Yikes, abomination? I think that's a little strong. Sure it's inaccurate how they take a specimen from a patient, slap it on the stage of a microscope and pipette some liquid on it and say "It's CD68 positive!" But it's a freaking TV show. I find it more irritating how people get so outraged when their job is portrayed inaccurately on TV. You could say that it's screwing up the public perception of the field, but where does that end? No shows about cops, CSI, lawyers? Even being in jail is portrayed as glamorous.
Sorry for this off topic rant, but this is one of those things that bugs me.
I do feel like in pathology you get to "help" in a sense with difficult cases, as things that get to us are more likely to be unusual if they have progressed to tissue exam with no diagnosis, but it sounds like what you are looking for is interaction with patients and "on the ward" working with the clinicians. I think you will be dissatisfied if you chose pathology for that reason.
House is absolutely an abomination.
I watched one episode of it. It outdid in one hour the worst excesses of every ER episode put together.
The episode I watched, female patient had an ectopic pregnancy in her colon. Surgeon removed it, but she still had symptoms (wont go into them). They review the tape of the surgery, see a tiny lesion on the OUTSIDE of the colon, decided its a "ganglioma" (whatever that is), and that its causing all the symptoms. Surgeon refuses to go back in, so they put a colonoscope in with a light bulb at the end, find the lesion (not sure how you see a serosal lesion on endoscopy), push the segment of colon up to the abdominal wall, make an incision through the skin and abdominal wall and take a biopsy.
They read the biopsy themselves, not through a microscope, but through looking at one image on a computer screen. Diagnose amyloidosis immediately. Speculate as to the cause, decide maybe the patient has lymphoma.
Show screen image to an ONCOLOGIST. Oncologist says "I see AN atypical cell (not multiple cells, but ONE cell), and since I'm an oncologist, I say its lymphoma" ?!?!?! Then he says "I bet you showed this to an immunologist who said its autoimmune". They respond affirmatively. Oncologist reiterates that whereas the immunologist always sees autoimmune disease, he sees lymphoma, and so he thinks its lymphoma?!?!?
Based on this thorough pathologic examination to achieve a diagnosis of "lymphoma" with no subtype, team starts CHEMO! Patient gets better, House walks in, stabs patient in knee area with big needle, says "Its Leprosy, thats why she's a little better on chemo, but keep it up and she'll die", and walks away. Team walks away satisfied with the diagnosis.
But hey, who needs a pathologist anyway.