The Pitt (2025) s01e01 Episode Script
7:00 A.M.
1
[ROBERT BRADLEY'S
BLACKWATER SURPRISE'S "BABY"]
♪
Baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You'll stay here tonight ♪
- Baby ♪
- [SIREN WAILING]
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪
♪
Out on the street ♪
Love, music, and my guitar ♪
Drove up a woman ♪
In one of those old fancy cars ♪
She said, hey, boy ♪
Why don't you get on in? ♪
For tonight ♪
I'll be your lover and your friend ♪
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[MUSIC CONTINUES IN EARBUDS]
[DOOR BEEPS]
Is it true?
Simi told Hector that Dr. Deranjian said
the hospital was up for sale.
They might turn it into
an ortho center with no ER.
Oh, they're always
threatening to shut us down,
but they never do.
[BOTH SPEAKING TAGALOG]
Gloria is looking for you.
No guts, no Gloria.
Must be time for my weekly spanking.
Try to be nice, for all our sakes.
You sure you're cool being here today?
Yeah. Why wouldn't I be?
Well, if you need to talk
Yeah, I won't, but thanks.
Where's Abbot?
Getting some air.
Really?
[RETCHING]
[COUGHS] [DOOR CREAKS]
Hey.
You OK in there?
Uh, awesome.
[BOTH LAUGH]
I'd like to say it goes away,
but I had morning sickness
for six months with my second daughter.
[TOILET FLUSHES] Hell, who am I kidding?
That one still worries me sick.
[SIGHS]
- Thanks.
- But it's worth it.
You tell anybody yet?
Oh, no.
Not until I pass 12 weeks.
Not this time.
Nothing but good vibes.
But just so you know,
Robby's working today.
Today's the day Doc Adamson died.
He hasn't worked it in four years.
So why is he here?
All I know is, he still blames himself
for Adamson's death, so if
he's a little prickly today,
give him a pass, OK?
- Right.
- Thank you.
Hang in there, kid.
[GROANS]
[SIGHS]
[DISTANT SIREN WAILING]
Good morning, Jack.
[SIGHS] What are you doing here?
I'm working.
And you?
Oh, I don't know.
Had a guy come in.
Hit by a drunk driver in a crosswalk.
39-year-old vet.
Survived three tours without a scratch.
[SIGHS]
I spent the last two hours coding him.
That's always a rough way
to end the night.
I must have had a reason
at one time to keep coming back,
but I can't think of it right now.
Because this is the job
that keeps on giving.
Nightmares.
Ulcers.
Suicidal tendencies.
Besides, if you jump on my shift,
that's just rude, man.
[BREATHES DEEPLY]
I hope I'm never one of your patients.
That makes two of us, my friend.
I got a pregnant teen coming
back today for mifepristone
and a small bowel obstruction
waiting on surgery
for the last three hours.
Oh, and unfortunately,
the Kraken is still boarding in BH.
- Still?
- [ELEVATOR DINGS]
Guy's been here for a week
waiting on the psych ward.
Yep. He's only getting worse.
He's catching some Zyprexa Z's
at the moment.
But when he wakes up, God help you all.
[SIGHS]
I wrote a note
for the family of my dead vet,
if anyone shows.
Oh, and you got the med students
and new interns starting today,
so good luck with that.
Lucky, lucky me.
- Sir, get back here!
- No needles! No needles!
- Oh!
- Sir! Stop!
- Somebody help me!
- They're gonna hurt me!
Sure you want to work today, huh?
Sir, I promise
nobody is going to hurt you.
Sir!
[SCOFFS] Who left this mess?
They had a rough night.
Good morning, sunshine.
You obviously haven't seen this board.
Oh, we've seen worse.
Nothing like a little challenge
every now and then
to keep everybody on their toes.
- Dr. Robinavitch?
- Yep.
Melissa King.
I will be joining you today.
I just came from two months at the VA.
Hey, welcome to the Pitt.
This is Dr. Jack Abbot.
Nice to meet you.
I can't tell you how excited
I am to be here today, so
Talk to me at the end of the day.
Ignore him. He had a rough night
and is having
an ongoing existential crisis.
Don't worry,
you'll get there soon enough.
I married my second husband,
Everett, in 1964.
He unfortunately passed in 1976
from a heart attack
while we were vacationing
in Kissimmee, Florida.
- It was awful.
- Good morning.
We're gonna round, Dr. Mohan.
Excuse me, Estelle. I'll be right back.
So you know we track every resident's
patients seen per hour.
I was just taking her history.
It's a brief backstory
about what brought them in,
- not an autobiography.
- I was almost done.
You hadn't even made it to this century.
Patients, they check in
for registration here.
A nurse eyeballs them,
makes sure they're not dying.
If not, they're moved to one
of two triage rooms for vitals
and a quick chair exam
where you can order
your labs and your X-rays.
And then they come back to
Waiting room, until a bed opens up.
For how long?
Eight hours, if they're lucky.
A lot of times, 12.
Uh, is it always this busy?
Uh, no.
It gets a lot busier.
[DOOR BEEPS, BUZZES]
Take this.
Hey, Mateo.
Good morning, Cass.
This is Sherry.
Hi.
Sherry, I'm Dr. McKay.
I have some student doctors
with me today.
Do you mind if they observe?
Sure.
What's going on, Sherry?
- I
- [GROANS]
I burned my hand on a Sterno.
What were you doing with a Sterno?
Uh, cooking.
You were cooking with a Sterno?
Yeah, we were making s'mores.
That's sweet.
My son loves s'mores.
Uh, we've we've been here for hours,
and I have to get them to school.
Do you know how much longer
this will take?
Uh, yeah, let's see.
- You take anything for the pain?
- Uh, not yet.
1,000 Tylenol, 400 ibuprofen,
and saline dressing?
- Yes, please.
- [KNOCK AT DOOR]
McKay, we're going to round.
And the fun begins.
All right, Sherry,
we're gonna patch you up
and get you out of here
as soon as possible, OK?
I'll be back.
As you can see, we have some
new faces with us this morning.
Good morning, good morning.
Come on over.
Starting with second-year
resident Dr. Melissa King,
fresh from the VA.
Everyone calls me Mel.
I'm so happy to be here.
Trinity Santos, intern.
Victoria Javadi, MS3.
Uh, Dennis Whitaker, MS4.
Welcome to the Pitt. I'm
We've got two traumas from the T.
- Five minutes out.
- OK, copy that.
Actually, this is
the most important person
that you're gonna meet today.
This is Dana.
She's our charge nurse.
She is the ringleader of our circus.
Do what she says when she says it.
As you can see,
our house is always packed,
and our department is mostly
clogged up with boarders.
Those are admitted patients
waiting for a room upstairs,
sometimes for days.
Beds are a very precious
commodity around here,
so please be quick and efficient
with your workups.
What else?
We treat the sicker patients back here,
but please keep your eye
on that waiting room.
Make sure nobody's gonna die out there.
Your senior residents are Dr. Collins
and Dr. Langdon.
You report to them,
and they report to me.
Senior residents,
you got your sign-outs?
- Yep.
- OK. Let's do this.
- Virgil Straker.
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
9mm GSW to the left shoulder.
CT angiogram negative,
surgery wants to admit
for overnight observation.
Good vitals. They repeat a crit?
Stable crits
every two hours times three.
Discharge on Ceftin, recheck tomorrow.
He'll get way more rest at home.
Good morning, Mr. Straker.
You want to go home?
- Hell yeah.
- OK.
Hey. Hey, Ro.
Hey, Ro, I'm finally
getting out of here!
All right, Murphy Rottenstein.
48-year-old woman with cirrhosis
and upper GI bleed.
Intubated and stable after one unit.
Awaiting ICU bed.
Hey, Doc.
And we all know Louie Cloverfield.
Blood alcohol of .420 at 11:00 PM.
- I've been cutting back.
- How is he still breathing?
That's a lethal dose for you and me.
That's happy hour for Louie.
Sobered up. Had two rounds of lorazepam.
Hold out your hands for me, Louie.
- Another two of lorazepam.
- On it.
And a script for Librium.
It's good to see you, Louie.
It's always a pleasure, Doc.
Bar fight with complete avulsion
of tooth number eight.
Smile, Charlie.
Oh! Where's your tooth, Charlie?
Fuck if I know.
Cancel the discharge.
Order a chest X-ray.
Got to rule out aspiration.
Incoming!
42-year-old male, Sam Wallace.
Blunt head with agonal respirations.
Dropped down on the T tracks.
Couldn't tube him.
- LMA in place.
- Suicide attempt?
Rescue. He's a good Samaritan.
Took a spill helping an elderly
woman who fell off the tracks.
- She's right behind us.
- OK. Trauma one. Go ahead.
- Copy.
- [SCREAMING]
Come on.
Elderly woman, fell from T platform.
Good vitals and no head injuries.
Degloving injury, right lower leg
with open fracture dislocation
to the ankle.
Whoa. OK.
Trauma two. Trauma two. Let's go!
[CRYING INDISTINCTLY]
How are we doing? We ready?
OK, here we go. Ready?
One, two, three.
Good breath sounds bilaterally,
but we need to protect
Apparently he jumped down
to save the lady.
When he climbed back up, he slipped,
- fell back, and hit his head.
- OK, thanks.
Uh, Mel, right?
I need you on the E-FAST.
Pupils four millimeters and reactive.
OK, that's encouraging.
- What do you want for meds?
- 120 ketamine, 80 of rock.
- A-fib on the monitor.
- Courses clear.
That's a lot more blood than expected.
Um, he's probably
anticoagulated for A-fib.
Check his medical records,
see if he's on a DOAC.
Stand by with four-factor PCC
if there's a brain bleed.
What's in the PCC, Mel?
Uh, clotting factors
two, seven, nine, and ten.
OK. Be right back.
50 of fent didn't touch her.
Did she faint or did she trip
off the platform?
Nobody knows.
The other guy jumped down,
pulled her off the tracks
just as the train was rolling in.
Isolated injury to the foot.
The train ran over her foot?
Got caught between the platform
and the incoming train.
Ma'am? Ma'am, what's your name?
All right, type 3 open fracture.
Two grams Cefazolin, 400 of gent.
- Do you speak any English?
- [SCREAMS]
Airway and breathing are perfect.
As is circulation.
BP 140 over 85.
Students, what might have
made her faint on the platform?
- Uh, TIA, CVA.
- Could be an arrhythmia,
- cardiac event.
- So she needs
- Hed CT.
- EKG and troponin.
- OK, good.
- What do we got, party people?
Subway train degloved her foot
with an open fracture dislocation.
Ooh, and I thought
my heels were painful.
- Hemodynamically stable.
- E-FAST negative.
Ma'am, I'm Dr. Yolanda Garcia.
Any pain in your chest or belly?
[SOBBING]
Can we please push the morphine?
No, it could cloud her mental status.
I can't do an exam like this.
Push the damn morphine.
We're doing a popliteal block.
Numbs the lower leg, no side effects.
Wonderful. Where's the other guy?
Next door. He's a bit worse.
Pan scan her.
Let me know when she stops screaming.
[MACHINE BEEPING]
The cords are very anterior.
Yeah, that's because
we can't flex the neck.
Keep the hockey stick straight up.
- I'm in.
- Good. Well done.
Bring me up to speed.
Intubated for agonal respirations.
GCS 5. Probably anticoagulated.
With what?
First time here.
There's no medical records.
- Call for FFP?
- No, we got four-factor PCC.
80 of mannitol to reduce brain swelling,
then right up to CT.
[PHONE RINGING]
Do me a favor.
Swap out with Jesse for me, would you?
- Of course.
- My attending.
Dr. Robinavitch, do you have a moment?
I'm just a little busy
right now, Gloria.
One sec.
- [MOANING]
- Nerve block complete.
Seems like it's starting to work.
Swapping out, Jesse.
Takes ten minutes for the full effect,
and the Marcaine lasts
a good four hours.
She's next for CT.
You have any idea what language that is?
Definitely not Tagalog.
Maybe Hindi or Urdu.
I'm gonna go get language services.
Don't you speak, like, five languages?
Six, but that's not one of them.
Six?
And I thought Collins was smart.
Oh, it's way too early
for you to start being an ass, Langdon.
Open hostility in front of the patient?
She doesn't speak English.
Judgmental and dismissive.
How are we doing?
- Vitals stable.
- Unlike these two.
Ooh, good for you. Princess made a joke.
And I thank you
for that beautiful blessing.
- Namaste.
- OK, do we have a phone
or anything
with a relative's name on it?
EMT said the purse got obliterated
when the subway ran over it.
- Any way I can speak with her?
- Highly doubt it.
We don't know what language she speaks.
Hey, um, any chance she jumped?
She may have been pushed.
- Jesus.
- Yeah.
Could be looking
at a possible hate crime.
I take it you're free now?
We need to talk about your numbers.
- Of people we've saved?
- Metrics.
Our door-to-balloon times
beat federal standards.
I'm talking about Press Ganey scores.
Patient satisfaction.
If they're still alive,
they should be satisfied.
Our goal is 36%
very satisfied with their care.
Your department is at 8%.
Do you know how likely patients
are to recommend this hospital?
This is an emergency department,
not a Taco Bell.
11%.
Well, if you want people to be happier,
don't make 'em wait for 12 hours.
There's a nursing shortage
across the country.
Most of our patients are boarders
who are waiting for a bed upstairs.
We don't have the beds.
That's bullshit. The beds are up there.
You just don't want to hire
the staff you need
to care for them.
Oh, Doc. Doc, it ain't working.
Man, whatever they're
giving me, it's not working.
No response to mag citrate.
Should I send in the Fleet? [SIGHS]
OK, sir, we're gonna try an enema.
Like I said, there's a nursing shortage.
Well, if you paid them a living wage,
they'd be lining up to work here.
Our budget can't support that.
[LAUGHS] Here's a dirty little secret.
The hospital saves money
keeping patients down here in the Pitt.
It's way cheaper than staffing upstairs.
I have asked you repeatedly
to stop referring
to the emergency department
as the Pitt it is derogatory
and incompatible
to the institution's image.
You know what's incompatible
with the institution's image?
Me speaking to the media
about people who code
in our waiting rooms
and people who get
shitty care in our hallways
waiting for an ICU bed for days.
I've heard about doctors
who have tried that
and find themselves out of work.
Uh-huh.
I know today is difficult for you.
Every day is difficult down here.
Boarding is a nationwide problem.
Your predecessor, Adamson,
sure as hell knew that.
Or wasn't that something he taught you?
Fuck. Wow. Really?
Yes, really.
Other hospitals are managing this crisis
much more effectively.
So you can either step up your game,
or you can step aside.
[SIGHS]
Good Samaritan dude has
a small left temporal
intraparenchymal bleed.
No epidural, no subdural,
no midline shift in the brain.
Oh, that's good news. He could recover.
CT can take her in five.
Let's have a look. Bandage scissors?
All right.
If an artery is totally transected,
the smooth muscle and the tunica media
contracts with hemostasis.
But if it's a partial cut,
get out your umbrella.
Grab a culture from the open
fibula before you reduce.
You're up.
I'll stabilize the knee
for the reduction.
Dr. Langdon will be distracting distally
before moving medially
to clear the tibia.
Good.
Ready?
- [CRACKING]
- [GROANING SOFTLY]
[THUDS]
Med student down.
Good catch on Bar Fight Billy.
There was an aspirated tooth
on chest X-ray.
Would have been dead in a week
from a lung abscess
had you let him be discharged.
Good call on the pulmonary.
Cardiac arrest, ETA 10 minutes.
- Where should we put it?
- Anywhere.
We might have to put
somebody in the hall.
Dr. Robby? She, uh, took a fall.
No, I I tripped on the gurney.
I'm fine.
Why don't you go get a cold drink
in the staff lounge?
I'm fine, really. I swear.
Oh, I know, but it's hospital policy.
Anytime someone gets
a paper cut around here,
we have to fill out
a workers' comp report.
Other way.
I was fine until about two weeks ago,
after the Rochester Marathon.
OK. Any falls or injuries?
Just tired. Sore muscles.
Yeah, I'd be in bed for a month.
Was this your first triathlon?
God no.
No, I do one every few months.
Have you seen a doctor yet?
Uh, no.
I went for a run this morning.
Had to quit after a minute.
Pretty short of breath.
This goes under your tongue.
- No current meds, no allergies?
- Mm-mm.
We're gonna check a few labs and an EKG.
- Draw a red and purple top.
- Yep.
[BEEPS] Temp 98.2.
Take a deep breath for me, Otis.
[BREATHES DEEPLY]
Little pinprick now, OK?
Otis?
Otis.
I didn't take him
for a lightweight, huh?
Oh, shit. No pulse.
Crash cart! Lay him flat!
- Let's check a rhythm.
- Saline pads.
Quick look paddles.
- [SUSTAINED BEEPING]
- V-tach.
Charging at 200.
[WHIRRING] Charged.
Clear!
[STEADY BEEPING]
All right, he's back to normal sinus.
Need a gurney in here!
So what's the plan?
ICU when we can get a bed
and admit for supportive care.
Repeat head CT in three hours.
Or sooner, if he blows a pupil.
- Want a Keppra load?
- Order's already in.
Nice job.
Do you think he'll wake up?
Maybe.
Maybe not.
No good deed goes unpunished.
Oh, has anyone, um, notified the family?
I could try.
Otis Williams. Healthy 31-year-old.
V-tach arrest two weeks after triathlon.
NSR with one shock.
Pulse 98, BP 110 over 60.
He's a little young for an MI.
Exactly right,
What's in the differential, Dr. Collins?
Drug overdose, electrolytes, long QT
ooh, Brugada syndrome, WPW
How you doing there, Otis?
OK. What ha
- [MACHINE FLATLINES]
- V-tach again.
200 joules.
- [WHIRRING]
- Charged, and clear!
- Back in sinus.
- [STEADY BEEPING]
Otis?
[GROANING]
Otis?
Oh, groaning's good. 5 of nasal O2, CBC,
CMP, troponin, and D-dimer.
What are you doing?
One gram calcium gluconate, IV push.
- We don't have the labs back.
- Look at the monitor.
Widened QRS and PT waves.
- Hyperkalemia.
- How'd he get that?
Intense exercise
caused muscle breakdown.
Rhabdomyolysis knocked out his kidneys.
Now he's not clearing potassium.
I bet it's over 7.5.
Wait two minutes for the i-STAT.
If he arrests again,
we might not get him back.
If it's hypercalcemia,
you could kill him.
- Wait.
- Oh, it's my ass, not yours.
[GROANING]
Pan scan is negative.
That means you can admit to orthopedics.
But there may have been
a medical etiology
- if she fainted.
- That's not surgical.
Get an internal medicine consult,
or admit to medicine
with ortho consulting.
Either way, I'm off the case.
OK. Thanks for nothing.
Ancef's in. I'll grab the gent.
Did we figure out what she's speaking?
Last interpreter thought
she might be from Pakistan.
There are 77 languages in Pakistan.
OK, well, I will buy lunch
for whoever figures it out.
Good luck.
If you need me, I'll be saving lives.
That was wicked.
- [SCOFFS] That was gross.
- Yeah.
Too much for Little Miss Crash and Burn.
- What'd you do with her?
- Nothing.
- I think she'll be fine.
- Are you kidding?
If that took her out,
she'll be lucky to make it
through this rotation.
I got 50 bucks says she doesn't
last through this shift.
[SCOFFS]
Come on.
Put your money where your mouth is.
Uh, no. I didn't say anything, OK?
And I sure as hell don't have 50 bucks.
I'll be this lady's age by the time
I pay off my student loans.
Not that you're
Hey, you want to sell a kidney?
I could get you 30K
as soon as this weekend.
That's just between you and me.
Think about it.
How you doing?
Yeah.
QRS has narrowed.
Much better.
Potassium is 7.7.
Creatinine, 5.6.
High potassium and renal failure.
Just what you thought.
It must be my lucky day.
Ordering 10 units of regular insulin
and 25 grams of glucose.
Why insulin and glucose?
Shift the potassium intracellularly.
Exactly, but the definitive
treatment is
Hemodialysis. I'll call renal
and get a tech down with the machine.
Have you ever seen
a dialysis catheter inserted?
Dr. Collins is gonna place
a femoral Quinton
under ultrasound guidance.
It's an excellent way to learn.
[GROANS] Oh, my chest.
Yeah, we had to shock you.
You're gonna be sore for a while.
You shocked my heart?
Long story.
Dr. Collins will fill you in.
You got a sec?
You OK?
Why wouldn't I be? Are you OK?
Why wouldn't I be?
You seem annoyed with me already,
and I just got here.
It's not always about you, Robby.
Am I gonna be OK?
Yeah.
You just need to take it easy
on yourself.
Muscle breakdown and myoglobin
damaged your kidneys.
Why'd you shock my heart?
When your kidneys don't work,
potassium builds up
and messes with the electrical
activity in your heart.
Can it happen again?
We gave you medicine
to lower your potassium,
and you'll need dialysis
to clear it all out.
Then I'll be OK?
Yeah.
You might need a week or two
for your kidneys to recover, but yeah.
You really need to hydrate like crazy
before and after a triathlon.
Trust me, I won't let this happen again.
Good.
Be kind to yourself.
[SIGHS] Oh, hey.
Abbot's told me that he's got
a pregnant teen
coming back today for mifepristone.
- Let me know when she gets here.
- Yep.
Bowel obstruction, still waiting
on a surgery consult. What about Garcia?
She was just here for the traumas.
I think she was waiting
for her attending to sign off.
OK.
Oh, one of the med students
took a header.
I parked her in the lounge
under the guise
of a work comp report.
Will you just go in there, eyeball her,
and make sure she's all right?
She's gonna miss the morning arrival
of the living dead.
How many are we expecting?
We were getting three,
but one died en route.
Don't know who's luckier, us or them.
- What's open?
- 14.
89-year-old woman from a SNF.
History of emphysema, CHF, MS.
V-fib, unresponsive to three shocks.
- Two rounds of epi.
- What is that?
LUCAS chest compression system.
Robotic CPR.
[MACHINE THUMPING]
Everybody get a hold. One, two, three.
[YELLS]
Students are dropping like flies.
Take a break. Ice the finger.
You can count on getting
a couple elderly patients
every day around 7:30,
after the nursing homes
and assisted living facilities
do their morning bed checks.
You can practically set your watch.
Was there an advanced directive?
No, full code, per the nursing home.
Seriously?
LUCAS off.
Still V-fib.
LUCAS on.
One more round of epi, one more shock,
and then we call it?
[MACHINE BEEPING]
Joseph Spencer, 79.
Fever and cough. From assisted living.
He has a history of mild Alzheimer's.
One, two, three.
Pulse 130. BP 90 over 60.
Gave him 500 cc's normal saline.
Hi, Mr. Spencer. I'm Dr. King.
This is Dr. Collins.
How are you feeling today?
Is it dinnertime?
I I'm not really hungry.
Do we have any paperwork
from the facility?
He has a POLST.
IV fluids and medications are fine,
but no intubation
and no chest compressions.
That's helpful.
Coarse rhonchi here.
Right middle lobe infiltrate.
Temp 102. Call a code sepsis.
- Mm-hmm.
- Code?
To make sure we check all of our boxes.
The federal government audits
our sepsis bundle performance
and publishes the data online.
Today, it better be perfect.
Two sets of blood cultures, lactic acid,
30 cc's per kilo NS,
a gram of ceftriaxone,
500 of azithromycin,
repeat lactic in three hours.
Nice.
Charging, and
Stop.
Call it.
Nursing home just faxed us a DNR.
[SCOFFS] Are you kidding me?
Power off the defibrillator
and the LUCAS.
Complete waste of time and money.
Who the hell works at that place?
A nurse taking care of 60 patients
who couldn't find the form.
She called 911 so she could
take care of the others.
OK, let's move her to the viewing room
- and notify the family.
- Yep.
One of the things we do here
is to take a moment of silence
when we lose a patient,
to respect their humanity
And also to remember
that this was somebody's child
or sibling or parent, friend.
I like the sound of funky music ♪
Oh. Ow, ow!
[MUSIC STOPS]
I am so sorry.
Maybe leave it on vibrate
while you're working.
- Later, Doc.
- You behave yourself now.
Always.
Your med student's back on her feet.
- How old's that kid?
- I don't know. I didn't ask.
What is she, some sort of savant?
I don't know. Maybe.
Dr. Robinavitch, hi.
I just wanted to apologize
for any trouble
my clumsiness might have caused.
I feel ridiculous.
Oh, I can't tell how many times
I've hit my head on an overhead lamp.
Twice I needed to get staples.
Why don't you go work
with Dr. McKay in triage?
That would help both of us.
Oh, I I don't need special treatment.
Good, because I don't give it.
[EXHALES]
Look, I know I might look too young,
but I studied my ass off to get here.
Probably harder than the others.
I earned this.
OK, look, I respect your dedication
and your determination,
but while you're here,
you're my responsibility.
And when one of my responsibilities
takes a header wow!
Abbot called for a surgical consult
on the SBO three hours ago.
You're very lucky they didn't perf.
I'm here to see my daughter.
I'm sorry, is that a patient?
You're talking to her.
Am I interrupting?
No.
No, we're done. We're good.
Come find me when you're ready
to present your next case.
Thank you.
So how's your first day going?
- It's great.
- Yeah?
Yeah, really great.
Hey, Crash, they're doing a dialysis
catheter insertion in North One
if you want to check it out.
Mm-hmm.
- The thing
- Did she say Crash?
No.
No, no, it's not crash.
Um, she said crush,
'cause I'm always crushing it.
[CHUCKLES]
Um, thanks for coming down,
Mom, but I've
I've got a patient.
Bye.
What do you want?
Um, I I just wanted to make
sure you're comfortable.
I am taking a dump in a dustpan,
so what's that fucking tell you?
Um, I'm
I'm clearly
I'm clearly in the wrong room.
- Yeah.
- I'm sorry.
Mm-hmm.
[GRUNTS, SPLATTERS]
So it would have been nice
if someone had told me
that Eileen Shamsi's daughter
was one of our med students.
What, and ruin the surprise?
Was it as awkward
as I hoped it would be?
You you have a mean streak
in you, you know that?
And what's the deal with the body in 19?
That's Abbot's MVC vet from last night.
Still waiting on next of kin.
- Supposedly on their way.
- OK.
Can we move him
to the viewing room, at least?
Nursing home DNR is heading there,
joining last night's Jane Doe.
Coroner's office is backed up.
Well, then our morgue
needs to take her, then.
Perlah.
Triathlete, Otis?
Oh, he's stable.
Repeat potassium is 6.1.
Renal wrote the dialysis order.
Tech should be down in 15 minutes.
Good. Thank you.
Language mystery solved yet?
No.
Hey, what's your take on dogs?
In what context?
For kids.
Kids and puppies go together
like fish and chips.
Man's best friend, you know?
Well, you don't have a dog.
I don't have a best friend.
- What am I?
- You're my best resident.
Big difference.
Yeah, but we're still friends.
Not if this conversation
goes on much longer.
I have a lethargic four-year-old,
no PMH, no antecedent illness,
no fever or vomiting.
Parents just couldn't
wake him up this morning.
- What room?
- Oh, south 15.
There's no nuchal rigidity,
no skin lesions, no focal neuro.
He looks well fed and cared for.
DKA from new-onset diabetes?
No, BG 85.
CBC, BMP, UA, and UDS ordered.
[EXHALES]
Can you wake up for me, Tyler?
He's not usually this sleepy?
No, and he barely flinched
for the blood test.
He wakes up at 90 miles an hour
and doesn't stop
till he passes out at night.
He passes out?
No, he just means he goes all day.
Any chance he could have
ingested something?
Any pills, vitamins,
any prescriptions
that may have been left around?
No, that's all kept locked
in the medicine cabinet.
The whole house is childproof.
Uh, what about alcohol?
Anything left out?
- No.
- What about pets?
No.
So he's usually, like, quite active?
- Very.
- Um, any injuries lately?
No.
Hasn't bumped his head recently?
Not that I'm aware of, but he does love
roughhousing with Drew.
But he never gets hurt.
Oxygen level is normal.
Good pulse and blood pressure.
No signs of infection.
We're gonna start
with blood and urine tests,
check for any metabolic abnormalities.
[GROANS] It's really throbbing.
Yeah, the blood's under pressure.
Gotta drain it.
No anesthesia, or
I'll stop before I hit the nail bed.
I hope.
Hey, eyes down here.
Watch and learn.
I'm just looking who to see next.
You're supposed to take them
in the order they arrive.
Yeah, I know how it works.
OK. No need to cry about it.
Do you want me to choose for you?
No.
Wow, pain's gone.
Thank you.
All right.
How about a 20-year-old cough in eight?
Should be easy. Probably viral.
I don't need an easy one.
Suit yourself, Huckleberry.
I'm gonna take the splitting headache.
Maybe I'll catch a subarachnoid
hemorrhage or something cool.
Hey, why do you keep calling me that?
Huckleberry?
It's a term of endearment.
It sounds like sarcasm.
You think?
Bordering on harassment.
Where are you from?
Broken Bow, Nebraska.
Jesus, where the hell is that?
It's about three and a half
hours west of Omaha.
Oh, yeah, just a little
south of nowhere.
What the hell do you do there?
My parents have a farm, so
You're a farm boy?
Yeah, I guess.
I rest my case, Huckleberry.
[SPEAKING NATIVE LANGUAGE]
I'm so sorry, ma'am.
We don't understand you.
[SPEAKING NATIVE LANGUAGE]
Oh.
Me, I'm Dr. Heather Collins.
I'm from here.
Portland, Oregon.
You.
Where are you from?
Uh-huh.
Uh, China? India?
I can't tell where you're pointing.
Tajikistan?
Nepal.
Mm.
- You're from Nepal.
- Nepali.
[LAUGHS]
Mom's got a bad burn.
Needs wound checks and hand therapy.
And I got a sneaking suspicion
she may be unhoused.
I'll talk to her.
We can offer some help.
Thank you, I appreciate it.
Ah, you're back.
Dr. Robby suggested
I might be of assistance.
Yeah, I could use the company.
Victoria Javadi, this is Kiara Alfaro.
She's the department social worker,
which pretty much makes her an angel.
- Welcome.
- Thanks.
Thank you.
So what rotation is this for you?
Um, third.
I've done OB-GYN and pedes.
You have any favorites?
Not really.
Well, what are you leaning towards?
I'm not really sure yet.
OK, well, you have time.
Uh, can I actually ask you
a personal question?
I'm 20, and I've earned
the right to be here.
Oh.
Yeah, I don't I don't
doubt that for a minute.
I I was actually wondering if
Dr. Eileen Shamsi from surgery
is a friend or relative of yours.
I saw you talking to her
in the hall and I thought
Yeah, she's my mother.
Oh.
Oh, wow.
Oh, that's cool.
- You're really only 20?
- Yeah.
And for the record, my
my father also works here.
He's an endocrinologist.
Oh, so it's like a family business.
[LAUGHS]
I'm sorry. That was a joke.
That was a joke.
And I'm sure that comes
with a lot of pressure.
And as for the age thing,
I'm a 42-year-old R2,
so I have my own haters, trust me.
[DOOR BEEPS] OK.
Um, sometimes when it gets busy,
we'll help the nurses
bring back patients.
- OK.
- Um, OK.
Next to come back is Fred Saeta.
Knee pain after a fall.
- Fred Sa
- Hey, Doc. Hi.
Hi. Doug Driscoll.
Any chance someone could see me now?
I've been here for, like, two hours.
Unfortunately, Mr. Driscoll,
there's a lot of patients
still ahead of you,
some of whom are severely ill.
Yeah, and I got chest pains
that woke me up
- in the middle of the night.
- Chest pain.
- Yeah.
- No, it's not plural.
It's just chest pain, not chest pains.
Yeah, and if I have more
than one, it's chest pains.
- Are you even a real doctor?
- She's a student doctor.
Yeah, well, keep her
the hell away from me.
I just need to see someone, OK? Not her.
Isn't chest pain an emergency?
I don't
It looks here like you got an EKG
five minutes after arrival,
so it's not a heart attack.
Yeah, but I'm supposed to get
a chest X-ray and blood tests.
Ah, and you are next
in line for the lab tech, OK?
So listen for your name. Excuse me.
- Fred
- [RETCHING]
Actually, can you get me
a wheelchair, please?
Uh, hi. I'm I'm Dr. McKay.
What's going on?
I, uh, found her
on the floor in the bathroom.
- She can't stop puking.
- What's her name?
Theresa. She's my mom.
Theresa?
Theresa, are you taking any medication?
No.
Any previous stomach problems?
Oh, no.
When did the vomiting begin?
Um, last night.
Last night.
Do you have any dizziness or fatigue?
Mystery solved.
Our lady with the degloved foot
is Nepali.
Oh, hey, congratulations.
Otis's BP is crashing. 70 over 50.
Still waiting for dialysis.
[MACHINE BEEPING RAPIDLY]
How you doing there, Otis?
- Not so good.
- 50 liters.
Non-rebreather, please.
Oh, crap.
Diastolic collapse of the right
atrium and right ventricle.
Tamponade from uremic effusion.
- That's why his BP is low?
- Yep.
Too much fluid and pressure
around the heart, chambers can't fill.
Otis, you've got
some fluid around your heart.
We need to get it off.
What's happening?
25 of Propofol,
10 cc's of lidocaine with epi,
pericardiocentesis tray.
I have to get that from central.
No, no. Just open a central line kit.
Dr. Santos, take the head of the bed
and bag him if he stops breathing,
compressions if we lose the carotid.
Prep and drape the subxiphoid, please.
- 10 cc's of 1% with.
- Chlorhexidine here.
- 25 or 27-gauge?
- Long 25, 25.
Thank you.
Injecting lidocaine.
Pressure down. 60 over 40.
Right.
Wait, you can't ultrasound and place.
I know, that's why I'm taking the probe.
18-gauge thin wall
on a 60 cc syringe, please, Dr. Collins.
Let's go.
You're going in right over
the center of my probe,
advancing very slowly.
We're looking for the hyperechoic tip.
Very, very slowly.
Do not hit that heart.
Dr. Santos, do you see
that sea of black?
That's the effusion.
We're looking for a little white dot.
There it is.
Got it.
Aspirating.
3 cc's should be enough.
[STEADY BEEPING]
Good.
Next, we'll place the guide wire,
and then the triple lumen catheter.
Pulse ox is 99.
Pressure is up. 124 over 78.
Looks like things are back to normal.
That was cool.
Four Zofrans on board.
That should stop the nausea.
David, have you had any vomiting?
- No.
- Anyone else sick at home?
No, it's just us.
My husband passed away
a few years ago, from COVID.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
Potassium, 3.1.
Is that bad?
It can cause heart problems.
But we're gonna correct it, OK?
10 in the bag, 20 PO.
Javadi, any questions?
Um
uh, David, have you two traveled
out of the country recently?
We never go anywhere.
Is she gonna have to stay here?
If the rest of the tests are good,
and she responds to treatment,
she can go home.
Mr. Milton, my name is Dennis Whitaker.
I'm one of the student doctors here.
I'll be seeing you first.
Nice to meet you.
BP's 150 over 90.
OK, that's just a touch high.
I forgot to take my damn
enalapril this morning.
Oh, we'll get that for you.
Tell me about this belly pain.
Uh, it started about here.
Um, woke me up at, like, 2:00 AM.
Pretty intense.
- Lasted about an hour.
- Mm-hmm.
Now it's gone.
Any fever or vomiting?
Nah, I never get sick.
OK.
Uh, what did you eat last night?
Oh, it was my wife's birthday.
I took her out to Sullivan's
for a steak.
OK.
Well, the exam is pretty benign.
I'm gonna test for gallstones.
If there is a stone
and you eat fatty food,
there can be pain when
the gallbladder contracts.
Oh. [CHUCKLES]
Uh, bingo.
One stone. There it is.
Do I need surgery?
Uh, you should be able
to manage with a low-fat diet.
But we'll send off labs
for liver and pancreas.
Just let us know
if you have any more pain.
OK.
Thanks.
Yeah, you bet.
Great.
You want an EKG?
For?
Heart attacks can present
as upper abdominal pain.
Um, yeah.
No, yeah, that's a great idea.
Thank you.
I'm going as fast as I can.
I'm picking up two more patients.
I didn't say anything.
I, uh I need a fresh set of eyes.
On what?
54-year-old woman brought in
with intractable vomiting
by her 18-year-old son.
I'm, um I'm getting a weird vibe.
How so?
Like, I don't know,
maybe she was given something.
Some sort of elder abuse.
There's just a strange dynamic
I can't quite figure out.
You're really good at
sussing out that sort of thing.
[LAUGHS] I don't know about that.
Uh, excuse me, Dr. Langdon.
Almost all of our labs are back
on sleeping boy Tyler.
All 100% normal.
What are we missing?
Is he waking up?
No, he's he's still fast asleep.
Most of the lab results
are in, and they look great.
No abnormal blood count, no, uh,
electrolyte abnormalities, no diabetes,
no, um, kidney disease, so
Good. So so what's wrong with him?
We're still trying to figure that out.
Did he, uh, have a playdate
yesterday, by chance?
No, he had preschool,
but he was fine when I picked him up.
Any kids in his class ill?
No, my phone tree would have lit up
if someone else was sick.
He eat anything this morning?
No.
Why?
It looks like some sort of gelatin.
Any chance he could have gotten
into some bath beads or laundry pods?
No, there's no such thing in our house.
What about gummies?
No, we're very strict about candy.
Right?
Oh, shit.
Danny.
What about Danny?
Your brother, he
he gave me some gummies
he got in Cleveland.
They were in my coat pocket.
Are you fucking serious?
Pot gummies?
Yes. I'm so sorry.
Let me call the lab.
Maybe the tox screen is back.
Hey, this is Dr. Langdon from the ED.
Can I fast-track a lab on a little boy,
last name Jones,
first name Tyler, tox screen?
Get the fuck out! I mean it.
Why don't we step outside,
and maybe you can help me
figure out how much he may have taken.
Thanks.
I appreciate that quick turnaround.
The labs confirm it.
Your son tested positive for cannabis.
This is a fucking nightmare.
Theresa, David, this is
my attending, Dr. Robinavitch.
Hi, I'm Dr. Robby.
We need to do a pelvic exam.
And David, I don't think you
want to be in here for that.
Definitely not.
Can you have Nurse Perlah
come join me, please?
Do you want a coffee
or a soda or something?
Why do I need a pelvic exam?
Uh, you don't.
Your son seems like a nice kid.
He's clearly worried about you.
But your exam and your labs
are not matching
any of the usual diagnoses,
so I'm not really sure what's going on.
I'm not here for me.
- I'm here for David.
- I don't understand.
He said that you've had
persistent vomiting,
some some dehydration.
I made myself sick with ipecac.
To induce vomiting?
Why would you do that?
So David would bring me here.
My son has some problems.
He needs professional help.
OK. What kind of problems?
Drugs, alcohol?
I found some of his writing.
I thought it was schoolwork,
but it wasn't.
It was lists of girls he wanted to hurt.
Hurt them how?
He said, "They should all
be eliminated."
Has David seen a therapist?
No.
He's not a bad kid,
but I'm afraid he's troubled,
and I didn't want to call the police
because I was afraid they'd overreact.
- He's just a kid.
- How old is David?
He just turned 18 last month.
Then he's considered an adult
and he would have to consent
to treatment.
Do you have any guns in the house?
No.
My husband did,
but I got rid of all of them
after he passed.
He's a good soul.
I just don't want to see him
hurt anyone or himself.
How are you feeling, Crash?
I'd really appreciate
if you didn't call me that.
Why not? It's a cool nickname.
You earned it. You should own it.
I don't like it.
All right. It's just a joke.
You know, if it makes you
feel any better,
I sharted the first time
I saw an emergency C-section.
Really?
Of course not.
Excuse me. I'll be right back.
I got a situation.
18-year-old kid brings in
his dehydrated mom.
Dad died during the pandemic.
Mom's vomiting is self-induced
for the sole purpose
of getting him here after she finds
his death list for classmates.
I OK.
What does she want us to do?
Help him, protect him, save him.
- Where is he now?
- Talking to McKay.
How are you doing?
Me? I'm good.
I'm always good. You know that.
Do I? Does anybody?
- I'm an open book.
- Not even close.
You do know you can always
come talk to me, right?
Yep.
Zofran. It's what
- How's it going over here?
- Good, good.
We're just going over
aftercare instructions,
prescription medications, special diet
for the next few days.
Dr. McKay, can you check
orthostatics on Mom?
I can.
David, I wanted you to meet Kiara.
She's a social worker here who helps
in situations like this.
We heard about your father's passing.
We're really sorry.
And we know that it can put
a lot of pressure
on somebody your age,
which combined with school
and now having to take care
of your mom, that's a lot.
It's fine.
We just want to make sure
that when your mom goes home,
you can handle it.
We want to make sure you have someone
you can talk to if you need to.
I'm OK.
I don't need to talk to anybody.
After a parent dies,
the sadness can last a long time.
How's that going for you?
It's not a problem.
What about school?
What about it?
Anything you enjoy there?
Not really.
A lot of people have thoughts
that can disturb them.
If you've had any,
it's OK to talk about it.
What's that have to do with my mom?
- Is she gonna be OK?
- Yeah, she's gonna be fine.
She's probably got a stomach virus,
maybe food poisoning.
I think she's more worried about you.
She always worries about me.
- Does she have a reason to?
- No.
It's almost 8:00. I gotta go.
Are you sure you wouldn't
prefer to wait with your mom?
I'm late for school.
She can just call me when she's ready.
It would actually be kind of helpful
to talk to you some more.
Hey, David.
David.
Just give me five minutes.
Leave me alone!
[PEOPLE GASPING]
Hey, David!
Shit.
Robby!
Robby.
Got a college kid, respiratory arrest,
coming in hot.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[TENSE MUSIC]
♪
[BABY CRYING]
[HIGH-PITCHED RINGING]
♪
[MACHINE BEEPING RAPIDLY]
Robby, we need to intubate here.
Dr. Adamson just went down
with a pulse ox of 65.
[BREATHING HEAVILY]
[RINGING INTENSIFIES]
Robby!
[THE SMILE'S "NO WORDS"]
♪
You're not so tough ♪
Your need to be loved ♪
You roast in the desert ♪
A scorched earth ♪
Your mind come loose ♪
The monster's back ♪
Toward a mirage ♪
No words ♪
♪
You're not so tough ♪
A whip, no crack ♪
A sudden switch ♪
A constant threat that ♪
You'll torch the place ♪
That plants are ♪
Snakes ♪
[ROBERT BRADLEY'S
BLACKWATER SURPRISE'S "BABY"]
♪
Baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You'll stay here tonight ♪
- Baby ♪
- [SIREN WAILING]
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪
♪
Out on the street ♪
Love, music, and my guitar ♪
Drove up a woman ♪
In one of those old fancy cars ♪
She said, hey, boy ♪
Why don't you get on in? ♪
For tonight ♪
I'll be your lover and your friend ♪
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[MUSIC CONTINUES IN EARBUDS]
[DOOR BEEPS]
Is it true?
Simi told Hector that Dr. Deranjian said
the hospital was up for sale.
They might turn it into
an ortho center with no ER.
Oh, they're always
threatening to shut us down,
but they never do.
[BOTH SPEAKING TAGALOG]
Gloria is looking for you.
No guts, no Gloria.
Must be time for my weekly spanking.
Try to be nice, for all our sakes.
You sure you're cool being here today?
Yeah. Why wouldn't I be?
Well, if you need to talk
Yeah, I won't, but thanks.
Where's Abbot?
Getting some air.
Really?
[RETCHING]
[COUGHS] [DOOR CREAKS]
Hey.
You OK in there?
Uh, awesome.
[BOTH LAUGH]
I'd like to say it goes away,
but I had morning sickness
for six months with my second daughter.
[TOILET FLUSHES] Hell, who am I kidding?
That one still worries me sick.
[SIGHS]
- Thanks.
- But it's worth it.
You tell anybody yet?
Oh, no.
Not until I pass 12 weeks.
Not this time.
Nothing but good vibes.
But just so you know,
Robby's working today.
Today's the day Doc Adamson died.
He hasn't worked it in four years.
So why is he here?
All I know is, he still blames himself
for Adamson's death, so if
he's a little prickly today,
give him a pass, OK?
- Right.
- Thank you.
Hang in there, kid.
[GROANS]
[SIGHS]
[DISTANT SIREN WAILING]
Good morning, Jack.
[SIGHS] What are you doing here?
I'm working.
And you?
Oh, I don't know.
Had a guy come in.
Hit by a drunk driver in a crosswalk.
39-year-old vet.
Survived three tours without a scratch.
[SIGHS]
I spent the last two hours coding him.
That's always a rough way
to end the night.
I must have had a reason
at one time to keep coming back,
but I can't think of it right now.
Because this is the job
that keeps on giving.
Nightmares.
Ulcers.
Suicidal tendencies.
Besides, if you jump on my shift,
that's just rude, man.
[BREATHES DEEPLY]
I hope I'm never one of your patients.
That makes two of us, my friend.
I got a pregnant teen coming
back today for mifepristone
and a small bowel obstruction
waiting on surgery
for the last three hours.
Oh, and unfortunately,
the Kraken is still boarding in BH.
- Still?
- [ELEVATOR DINGS]
Guy's been here for a week
waiting on the psych ward.
Yep. He's only getting worse.
He's catching some Zyprexa Z's
at the moment.
But when he wakes up, God help you all.
[SIGHS]
I wrote a note
for the family of my dead vet,
if anyone shows.
Oh, and you got the med students
and new interns starting today,
so good luck with that.
Lucky, lucky me.
- Sir, get back here!
- No needles! No needles!
- Oh!
- Sir! Stop!
- Somebody help me!
- They're gonna hurt me!
Sure you want to work today, huh?
Sir, I promise
nobody is going to hurt you.
Sir!
[SCOFFS] Who left this mess?
They had a rough night.
Good morning, sunshine.
You obviously haven't seen this board.
Oh, we've seen worse.
Nothing like a little challenge
every now and then
to keep everybody on their toes.
- Dr. Robinavitch?
- Yep.
Melissa King.
I will be joining you today.
I just came from two months at the VA.
Hey, welcome to the Pitt.
This is Dr. Jack Abbot.
Nice to meet you.
I can't tell you how excited
I am to be here today, so
Talk to me at the end of the day.
Ignore him. He had a rough night
and is having
an ongoing existential crisis.
Don't worry,
you'll get there soon enough.
I married my second husband,
Everett, in 1964.
He unfortunately passed in 1976
from a heart attack
while we were vacationing
in Kissimmee, Florida.
- It was awful.
- Good morning.
We're gonna round, Dr. Mohan.
Excuse me, Estelle. I'll be right back.
So you know we track every resident's
patients seen per hour.
I was just taking her history.
It's a brief backstory
about what brought them in,
- not an autobiography.
- I was almost done.
You hadn't even made it to this century.
Patients, they check in
for registration here.
A nurse eyeballs them,
makes sure they're not dying.
If not, they're moved to one
of two triage rooms for vitals
and a quick chair exam
where you can order
your labs and your X-rays.
And then they come back to
Waiting room, until a bed opens up.
For how long?
Eight hours, if they're lucky.
A lot of times, 12.
Uh, is it always this busy?
Uh, no.
It gets a lot busier.
[DOOR BEEPS, BUZZES]
Take this.
Hey, Mateo.
Good morning, Cass.
This is Sherry.
Hi.
Sherry, I'm Dr. McKay.
I have some student doctors
with me today.
Do you mind if they observe?
Sure.
What's going on, Sherry?
- I
- [GROANS]
I burned my hand on a Sterno.
What were you doing with a Sterno?
Uh, cooking.
You were cooking with a Sterno?
Yeah, we were making s'mores.
That's sweet.
My son loves s'mores.
Uh, we've we've been here for hours,
and I have to get them to school.
Do you know how much longer
this will take?
Uh, yeah, let's see.
- You take anything for the pain?
- Uh, not yet.
1,000 Tylenol, 400 ibuprofen,
and saline dressing?
- Yes, please.
- [KNOCK AT DOOR]
McKay, we're going to round.
And the fun begins.
All right, Sherry,
we're gonna patch you up
and get you out of here
as soon as possible, OK?
I'll be back.
As you can see, we have some
new faces with us this morning.
Good morning, good morning.
Come on over.
Starting with second-year
resident Dr. Melissa King,
fresh from the VA.
Everyone calls me Mel.
I'm so happy to be here.
Trinity Santos, intern.
Victoria Javadi, MS3.
Uh, Dennis Whitaker, MS4.
Welcome to the Pitt. I'm
We've got two traumas from the T.
- Five minutes out.
- OK, copy that.
Actually, this is
the most important person
that you're gonna meet today.
This is Dana.
She's our charge nurse.
She is the ringleader of our circus.
Do what she says when she says it.
As you can see,
our house is always packed,
and our department is mostly
clogged up with boarders.
Those are admitted patients
waiting for a room upstairs,
sometimes for days.
Beds are a very precious
commodity around here,
so please be quick and efficient
with your workups.
What else?
We treat the sicker patients back here,
but please keep your eye
on that waiting room.
Make sure nobody's gonna die out there.
Your senior residents are Dr. Collins
and Dr. Langdon.
You report to them,
and they report to me.
Senior residents,
you got your sign-outs?
- Yep.
- OK. Let's do this.
- Virgil Straker.
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
9mm GSW to the left shoulder.
CT angiogram negative,
surgery wants to admit
for overnight observation.
Good vitals. They repeat a crit?
Stable crits
every two hours times three.
Discharge on Ceftin, recheck tomorrow.
He'll get way more rest at home.
Good morning, Mr. Straker.
You want to go home?
- Hell yeah.
- OK.
Hey. Hey, Ro.
Hey, Ro, I'm finally
getting out of here!
All right, Murphy Rottenstein.
48-year-old woman with cirrhosis
and upper GI bleed.
Intubated and stable after one unit.
Awaiting ICU bed.
Hey, Doc.
And we all know Louie Cloverfield.
Blood alcohol of .420 at 11:00 PM.
- I've been cutting back.
- How is he still breathing?
That's a lethal dose for you and me.
That's happy hour for Louie.
Sobered up. Had two rounds of lorazepam.
Hold out your hands for me, Louie.
- Another two of lorazepam.
- On it.
And a script for Librium.
It's good to see you, Louie.
It's always a pleasure, Doc.
Bar fight with complete avulsion
of tooth number eight.
Smile, Charlie.
Oh! Where's your tooth, Charlie?
Fuck if I know.
Cancel the discharge.
Order a chest X-ray.
Got to rule out aspiration.
Incoming!
42-year-old male, Sam Wallace.
Blunt head with agonal respirations.
Dropped down on the T tracks.
Couldn't tube him.
- LMA in place.
- Suicide attempt?
Rescue. He's a good Samaritan.
Took a spill helping an elderly
woman who fell off the tracks.
- She's right behind us.
- OK. Trauma one. Go ahead.
- Copy.
- [SCREAMING]
Come on.
Elderly woman, fell from T platform.
Good vitals and no head injuries.
Degloving injury, right lower leg
with open fracture dislocation
to the ankle.
Whoa. OK.
Trauma two. Trauma two. Let's go!
[CRYING INDISTINCTLY]
How are we doing? We ready?
OK, here we go. Ready?
One, two, three.
Good breath sounds bilaterally,
but we need to protect
Apparently he jumped down
to save the lady.
When he climbed back up, he slipped,
- fell back, and hit his head.
- OK, thanks.
Uh, Mel, right?
I need you on the E-FAST.
Pupils four millimeters and reactive.
OK, that's encouraging.
- What do you want for meds?
- 120 ketamine, 80 of rock.
- A-fib on the monitor.
- Courses clear.
That's a lot more blood than expected.
Um, he's probably
anticoagulated for A-fib.
Check his medical records,
see if he's on a DOAC.
Stand by with four-factor PCC
if there's a brain bleed.
What's in the PCC, Mel?
Uh, clotting factors
two, seven, nine, and ten.
OK. Be right back.
50 of fent didn't touch her.
Did she faint or did she trip
off the platform?
Nobody knows.
The other guy jumped down,
pulled her off the tracks
just as the train was rolling in.
Isolated injury to the foot.
The train ran over her foot?
Got caught between the platform
and the incoming train.
Ma'am? Ma'am, what's your name?
All right, type 3 open fracture.
Two grams Cefazolin, 400 of gent.
- Do you speak any English?
- [SCREAMS]
Airway and breathing are perfect.
As is circulation.
BP 140 over 85.
Students, what might have
made her faint on the platform?
- Uh, TIA, CVA.
- Could be an arrhythmia,
- cardiac event.
- So she needs
- Hed CT.
- EKG and troponin.
- OK, good.
- What do we got, party people?
Subway train degloved her foot
with an open fracture dislocation.
Ooh, and I thought
my heels were painful.
- Hemodynamically stable.
- E-FAST negative.
Ma'am, I'm Dr. Yolanda Garcia.
Any pain in your chest or belly?
[SOBBING]
Can we please push the morphine?
No, it could cloud her mental status.
I can't do an exam like this.
Push the damn morphine.
We're doing a popliteal block.
Numbs the lower leg, no side effects.
Wonderful. Where's the other guy?
Next door. He's a bit worse.
Pan scan her.
Let me know when she stops screaming.
[MACHINE BEEPING]
The cords are very anterior.
Yeah, that's because
we can't flex the neck.
Keep the hockey stick straight up.
- I'm in.
- Good. Well done.
Bring me up to speed.
Intubated for agonal respirations.
GCS 5. Probably anticoagulated.
With what?
First time here.
There's no medical records.
- Call for FFP?
- No, we got four-factor PCC.
80 of mannitol to reduce brain swelling,
then right up to CT.
[PHONE RINGING]
Do me a favor.
Swap out with Jesse for me, would you?
- Of course.
- My attending.
Dr. Robinavitch, do you have a moment?
I'm just a little busy
right now, Gloria.
One sec.
- [MOANING]
- Nerve block complete.
Seems like it's starting to work.
Swapping out, Jesse.
Takes ten minutes for the full effect,
and the Marcaine lasts
a good four hours.
She's next for CT.
You have any idea what language that is?
Definitely not Tagalog.
Maybe Hindi or Urdu.
I'm gonna go get language services.
Don't you speak, like, five languages?
Six, but that's not one of them.
Six?
And I thought Collins was smart.
Oh, it's way too early
for you to start being an ass, Langdon.
Open hostility in front of the patient?
She doesn't speak English.
Judgmental and dismissive.
How are we doing?
- Vitals stable.
- Unlike these two.
Ooh, good for you. Princess made a joke.
And I thank you
for that beautiful blessing.
- Namaste.
- OK, do we have a phone
or anything
with a relative's name on it?
EMT said the purse got obliterated
when the subway ran over it.
- Any way I can speak with her?
- Highly doubt it.
We don't know what language she speaks.
Hey, um, any chance she jumped?
She may have been pushed.
- Jesus.
- Yeah.
Could be looking
at a possible hate crime.
I take it you're free now?
We need to talk about your numbers.
- Of people we've saved?
- Metrics.
Our door-to-balloon times
beat federal standards.
I'm talking about Press Ganey scores.
Patient satisfaction.
If they're still alive,
they should be satisfied.
Our goal is 36%
very satisfied with their care.
Your department is at 8%.
Do you know how likely patients
are to recommend this hospital?
This is an emergency department,
not a Taco Bell.
11%.
Well, if you want people to be happier,
don't make 'em wait for 12 hours.
There's a nursing shortage
across the country.
Most of our patients are boarders
who are waiting for a bed upstairs.
We don't have the beds.
That's bullshit. The beds are up there.
You just don't want to hire
the staff you need
to care for them.
Oh, Doc. Doc, it ain't working.
Man, whatever they're
giving me, it's not working.
No response to mag citrate.
Should I send in the Fleet? [SIGHS]
OK, sir, we're gonna try an enema.
Like I said, there's a nursing shortage.
Well, if you paid them a living wage,
they'd be lining up to work here.
Our budget can't support that.
[LAUGHS] Here's a dirty little secret.
The hospital saves money
keeping patients down here in the Pitt.
It's way cheaper than staffing upstairs.
I have asked you repeatedly
to stop referring
to the emergency department
as the Pitt it is derogatory
and incompatible
to the institution's image.
You know what's incompatible
with the institution's image?
Me speaking to the media
about people who code
in our waiting rooms
and people who get
shitty care in our hallways
waiting for an ICU bed for days.
I've heard about doctors
who have tried that
and find themselves out of work.
Uh-huh.
I know today is difficult for you.
Every day is difficult down here.
Boarding is a nationwide problem.
Your predecessor, Adamson,
sure as hell knew that.
Or wasn't that something he taught you?
Fuck. Wow. Really?
Yes, really.
Other hospitals are managing this crisis
much more effectively.
So you can either step up your game,
or you can step aside.
[SIGHS]
Good Samaritan dude has
a small left temporal
intraparenchymal bleed.
No epidural, no subdural,
no midline shift in the brain.
Oh, that's good news. He could recover.
CT can take her in five.
Let's have a look. Bandage scissors?
All right.
If an artery is totally transected,
the smooth muscle and the tunica media
contracts with hemostasis.
But if it's a partial cut,
get out your umbrella.
Grab a culture from the open
fibula before you reduce.
You're up.
I'll stabilize the knee
for the reduction.
Dr. Langdon will be distracting distally
before moving medially
to clear the tibia.
Good.
Ready?
- [CRACKING]
- [GROANING SOFTLY]
[THUDS]
Med student down.
Good catch on Bar Fight Billy.
There was an aspirated tooth
on chest X-ray.
Would have been dead in a week
from a lung abscess
had you let him be discharged.
Good call on the pulmonary.
Cardiac arrest, ETA 10 minutes.
- Where should we put it?
- Anywhere.
We might have to put
somebody in the hall.
Dr. Robby? She, uh, took a fall.
No, I I tripped on the gurney.
I'm fine.
Why don't you go get a cold drink
in the staff lounge?
I'm fine, really. I swear.
Oh, I know, but it's hospital policy.
Anytime someone gets
a paper cut around here,
we have to fill out
a workers' comp report.
Other way.
I was fine until about two weeks ago,
after the Rochester Marathon.
OK. Any falls or injuries?
Just tired. Sore muscles.
Yeah, I'd be in bed for a month.
Was this your first triathlon?
God no.
No, I do one every few months.
Have you seen a doctor yet?
Uh, no.
I went for a run this morning.
Had to quit after a minute.
Pretty short of breath.
This goes under your tongue.
- No current meds, no allergies?
- Mm-mm.
We're gonna check a few labs and an EKG.
- Draw a red and purple top.
- Yep.
[BEEPS] Temp 98.2.
Take a deep breath for me, Otis.
[BREATHES DEEPLY]
Little pinprick now, OK?
Otis?
Otis.
I didn't take him
for a lightweight, huh?
Oh, shit. No pulse.
Crash cart! Lay him flat!
- Let's check a rhythm.
- Saline pads.
Quick look paddles.
- [SUSTAINED BEEPING]
- V-tach.
Charging at 200.
[WHIRRING] Charged.
Clear!
[STEADY BEEPING]
All right, he's back to normal sinus.
Need a gurney in here!
So what's the plan?
ICU when we can get a bed
and admit for supportive care.
Repeat head CT in three hours.
Or sooner, if he blows a pupil.
- Want a Keppra load?
- Order's already in.
Nice job.
Do you think he'll wake up?
Maybe.
Maybe not.
No good deed goes unpunished.
Oh, has anyone, um, notified the family?
I could try.
Otis Williams. Healthy 31-year-old.
V-tach arrest two weeks after triathlon.
NSR with one shock.
Pulse 98, BP 110 over 60.
He's a little young for an MI.
Exactly right,
What's in the differential, Dr. Collins?
Drug overdose, electrolytes, long QT
ooh, Brugada syndrome, WPW
How you doing there, Otis?
OK. What ha
- [MACHINE FLATLINES]
- V-tach again.
200 joules.
- [WHIRRING]
- Charged, and clear!
- Back in sinus.
- [STEADY BEEPING]
Otis?
[GROANING]
Otis?
Oh, groaning's good. 5 of nasal O2, CBC,
CMP, troponin, and D-dimer.
What are you doing?
One gram calcium gluconate, IV push.
- We don't have the labs back.
- Look at the monitor.
Widened QRS and PT waves.
- Hyperkalemia.
- How'd he get that?
Intense exercise
caused muscle breakdown.
Rhabdomyolysis knocked out his kidneys.
Now he's not clearing potassium.
I bet it's over 7.5.
Wait two minutes for the i-STAT.
If he arrests again,
we might not get him back.
If it's hypercalcemia,
you could kill him.
- Wait.
- Oh, it's my ass, not yours.
[GROANING]
Pan scan is negative.
That means you can admit to orthopedics.
But there may have been
a medical etiology
- if she fainted.
- That's not surgical.
Get an internal medicine consult,
or admit to medicine
with ortho consulting.
Either way, I'm off the case.
OK. Thanks for nothing.
Ancef's in. I'll grab the gent.
Did we figure out what she's speaking?
Last interpreter thought
she might be from Pakistan.
There are 77 languages in Pakistan.
OK, well, I will buy lunch
for whoever figures it out.
Good luck.
If you need me, I'll be saving lives.
That was wicked.
- [SCOFFS] That was gross.
- Yeah.
Too much for Little Miss Crash and Burn.
- What'd you do with her?
- Nothing.
- I think she'll be fine.
- Are you kidding?
If that took her out,
she'll be lucky to make it
through this rotation.
I got 50 bucks says she doesn't
last through this shift.
[SCOFFS]
Come on.
Put your money where your mouth is.
Uh, no. I didn't say anything, OK?
And I sure as hell don't have 50 bucks.
I'll be this lady's age by the time
I pay off my student loans.
Not that you're
Hey, you want to sell a kidney?
I could get you 30K
as soon as this weekend.
That's just between you and me.
Think about it.
How you doing?
Yeah.
QRS has narrowed.
Much better.
Potassium is 7.7.
Creatinine, 5.6.
High potassium and renal failure.
Just what you thought.
It must be my lucky day.
Ordering 10 units of regular insulin
and 25 grams of glucose.
Why insulin and glucose?
Shift the potassium intracellularly.
Exactly, but the definitive
treatment is
Hemodialysis. I'll call renal
and get a tech down with the machine.
Have you ever seen
a dialysis catheter inserted?
Dr. Collins is gonna place
a femoral Quinton
under ultrasound guidance.
It's an excellent way to learn.
[GROANS] Oh, my chest.
Yeah, we had to shock you.
You're gonna be sore for a while.
You shocked my heart?
Long story.
Dr. Collins will fill you in.
You got a sec?
You OK?
Why wouldn't I be? Are you OK?
Why wouldn't I be?
You seem annoyed with me already,
and I just got here.
It's not always about you, Robby.
Am I gonna be OK?
Yeah.
You just need to take it easy
on yourself.
Muscle breakdown and myoglobin
damaged your kidneys.
Why'd you shock my heart?
When your kidneys don't work,
potassium builds up
and messes with the electrical
activity in your heart.
Can it happen again?
We gave you medicine
to lower your potassium,
and you'll need dialysis
to clear it all out.
Then I'll be OK?
Yeah.
You might need a week or two
for your kidneys to recover, but yeah.
You really need to hydrate like crazy
before and after a triathlon.
Trust me, I won't let this happen again.
Good.
Be kind to yourself.
[SIGHS] Oh, hey.
Abbot's told me that he's got
a pregnant teen
coming back today for mifepristone.
- Let me know when she gets here.
- Yep.
Bowel obstruction, still waiting
on a surgery consult. What about Garcia?
She was just here for the traumas.
I think she was waiting
for her attending to sign off.
OK.
Oh, one of the med students
took a header.
I parked her in the lounge
under the guise
of a work comp report.
Will you just go in there, eyeball her,
and make sure she's all right?
She's gonna miss the morning arrival
of the living dead.
How many are we expecting?
We were getting three,
but one died en route.
Don't know who's luckier, us or them.
- What's open?
- 14.
89-year-old woman from a SNF.
History of emphysema, CHF, MS.
V-fib, unresponsive to three shocks.
- Two rounds of epi.
- What is that?
LUCAS chest compression system.
Robotic CPR.
[MACHINE THUMPING]
Everybody get a hold. One, two, three.
[YELLS]
Students are dropping like flies.
Take a break. Ice the finger.
You can count on getting
a couple elderly patients
every day around 7:30,
after the nursing homes
and assisted living facilities
do their morning bed checks.
You can practically set your watch.
Was there an advanced directive?
No, full code, per the nursing home.
Seriously?
LUCAS off.
Still V-fib.
LUCAS on.
One more round of epi, one more shock,
and then we call it?
[MACHINE BEEPING]
Joseph Spencer, 79.
Fever and cough. From assisted living.
He has a history of mild Alzheimer's.
One, two, three.
Pulse 130. BP 90 over 60.
Gave him 500 cc's normal saline.
Hi, Mr. Spencer. I'm Dr. King.
This is Dr. Collins.
How are you feeling today?
Is it dinnertime?
I I'm not really hungry.
Do we have any paperwork
from the facility?
He has a POLST.
IV fluids and medications are fine,
but no intubation
and no chest compressions.
That's helpful.
Coarse rhonchi here.
Right middle lobe infiltrate.
Temp 102. Call a code sepsis.
- Mm-hmm.
- Code?
To make sure we check all of our boxes.
The federal government audits
our sepsis bundle performance
and publishes the data online.
Today, it better be perfect.
Two sets of blood cultures, lactic acid,
30 cc's per kilo NS,
a gram of ceftriaxone,
500 of azithromycin,
repeat lactic in three hours.
Nice.
Charging, and
Stop.
Call it.
Nursing home just faxed us a DNR.
[SCOFFS] Are you kidding me?
Power off the defibrillator
and the LUCAS.
Complete waste of time and money.
Who the hell works at that place?
A nurse taking care of 60 patients
who couldn't find the form.
She called 911 so she could
take care of the others.
OK, let's move her to the viewing room
- and notify the family.
- Yep.
One of the things we do here
is to take a moment of silence
when we lose a patient,
to respect their humanity
And also to remember
that this was somebody's child
or sibling or parent, friend.
I like the sound of funky music ♪
Oh. Ow, ow!
[MUSIC STOPS]
I am so sorry.
Maybe leave it on vibrate
while you're working.
- Later, Doc.
- You behave yourself now.
Always.
Your med student's back on her feet.
- How old's that kid?
- I don't know. I didn't ask.
What is she, some sort of savant?
I don't know. Maybe.
Dr. Robinavitch, hi.
I just wanted to apologize
for any trouble
my clumsiness might have caused.
I feel ridiculous.
Oh, I can't tell how many times
I've hit my head on an overhead lamp.
Twice I needed to get staples.
Why don't you go work
with Dr. McKay in triage?
That would help both of us.
Oh, I I don't need special treatment.
Good, because I don't give it.
[EXHALES]
Look, I know I might look too young,
but I studied my ass off to get here.
Probably harder than the others.
I earned this.
OK, look, I respect your dedication
and your determination,
but while you're here,
you're my responsibility.
And when one of my responsibilities
takes a header wow!
Abbot called for a surgical consult
on the SBO three hours ago.
You're very lucky they didn't perf.
I'm here to see my daughter.
I'm sorry, is that a patient?
You're talking to her.
Am I interrupting?
No.
No, we're done. We're good.
Come find me when you're ready
to present your next case.
Thank you.
So how's your first day going?
- It's great.
- Yeah?
Yeah, really great.
Hey, Crash, they're doing a dialysis
catheter insertion in North One
if you want to check it out.
Mm-hmm.
- The thing
- Did she say Crash?
No.
No, no, it's not crash.
Um, she said crush,
'cause I'm always crushing it.
[CHUCKLES]
Um, thanks for coming down,
Mom, but I've
I've got a patient.
Bye.
What do you want?
Um, I I just wanted to make
sure you're comfortable.
I am taking a dump in a dustpan,
so what's that fucking tell you?
Um, I'm
I'm clearly
I'm clearly in the wrong room.
- Yeah.
- I'm sorry.
Mm-hmm.
[GRUNTS, SPLATTERS]
So it would have been nice
if someone had told me
that Eileen Shamsi's daughter
was one of our med students.
What, and ruin the surprise?
Was it as awkward
as I hoped it would be?
You you have a mean streak
in you, you know that?
And what's the deal with the body in 19?
That's Abbot's MVC vet from last night.
Still waiting on next of kin.
- Supposedly on their way.
- OK.
Can we move him
to the viewing room, at least?
Nursing home DNR is heading there,
joining last night's Jane Doe.
Coroner's office is backed up.
Well, then our morgue
needs to take her, then.
Perlah.
Triathlete, Otis?
Oh, he's stable.
Repeat potassium is 6.1.
Renal wrote the dialysis order.
Tech should be down in 15 minutes.
Good. Thank you.
Language mystery solved yet?
No.
Hey, what's your take on dogs?
In what context?
For kids.
Kids and puppies go together
like fish and chips.
Man's best friend, you know?
Well, you don't have a dog.
I don't have a best friend.
- What am I?
- You're my best resident.
Big difference.
Yeah, but we're still friends.
Not if this conversation
goes on much longer.
I have a lethargic four-year-old,
no PMH, no antecedent illness,
no fever or vomiting.
Parents just couldn't
wake him up this morning.
- What room?
- Oh, south 15.
There's no nuchal rigidity,
no skin lesions, no focal neuro.
He looks well fed and cared for.
DKA from new-onset diabetes?
No, BG 85.
CBC, BMP, UA, and UDS ordered.
[EXHALES]
Can you wake up for me, Tyler?
He's not usually this sleepy?
No, and he barely flinched
for the blood test.
He wakes up at 90 miles an hour
and doesn't stop
till he passes out at night.
He passes out?
No, he just means he goes all day.
Any chance he could have
ingested something?
Any pills, vitamins,
any prescriptions
that may have been left around?
No, that's all kept locked
in the medicine cabinet.
The whole house is childproof.
Uh, what about alcohol?
Anything left out?
- No.
- What about pets?
No.
So he's usually, like, quite active?
- Very.
- Um, any injuries lately?
No.
Hasn't bumped his head recently?
Not that I'm aware of, but he does love
roughhousing with Drew.
But he never gets hurt.
Oxygen level is normal.
Good pulse and blood pressure.
No signs of infection.
We're gonna start
with blood and urine tests,
check for any metabolic abnormalities.
[GROANS] It's really throbbing.
Yeah, the blood's under pressure.
Gotta drain it.
No anesthesia, or
I'll stop before I hit the nail bed.
I hope.
Hey, eyes down here.
Watch and learn.
I'm just looking who to see next.
You're supposed to take them
in the order they arrive.
Yeah, I know how it works.
OK. No need to cry about it.
Do you want me to choose for you?
No.
Wow, pain's gone.
Thank you.
All right.
How about a 20-year-old cough in eight?
Should be easy. Probably viral.
I don't need an easy one.
Suit yourself, Huckleberry.
I'm gonna take the splitting headache.
Maybe I'll catch a subarachnoid
hemorrhage or something cool.
Hey, why do you keep calling me that?
Huckleberry?
It's a term of endearment.
It sounds like sarcasm.
You think?
Bordering on harassment.
Where are you from?
Broken Bow, Nebraska.
Jesus, where the hell is that?
It's about three and a half
hours west of Omaha.
Oh, yeah, just a little
south of nowhere.
What the hell do you do there?
My parents have a farm, so
You're a farm boy?
Yeah, I guess.
I rest my case, Huckleberry.
[SPEAKING NATIVE LANGUAGE]
I'm so sorry, ma'am.
We don't understand you.
[SPEAKING NATIVE LANGUAGE]
Oh.
Me, I'm Dr. Heather Collins.
I'm from here.
Portland, Oregon.
You.
Where are you from?
Uh-huh.
Uh, China? India?
I can't tell where you're pointing.
Tajikistan?
Nepal.
Mm.
- You're from Nepal.
- Nepali.
[LAUGHS]
Mom's got a bad burn.
Needs wound checks and hand therapy.
And I got a sneaking suspicion
she may be unhoused.
I'll talk to her.
We can offer some help.
Thank you, I appreciate it.
Ah, you're back.
Dr. Robby suggested
I might be of assistance.
Yeah, I could use the company.
Victoria Javadi, this is Kiara Alfaro.
She's the department social worker,
which pretty much makes her an angel.
- Welcome.
- Thanks.
Thank you.
So what rotation is this for you?
Um, third.
I've done OB-GYN and pedes.
You have any favorites?
Not really.
Well, what are you leaning towards?
I'm not really sure yet.
OK, well, you have time.
Uh, can I actually ask you
a personal question?
I'm 20, and I've earned
the right to be here.
Oh.
Yeah, I don't I don't
doubt that for a minute.
I I was actually wondering if
Dr. Eileen Shamsi from surgery
is a friend or relative of yours.
I saw you talking to her
in the hall and I thought
Yeah, she's my mother.
Oh.
Oh, wow.
Oh, that's cool.
- You're really only 20?
- Yeah.
And for the record, my
my father also works here.
He's an endocrinologist.
Oh, so it's like a family business.
[LAUGHS]
I'm sorry. That was a joke.
That was a joke.
And I'm sure that comes
with a lot of pressure.
And as for the age thing,
I'm a 42-year-old R2,
so I have my own haters, trust me.
[DOOR BEEPS] OK.
Um, sometimes when it gets busy,
we'll help the nurses
bring back patients.
- OK.
- Um, OK.
Next to come back is Fred Saeta.
Knee pain after a fall.
- Fred Sa
- Hey, Doc. Hi.
Hi. Doug Driscoll.
Any chance someone could see me now?
I've been here for, like, two hours.
Unfortunately, Mr. Driscoll,
there's a lot of patients
still ahead of you,
some of whom are severely ill.
Yeah, and I got chest pains
that woke me up
- in the middle of the night.
- Chest pain.
- Yeah.
- No, it's not plural.
It's just chest pain, not chest pains.
Yeah, and if I have more
than one, it's chest pains.
- Are you even a real doctor?
- She's a student doctor.
Yeah, well, keep her
the hell away from me.
I just need to see someone, OK? Not her.
Isn't chest pain an emergency?
I don't
It looks here like you got an EKG
five minutes after arrival,
so it's not a heart attack.
Yeah, but I'm supposed to get
a chest X-ray and blood tests.
Ah, and you are next
in line for the lab tech, OK?
So listen for your name. Excuse me.
- Fred
- [RETCHING]
Actually, can you get me
a wheelchair, please?
Uh, hi. I'm I'm Dr. McKay.
What's going on?
I, uh, found her
on the floor in the bathroom.
- She can't stop puking.
- What's her name?
Theresa. She's my mom.
Theresa?
Theresa, are you taking any medication?
No.
Any previous stomach problems?
Oh, no.
When did the vomiting begin?
Um, last night.
Last night.
Do you have any dizziness or fatigue?
Mystery solved.
Our lady with the degloved foot
is Nepali.
Oh, hey, congratulations.
Otis's BP is crashing. 70 over 50.
Still waiting for dialysis.
[MACHINE BEEPING RAPIDLY]
How you doing there, Otis?
- Not so good.
- 50 liters.
Non-rebreather, please.
Oh, crap.
Diastolic collapse of the right
atrium and right ventricle.
Tamponade from uremic effusion.
- That's why his BP is low?
- Yep.
Too much fluid and pressure
around the heart, chambers can't fill.
Otis, you've got
some fluid around your heart.
We need to get it off.
What's happening?
25 of Propofol,
10 cc's of lidocaine with epi,
pericardiocentesis tray.
I have to get that from central.
No, no. Just open a central line kit.
Dr. Santos, take the head of the bed
and bag him if he stops breathing,
compressions if we lose the carotid.
Prep and drape the subxiphoid, please.
- 10 cc's of 1% with.
- Chlorhexidine here.
- 25 or 27-gauge?
- Long 25, 25.
Thank you.
Injecting lidocaine.
Pressure down. 60 over 40.
Right.
Wait, you can't ultrasound and place.
I know, that's why I'm taking the probe.
18-gauge thin wall
on a 60 cc syringe, please, Dr. Collins.
Let's go.
You're going in right over
the center of my probe,
advancing very slowly.
We're looking for the hyperechoic tip.
Very, very slowly.
Do not hit that heart.
Dr. Santos, do you see
that sea of black?
That's the effusion.
We're looking for a little white dot.
There it is.
Got it.
Aspirating.
3 cc's should be enough.
[STEADY BEEPING]
Good.
Next, we'll place the guide wire,
and then the triple lumen catheter.
Pulse ox is 99.
Pressure is up. 124 over 78.
Looks like things are back to normal.
That was cool.
Four Zofrans on board.
That should stop the nausea.
David, have you had any vomiting?
- No.
- Anyone else sick at home?
No, it's just us.
My husband passed away
a few years ago, from COVID.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
Potassium, 3.1.
Is that bad?
It can cause heart problems.
But we're gonna correct it, OK?
10 in the bag, 20 PO.
Javadi, any questions?
Um
uh, David, have you two traveled
out of the country recently?
We never go anywhere.
Is she gonna have to stay here?
If the rest of the tests are good,
and she responds to treatment,
she can go home.
Mr. Milton, my name is Dennis Whitaker.
I'm one of the student doctors here.
I'll be seeing you first.
Nice to meet you.
BP's 150 over 90.
OK, that's just a touch high.
I forgot to take my damn
enalapril this morning.
Oh, we'll get that for you.
Tell me about this belly pain.
Uh, it started about here.
Um, woke me up at, like, 2:00 AM.
Pretty intense.
- Lasted about an hour.
- Mm-hmm.
Now it's gone.
Any fever or vomiting?
Nah, I never get sick.
OK.
Uh, what did you eat last night?
Oh, it was my wife's birthday.
I took her out to Sullivan's
for a steak.
OK.
Well, the exam is pretty benign.
I'm gonna test for gallstones.
If there is a stone
and you eat fatty food,
there can be pain when
the gallbladder contracts.
Oh. [CHUCKLES]
Uh, bingo.
One stone. There it is.
Do I need surgery?
Uh, you should be able
to manage with a low-fat diet.
But we'll send off labs
for liver and pancreas.
Just let us know
if you have any more pain.
OK.
Thanks.
Yeah, you bet.
Great.
You want an EKG?
For?
Heart attacks can present
as upper abdominal pain.
Um, yeah.
No, yeah, that's a great idea.
Thank you.
I'm going as fast as I can.
I'm picking up two more patients.
I didn't say anything.
I, uh I need a fresh set of eyes.
On what?
54-year-old woman brought in
with intractable vomiting
by her 18-year-old son.
I'm, um I'm getting a weird vibe.
How so?
Like, I don't know,
maybe she was given something.
Some sort of elder abuse.
There's just a strange dynamic
I can't quite figure out.
You're really good at
sussing out that sort of thing.
[LAUGHS] I don't know about that.
Uh, excuse me, Dr. Langdon.
Almost all of our labs are back
on sleeping boy Tyler.
All 100% normal.
What are we missing?
Is he waking up?
No, he's he's still fast asleep.
Most of the lab results
are in, and they look great.
No abnormal blood count, no, uh,
electrolyte abnormalities, no diabetes,
no, um, kidney disease, so
Good. So so what's wrong with him?
We're still trying to figure that out.
Did he, uh, have a playdate
yesterday, by chance?
No, he had preschool,
but he was fine when I picked him up.
Any kids in his class ill?
No, my phone tree would have lit up
if someone else was sick.
He eat anything this morning?
No.
Why?
It looks like some sort of gelatin.
Any chance he could have gotten
into some bath beads or laundry pods?
No, there's no such thing in our house.
What about gummies?
No, we're very strict about candy.
Right?
Oh, shit.
Danny.
What about Danny?
Your brother, he
he gave me some gummies
he got in Cleveland.
They were in my coat pocket.
Are you fucking serious?
Pot gummies?
Yes. I'm so sorry.
Let me call the lab.
Maybe the tox screen is back.
Hey, this is Dr. Langdon from the ED.
Can I fast-track a lab on a little boy,
last name Jones,
first name Tyler, tox screen?
Get the fuck out! I mean it.
Why don't we step outside,
and maybe you can help me
figure out how much he may have taken.
Thanks.
I appreciate that quick turnaround.
The labs confirm it.
Your son tested positive for cannabis.
This is a fucking nightmare.
Theresa, David, this is
my attending, Dr. Robinavitch.
Hi, I'm Dr. Robby.
We need to do a pelvic exam.
And David, I don't think you
want to be in here for that.
Definitely not.
Can you have Nurse Perlah
come join me, please?
Do you want a coffee
or a soda or something?
Why do I need a pelvic exam?
Uh, you don't.
Your son seems like a nice kid.
He's clearly worried about you.
But your exam and your labs
are not matching
any of the usual diagnoses,
so I'm not really sure what's going on.
I'm not here for me.
- I'm here for David.
- I don't understand.
He said that you've had
persistent vomiting,
some some dehydration.
I made myself sick with ipecac.
To induce vomiting?
Why would you do that?
So David would bring me here.
My son has some problems.
He needs professional help.
OK. What kind of problems?
Drugs, alcohol?
I found some of his writing.
I thought it was schoolwork,
but it wasn't.
It was lists of girls he wanted to hurt.
Hurt them how?
He said, "They should all
be eliminated."
Has David seen a therapist?
No.
He's not a bad kid,
but I'm afraid he's troubled,
and I didn't want to call the police
because I was afraid they'd overreact.
- He's just a kid.
- How old is David?
He just turned 18 last month.
Then he's considered an adult
and he would have to consent
to treatment.
Do you have any guns in the house?
No.
My husband did,
but I got rid of all of them
after he passed.
He's a good soul.
I just don't want to see him
hurt anyone or himself.
How are you feeling, Crash?
I'd really appreciate
if you didn't call me that.
Why not? It's a cool nickname.
You earned it. You should own it.
I don't like it.
All right. It's just a joke.
You know, if it makes you
feel any better,
I sharted the first time
I saw an emergency C-section.
Really?
Of course not.
Excuse me. I'll be right back.
I got a situation.
18-year-old kid brings in
his dehydrated mom.
Dad died during the pandemic.
Mom's vomiting is self-induced
for the sole purpose
of getting him here after she finds
his death list for classmates.
I OK.
What does she want us to do?
Help him, protect him, save him.
- Where is he now?
- Talking to McKay.
How are you doing?
Me? I'm good.
I'm always good. You know that.
Do I? Does anybody?
- I'm an open book.
- Not even close.
You do know you can always
come talk to me, right?
Yep.
Zofran. It's what
- How's it going over here?
- Good, good.
We're just going over
aftercare instructions,
prescription medications, special diet
for the next few days.
Dr. McKay, can you check
orthostatics on Mom?
I can.
David, I wanted you to meet Kiara.
She's a social worker here who helps
in situations like this.
We heard about your father's passing.
We're really sorry.
And we know that it can put
a lot of pressure
on somebody your age,
which combined with school
and now having to take care
of your mom, that's a lot.
It's fine.
We just want to make sure
that when your mom goes home,
you can handle it.
We want to make sure you have someone
you can talk to if you need to.
I'm OK.
I don't need to talk to anybody.
After a parent dies,
the sadness can last a long time.
How's that going for you?
It's not a problem.
What about school?
What about it?
Anything you enjoy there?
Not really.
A lot of people have thoughts
that can disturb them.
If you've had any,
it's OK to talk about it.
What's that have to do with my mom?
- Is she gonna be OK?
- Yeah, she's gonna be fine.
She's probably got a stomach virus,
maybe food poisoning.
I think she's more worried about you.
She always worries about me.
- Does she have a reason to?
- No.
It's almost 8:00. I gotta go.
Are you sure you wouldn't
prefer to wait with your mom?
I'm late for school.
She can just call me when she's ready.
It would actually be kind of helpful
to talk to you some more.
Hey, David.
David.
Just give me five minutes.
Leave me alone!
[PEOPLE GASPING]
Hey, David!
Shit.
Robby!
Robby.
Got a college kid, respiratory arrest,
coming in hot.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[TENSE MUSIC]
♪
[BABY CRYING]
[HIGH-PITCHED RINGING]
♪
[MACHINE BEEPING RAPIDLY]
Robby, we need to intubate here.
Dr. Adamson just went down
with a pulse ox of 65.
[BREATHING HEAVILY]
[RINGING INTENSIFIES]
Robby!
[THE SMILE'S "NO WORDS"]
♪
You're not so tough ♪
Your need to be loved ♪
You roast in the desert ♪
A scorched earth ♪
Your mind come loose ♪
The monster's back ♪
Toward a mirage ♪
No words ♪
♪
You're not so tough ♪
A whip, no crack ♪
A sudden switch ♪
A constant threat that ♪
You'll torch the place ♪
That plants are ♪
Snakes ♪