These people start sleeping with each other within days of meeting one another, and they get married at an alarming rate.
And apparently, it's not only normal but good to not know if you want to be with someone on a week-to-week basis. From day one, these interns are like, "We gotta be extra smart and dedicated because there aren't very many female interns and it's a competitive program" before they immediately and ceaselessly start sleeping with their attendings and talking about it to anyone who will listen, ad nauseum. And then they break up a bunch!
Over and over! In front of patients! It makes sense that after a short first season nine episodes the writers would extend the intern year dynamic into the second season. They set up a pecking order and a chain of command, so, sure, they wanted to continue exploring that. But season two is also a whirlwind, including the fact that Bailey has a baby. Karev was long known for his commitment-phobe ways and fear of ever settling down. Meanwhile, Chambers came to the show as a married father of five kids, according to Cosmopolitan.
The episode is titled after the hotline for domestic abuse. She naturally speaks with a British accent. Luddington played Kate. He taught history. ABC According to Essence, Williams once taught high school history before he made the jump to acting. ABC According to E! She was pregnant in real life. They changed it three times.
The hospital is in LA. Bohkee is a surgical nurse in real life. The show consults medical advisors. I am entering surgery residency in July. How it works is after medical school, you can apply to general surgery 5 years , orthopedic surgery 5 years , or neurosurgery 7 years for residency. If you go for general surgery residency, after you graduate THAT, you can do a fellowship in things like plastic surgery, vascular surgery, trauma, breast, oncologic, etc. Hope this helps. Good luck. I laughed when Ross was called in for a exhibition problem.
Were I worked, scientists of the various disciplines were squirreled away in their labs: looking down microscopes, writing papers, doing research and conservation work.
The people who concerned themselves with the exhibits, were the gallery management teams. I can see that GA, would make humungous mistakes, one thing that irks me, is the Doctors are so often wearing scrubs and caps with earrings even the dangly kind which would imply to me that they are either prepping for or finished an op, in the UK, you have to remove all jewelry, if not, they have to be taped over.
I think the unsecured ETTube is what gets me the most. Ok literally everyone needs to chill. The show is scripted, do you really expect them to do everything like actual doctors? No one needs to chill. If you are not interested in that, then you should not have read the article, let alone commented. It was alittle annoying reading this lol but after reading the comments I can understand where you all are coming from. If I were in the medical field I would probably watch the show and observe the discrepancies the way you all do just like I do when characters are in my field lol.
I find it interesting that in some ways Shonda tries to be medically correct the way she does consult with real doctors to see if some of the outrageous cases she portrays for drama could actually happen and how she employs real doctors to teach the actors how to hold instruments and do some procedures.
They actually took some of their actual lines and asked what it meant and they had no idea. Lol it hilarious and all for show. I am not even close to medical field or ever will be…. Pingback: Representation of Reality — Analyzing Television I like this show and I have watched the first 4 or 5 seasons several times. What bothers me is that the interns will talk about their personal lives in the patients rooms with the other interns.
In a real hospital you do not hear about the interns love life at all. You talk medical information they need to know and that is it. I have also caught them talking about patients in front of other patients… really?
There is a reason that privacy acts are active in medical care. If the show was realistic, no one would watch it. I am a physical therapist, and even this recent season they showed surgeons doing things that they would never do. When Dr. Sheperd tries to get that patient to walk to the chair from the bed after surgery…..
Same with a few seasons ago when Callie is treating the patient with an amputee and creates the bionic leg for him, she would never be rehabing him. As stated above, same goes for the surgeons doing a lot of what nurses do…but at least nurses are mentioned in the show! Ok so this annoyed the heck out of me. I am on Season 7, and the other day I saw that they did, for the first time, tape a patients eyes.
I would like to think all nurses are down right wholesome and not like her lol! Most of the time during my clinical rotations in the hospital, I saw that the nurses really run the show during patient care. Most of the time physicians are way too busy for the one-on-one ADL care or close monitoring that the show depicts pre and post op.
I kind of get irritated when the physicians depicted in the show do the nurses jobs, treat them like crap, or belittle them…but it is a fun show and I do enjoy calling out incorrect procedure protocol or guessing what a patients diagnosis is and what will happen next! How can one hospital be full of good-looking doctors? How about that for misrepresentation, haha. I also love the show despite everything. You need to either put in a spoiler alert or change your reference to the hospital name to Seattle Grace.
Some of us are just now watching the series on Netflix and have not gotten to the episodes where the hospital name changes yet. Even though it may be highly unprofessional the truth is that there maybe hospitals, where interns talk about there personal life, and attendings who sleep with interns. But many of the cases in the show happened in real life. If you want to see a full on accurate surgery, with no false accusations, watch a documentary because this show focuses on the characters rather than the actual surgeries.
I think that this is a very good comment, because its true. I am a resident, and as much this is a fake show, it focuses on the characters more, and the surgeries are less important. Thank you for making this a statement. I know!! Thank you. Like chill tf out. Every depiction of the show may not be correct, but those minor things are taught to those who choose to be a surgical intern.
The important things- the hard work, the long hours- are they not correct? And are you positive, without a doubt, that all teaching schools are in accordance with yours? As you said before this is a tv show that is highly fictionalized as is every other show. I doubt that you are indar the impression that detectives go into work everyday and participate in shoot outs, high speed pursuits causing thousands of dollars worth of damages.
I feel like most people also know that. I have no medical training or knowledge whatsoever. I do know that when watching something fictional its hard not to critique it but all shows have proffesional consultants so they are aware of these things but they are profesionals in entertainment and know what they are doing.
Real life is boring, if it was not we would not be watching these things. They will never take advice in a letter as this could open up a possibility for you to claim you are owed money for your contribution.
It goes a long way to encourage those of us that are in premed I love the show even though some sene are unreal I know residency program is not as easy as it is been potraited in the series but hey its just to entertain after all. Im really young in 13 but I plane to be a surgeon when I get older in think I might want to be a Cardiothoracic Surgeon or a Neurosurgeon. As an aviation professional since and a pilot since earlier high school , licensed in three facets by the FAA, I see the same with aviation in movies and tv shows.
Such simple fixes but they always—always! Sully, Hanks, and Eastwood with in my A simulator to work on getting acquainted in the cockpit environment and most of the movie is portrayed well. I feel your pain but I also understand still enjoying movies and shows on those topics :. You get to choose a specialty once you get into your residency, i presume.
I would definitely try to go to one of the big, ivy league schools, but acceptance rates and money could be a real issue. But my top 10 med schools after college are these: 1. Stanford Medicine 2. John Hopkins School of Medicine 3. Harvard Medical School 4. Weill Cornell Medicine 5. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science 6. Baylor College of Medicine 7. Boston University School of Medicine Perelman School of Medicine. I have already gotten accepted into John Hopkins School of Medicine, but i would still like to keep my options open, as this is not my first pick.
I really wish you the best of luck, and I hope you get to pursue the career, whatever it may be. Also, keep your options open about your career.
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