over 120. Diaphoresis. Confusion and inability to orient. Repeated vomiting. This is acute cannabinoid toxicity at high dose. It can also overlap with stimulant toxicity, which is why the first clinical question is always about fentanyl contamination. The parent did not know the difference between a Delta-8 edible and a fentanyl-contaminated product. She did not have the five red flags that tell a parent when this is an emergency versus when to monitor. Those five flags: heart rate above 100, confusion not clearing, vomiting not stopping, failure on orientation questions, and slow or shallow breathing. The fifth one is the one that cannot wait.",
      "deliver_core": "Deep clinical register. YouTube audience wants the full picture.",
      "cta": "Subscribe for more clinical ER education. The full story and the complete red-flag breakdown are on this channel.",
      "deliver_cta": "Purposeful, informational.",
      "caption": "What a 2,000mg gas-station gummy looks like in the ER. Clinical picture, 5 red flags, and what the parent did not know going in. Subscribe for more. #ERnurse #THCoverdose #nursecharlesmedia #gasstation #parenteducation",
      "hook_variant_a": "From the ER side: what acute high-dose THC toxicity looks like, the five red flags that tell you it is an emergency, and why a parent who said 'bad trip' was not wrong, just clinically undertooled.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Thirty years of substance emergencies and the clinical picture that brought a parent to call 911 calling it a bad trip. Here is what was actually happening."
    }
  }
}