Bad Medical Practices On Television

I watch some TV (and essentially no commercials, thanks to DVRs) and have been enjoying some shows: Necessary Roughness and Covert Affairs. Yes, put a reasonably attractive female in the lead role of a show with some action and I might watch. Demographic shocker.

So, within the last two days I saw one completely egregious professional breach, and one exercise of pretty awful medical judgement (in an ED, which makes it way worse for me), and I will now outline my concerns/gripes.

(Yes, I’m aware they’re TV shows, and are therefore not reality. What I’m unhappy with is the glib way in which these terrible decisions played out, like it’s not a big deal to act against the interests of your patient, even especially, on TV). (I think TV behavior, not the cartoon violence but the everyday mundane stuff, influences how regular people think, which is why I’m writing this: so the zero regular people who watch TV and read this blog have something to consider).

So the Necessary Roughness (episode Anchor Roughness) thing: (Background): the protagonist is a female psychologist hired by a football team to get their star player “TK” (with more than a mild resemblance to “TO“, the former 49ers Eagles Cowboys Bills Browns wide receiver) playing and catching; it’s a TV troubled relationship. (Player is aware she works for the team). In the show TK threatens to leave the team, is convinced not to leave in a bluff by the team to send him to a cold climate, and TK decides to stay with the team. In the denouement, it is revealed that the whole idea for the bluff was the psychologists’ idea, for which she was praised by the team.

Umm, I have an objection. A psychologist, privy to a patients’ secrets, shouldn’t in any way offer information to their employers to influence their behavior in an undue manner. Like, telling the team they don’t like a particular climate (implied in the show, never stated, but the inference is there). Does the fact that the player knows she’s hired by the team make any emotional manipulation okay? I say no.

Bad psychologist. Bad. Unethical. IMHO. Let’s see if I get sued by a fictional character.

And then the one that is less a professional slight and more an embarrassment.

On Covert Affairs (episode Space Jam) at the end the heroine is watching her nieces when one has a Very Minor head bonk. Panic out of proportion ensues, child is taken to an ED, and insistence on a CT scan of this approximately 8 year old without a loss of consciousness, with a normal neuro exam, without vomiting (or one instance, I deleted the episode quickly out of disgust), and an overbearing nature commanding the Central Casting ED doc to do a head CT. (ED doc then makes a pass at Heroine, which tease goes into the next show). Patient will get a CT.

Umm, Professionally No. The patient in the show didn’t need a CT. The family in the show needed a professional exam and reassurance, and time. Not radiation.

Okay, so that’s disappointing without being a professional boundaries violation, but still, the way the TV doc caved and agreed to a CT on a patient who clearly didn’t need one was appalling.

(For the record, I’ve done Head CT’s for wishy reasons, but I have a conversation, if possible, with the person getting the scan when an adult, and have refused a few in patients who clearly didn’t need them. In the Press Ganey Hell World coming I probably won’t refuse in the future).

Bad TV medicine. Bad.

*This blog post was originally published at GruntDoc*


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