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amen!
👍, seriously I cant believe all the bashing- House is an amazingly complex and interesting character.
amen!
👍, seriously I cant believe all the bashing- House is an amazingly complex and interesting character.
Can a misanthrope be an effective physician?
I used to like Scrubs when it still had a decent plot. Zach Braff's day dreams are rarely funny to me. I just liked to see how the characters evolved from being lowly interns to full doctors. Honestly, the show should have ended a little while after they finished residency. Now the show just consists of dull soap opera drama.
I absolutely freaking hate Elliot. She annoys the crap out of me. Zach Braff is up there too. Dr. Cox is next line. Heck, all the characters suck.
I hope this doesn't mean that next season is going to suck as they try to make it end in a somewhat believable way with them getting back together before the show ends like they did with Friends.
Yes, this season had some problems. They never should have done the whole "we need to make a statement on the Iraq war thing." ER is the one that makes all the statements about current events (gay marriage/parenting, Iraq war, etc.), but it's not a comedy. I absolutely loved the musical episode since it just cracked me up, but I'm rather annoyed at how the season ended with it looking like JD and Elliot are going to end up together. Too much like Ross and Rachel with the end of Friends. I hope this doesn't mean that next season is going to suck as they try to make it end in a somewhat believable way with them getting back together before the show ends like they did with Friends.
Though I agree that the first few seasons with them being residents were better, my absolute favorite episode was from season five - the rabies and transplant episode (go rent season 5 if you don't know what I mean).
Maybe as a coroner?Can a misanthrope be an effective physician?
Maybe as a coroner?
I know exactly what episode you're talking about. That's my favorite episode out of Scrubs also. There was actually some decent character development.
Getting back to the original question, Scrubs is the most realistic, but it is also over the top (i.e., the character types occur, but not necessarily to that degree). Having worked with med students, nurses, house docs, surgeons, etc., for several years, the stereotypes are generally accurate, and the issues raised are relevant and realistic.
The lessons are okay, but the portrayal is too flippant. For this reason I continue to go against the grain and say that Scrubs is the least realistic show about mediicne. You never get the sense of residents being downtrodden, overworked, abused or in any sort of real angst in a comedy because it's all so slapstick and even the abusers are soft and cuddly (hence your avatar). For this reason it is totally unrealistic compared to some of the dramas. Not everything in medicine is happy go-lucky, but everything in a half hour comedy generally is. That makes the show fun to watch, but not applicable to real life -- such is ratings. (Nor is everything in medicine hot, flirtatious and steamy which is why Grey's is comparably flawed). At least shows like ER, and even House are filled with depressing stuff now and then.
I think this is flawed for a number of reasons. There were episodes specifically dealing with being overworked (e.g., Elliot being picked on by Kelso, Cox's and Kelso's constant beratement of the other doctors, Cox's meltdown's concerning the frustrations of the hospital (season one), losing patients (season five)), seriousness of topics (episodes about one-in-three patients dying in-hospital (season one), iatrogenic illness killing patients (every season, especially season five), losing patients despite one's best efforts (every season)), losing coworkers (Laverne's death last season), losing patients with whom one has formed a bond, etc., etc. There are *many* serious episodes and significant portions of each are devoted to important psychosocial and interpersonal issues, and if you really want to challenge this, I'm happy to list them. Yes, they are done frequently with a tongue-in-cheek attitude, but that was the same approach I experienced working clinically. Gallows humor and bunker mentalities are frequent in clinical practice, even if only as coping mechanisms for the stress and problems working in a hospital pose.
Although completely unrelated to this medical topic...scrubs also has the best soundtrack of any television show i've seen. The music is often actually an integral part of the storyline.
what about Trauma: Life in the ER, an Code Blue. I never miss these when they are actually on. Unfortunately i think i have seen all the episodes already
Why did you bold the d's? Am I missing something here?
Haha this is actually funny. The letter (d) on my keyboard is broken. So I have to paste in the letter every time I want to use it! I have no idea why it came up as bold and was too lazy to fix it. I know one of my roomates that spilled on it!
Right, I agree with this. Thought it is over the top at times there are a lot of episodes that are sad, and I feel that those are when Scrubs is at their best. My favorite episodes are the rabies one (Season 5), the 1 in 3 patients dying in hospital (Season 1), and when Ben dies (Season 3), none of which I find particularly happy.
house and some other shows irk me b/c they give u the impression that its the real world and this is how its done.
They're ridiculously rare but a bunch of them I've actually already learned about in my first 3 months of med school. Only because they are usually so detrimental and represent the normal pathways so well by showing you what happens when there is a problem.House: The diseases you see are too rare for most to actually even know they exist.
Damn, I thought when I got to residency I would be meeting Dr. McSteamy in the on-call room. My dreams are shot. How do I go about recalling my applications? What's the point now....
They're ridiculously rare but a bunch of them I've actually already learned about in my first 3 months of med school. Only because they are usually so detrimental and represent the normal pathways so well by showing you what happens when there is a problem.
You guys are missing the big picture. STOP LOOK AT THE TREE'S DAMNIT!
We are the future doctors of America right? (all 300 of us)
So we could make the work place exactly like Scrubs or Grey's Anatomy!
WHO'S WITH ME!??!!?? It would be easy, we just have to decide our most unique personality traits and then exploit them so that they are larger than life. Also, we need ADCOMs in on this so that they accept more hotties. LizzyM, you know what to do.
SHOTGUN EXTREMELY SUCCESSFUL/ATTRACTIVE SURGEON WHO GETS ALL THE LADIES! because obviously charisma is my biggest trait.
Agreed. You may also see some of these obscure rare diseases on boards even if not in real life. Not that you should be watching House instead of studying for boards...
I did fly back home with a fellow interviewee after an interview and found out that she was a lingerie model during her college years. Wow!
I was watching nip/tuck the other day and noticed that during a surgery, they had some extras around as techs or nurses or whatever, and that when they weren't holding anything, they had their arms up above their waist and were kind of just holding them there. at first i thought, what the hell are they doing, but then i realized they were maintaining the sterile field. that made me laugh. i think that when something like that becomes something odd that people notice, it means that the show as a whole is completely unrealistic!
and someone already brought this up, but in House, the thing that sticks out as the most unrealistic of all is that all the doctors do everything. in particular, apparently each one of these fellows is also an interventional neuroradiologist.
What are you talking about? Real surgeries DO do that. Above the elbow, below the waist, and the back are not considered sterile so you aren't allowed to drape your hands by your waist for obvious reasons.
With all the emphasis on patient autonomy, empathy, and hands-on diagnosis of patients in med school these days, it's pretty clear to me that most med schools would take the position that the answer is "no". I think the current admissions criteria, with emphasis on diverse well rounded, personable, broad experienced people over purely high numbered, science major braniacs emphasizes this school of thought.
Nip/tuck has gotten pretty bad in the later seasons, the newest one looks to be particularly ridiculous but its an ok show with some high points. I agree with the earlier post that mentioned how ridiculous it was that julia could perform an adequate full thickness graft using a dead man's entire back with just a pre-med education, for all its unrealistic events this probably bothered me the most.
if nip/tuck isn't an accurate depiction of the practice of medicine, i'm withdrawing my app ASAP. the only thing keeping me going as a reapplicant is the thought of me being able to park my lamborghini sideways across 3 "physician parking" spots.
Let's face it: movies and TV are interesting because they aren't like real life. Otherwise, we wouldn't watch TV and we'd all be out living life. Life is a grind, med school is a grind, residency is a grind, being a doctor is a grind. It's the few and far between little moments of interest and our relationships with people we enjoy that make life worth living, not the circumstancial content.
Just for the record there is a different between an accurate description of an individual and a reasonable representation of a field. It is possible if you are a top earning in plastic surgery to afford a lamborghini, so keep your head up ;]. Obviously no show is going to try to represent the average anything. Nip/tuck though fails on both counts of authenticity; hardly the point though.
I'm going to have to give "Guy Love" and "Everything Comes Down To Poo" 👍 👍
Thats her point. It is something that real surgeons do. Yet it seemed out of place in that particular show because the rest of the show is soo extremely unrealistic.