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Reply to "The Pitt, Season 2"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Shes having absence seizures- it makes you look like you're zoning out.[/quote] But they told us there is more to the story with her and the baby- not to minimize her medical condition. [/quote] 2 things can be true. But if she’s having absence seizures with a history of epilepsy, she should not be operating in an ER.[/quote] Absence seizures can be triggered by emotional distress. We know Al-Hashimi was working in an Afghan hospital that was subject to a terrorist massacre back in 2020. I think the implication is that the baby, or the baby crying, may have triggered a seizure, perhaps through Al-Hashimi's association with that event. I wonder if potentially Al-Hashimi's condition had been dormant since childhood but PTSD from that attack has led to it recurring. Her response to the seizure was to immediately call her neurologist and request and urgent appointment, so it's not like she dismissed it or didn't view it as problematic -- she's concerned. In general I agree that having an attending with epilepsy and a pattern of absence seizures running an ED is a problem. However, if the condition was dormant and she was frequently tested and taking medication to control it, and obviously it was disclosed, I could see it being okay. ED doctors don't "operate" -- they aren't surgeons. And I do think that normally an ED would have enough duplication of roles that a doctor with this condition wouldn't be a liability. Or at least not any more of one than having an attending with a history of migraines, or with a bad back (like Langdon), or who is pregnant, or has any of a variety of conditions that might require someone have to step out of a trauma room or turn control of a case over to another doctor. I have a family member with well-controlled epilepsy dating from childhood and she can go years between seizures and they are momentary -- a few seconds. If it happens, she goes to her neurologist immediately and they can sometimes adjust her medication but generally the seizure is not repeated and everything goes back to normal immediately. She is really not limited by it. That could change with time, as with many neurological disorders, but right now she could definitely be an ED doctor. Just not in the Pitt which is structured in a totally unrealistic way with one attending and very few residents (with only two of them senior) and severely understaffed.[/quote] The chart said she has been having them for 35 years since she was 5. She’s playing a 40 year old? How could an attending be only 40? Duke coming to the ER for a test that should be done at a PCP is very annoying [b]Why so much focus on Whitaker losing his badge?[/b] I loved the scene with Langdon saving the patient from paraplegia! That was so good. [/quote] I had a thought that Langdon would misuse it to get drugs. I think they’re setting him up for a relapse. His back was hurting, he was sweating after the paralysis patient, and he disappeared to the bathroom.[/quote]
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