Yeah, that's right. And just an unusually long, hard day for all. |
+2 I think the baby just prompted him to reflect on everything positive she has before her. And underscored that he's more than halfway through his life, and despite his impressive career is very lonely and very sad. Hope this means he'll make some changes, beginning with getting the help he clearly needs. |
Yeah, my dirty lens is that my mom almost died of eclampsia having me (she had regular care, it just came on fast for her) and I'm currently in my third trimester (due to mom they watch me like a hawk) so I'd just rather not watch that right now. |
Totally understand. Agree with the ways others have described the way the scene rolls out. Also know that you can take comfort that this won't be your circumstances, because you are on top of this, mindful of your condition, and ready to rely on medical expertise. The show does a great job of showing how this person's refusal of any prenatal care before the ED visit was a problem, and the way her "free birth" stance meant crucial minutes of care were lost when she WAS in the ED. This isn't you, PP. |
I found this scenic, extremely emotional to watch. The entire season was really centered around all of the problems Our country is facing right now and this scene exemplified the sadness and exhaustion so many people are feeling. The juxtaposition of a woman in a hijab, who dedicates her life to caring for people in their worst moments with the fireworks and Star-Spangled Banner was really poignant. At times the show can feel a bit heavy-handed in their politics (which I 100% agree with) but I thought this was beautifully understated and hit home for me |
This is the PP and you beautifully put into words what I was thinking. All that happening, Then were supposed to enjoy the fireworks when this country is on fire. But that's also life, you can experience joy during pain and feel pain during moments of joy. Life is complex. |
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Crying over here having just finished this episode.
I thought we'd get some resolution on whether or not Langdon was using, given that they so clearly set us up to think he was. They showed him doing the drug test, but that was all we got and that didn't tell us much of anything. A great moment of levity in an ending that was a tear-jerker -- Whitaker's badge!!! |
So now we know it was both -- she was diagnosed with epilepsy as a child but had been mostly seizure free as an adult, but she notes she had not worked on pediatric cases "since Afghanistan" and Baby Jane Doe was her first seizure of the day, perhaps brought on by the child crying and a stress response due to her experience in the maternity hospital in Afghanistan during the terror attack. |
| Al Hashimi driving off on the top level of the parking garage with her two seizures that day made me think she was going to have another seizure and drive into the group of staff watching the fireworks on the top level of the garage. |
It's not "across the board" burn out. It's Robby and Dana. They are the only ones who seem truly burnt out. Santos is having a tough day and has a trauma history, but a lot of that is just being a new R2 and overwhelm. Common. Mel had a bad day, otherwise seems fine. Javadi seems fine (her mom SUCKS and Javadi should not be working in the same hospital as both parents, but it's not unrealistic for a family like hers and given her age). Princess seems better than fine. McKay seems good, just had a tough time with the cancer patient who died, but that would be normal. Whitaker seems great. Joy seems fine. Ogilvie had a bad day and probably emergency med is not for him (normal for a med student on rotation, happens in lots of specialties). Mohan doesn't seem burnt out, just dealing with a personal issue and not feeling supported at work (her having the panic attack was melodramatic, IMO, but I suppose it could happen under some circumstances). Langdon is at the start of recovery, I think he had an okay, not great, first day back -- he seems as good as can be expected. Robby is in crisis. Dana clearly has PTSD from being attacked and may just have hit her limit in her job -- she is retirement age and lots of older nurses get to the point she is at now, I think the ongoing story with her is how she continues to do this job. But they are the only two behaving in ways that would indicate burn out to me, and mostly not in front of patients. You could go to that ER, have Robby as your attending and interact with Dana, and not think "whoa is this place falling apart?" You'd actually probably find them both professional and reassuring, because they are, even on this particular day. This is consistent with most of my ER experiences. And I've definitely been in ER's where the waiting room is a total nightmare. Washington Hospital Center had a 10 hour wait for non-trauma cases the last time I was there (not a holiday), Howard's waiting room has a lot of unhoused people and people in dire life situations. GW gets a lot of serious trauma cases, especially on holidays, and can be a very stressful place. Sibley is the only ER in DC where I've had what I'd describe as literally a pleasant experience, but I was there in the middle of the day on a Tuesday and they were not busy. And I still had one nurse who was kind of an impatient jerk, though who knows maybe he was having a rough day like anyone can have! The Pitt is pretty realistic in this respect, IMO. |
Oh and I should mention the entire night shift seems to be great and has a fantastic vibe and many of them remind me of real ED doctors and nurses I've had. Some also remind me of surgical staff I've dealt with. Both of those specialities attract people who are kind of badass, thrive under pressure, and more than a little married to their jobs. |
Javadi was questioning whether she should even be a doctor because of everyone’s mental health issues. I don’t think she is fine. |
She was questioning working in the ED because of the mental health stuff, not being a doctor. And she was being melodramatic because as outlined above, "everyone" does not have severe mental health issues. Some of Javadi's examples didn't even make sense. She mentioned McKay's ankle monitor which I do not believe had anything to do with her job. She mentioned Santos being angry but even Whitaker pushed back on this and said Santos has issues (unrelated to her being a doctor) but isn't actually angry. And then she mentions Mel like "then there's Mel" and doesn't say what the issue is but it sure sounds like she's actually just judging Mel for being neurodiverse, not for being burnt out. Javadi is just a typical 20/21 year old. She's a little judgmental, doesn't really understand how the world works, in her first "real" job and learning what actual people who are not her family members are like. She's not burnt out. She making TikTok's and figuring out what her medical specialty will be and having crushes and making friends, maybe for the first time in her weird life with her overbearing mom and academic superstar status. She is absolutely fine. |
She's definitely going to kill someone driving. |
She started by saying maybe she should go to law school. Obviously not serious but definitely troubled by the issues most of the staff have. |