Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Good Episodes of House, M.D.: The Pilot

I actually started watching House, M.D. during reruns of the second season.  Even in high school, I recognized how far-fetched some of the portrayals of medicine were but also appreciated that the show was much smarter than most medical dramas (especially Grey's Anatomy).  Mysteries have always been my thing and I always love a good detective-type character, especially those who pay homage to Sherlock Holmes like House does (think about it: House = Holmes, Wilson = Watson; maybe the fellows = the Baker Street Irregulars?)

My mom got me the first season for my birthday which I found really good.  Of course, you need to suspend your disbelief on a couple things:
1) No real hospital administrator would tolerate Dr. House.
2) Technologists and nurses handle a lot of things like MRIs and blood draws but there needed to be a vehicle for conversation for the fellows with each other, the patient, and/or House.
3) Princeton-Plainsboro has an interesting set up that appears to give its doctors a salary and make them do clinic duty.  I have not really encountered such a setup but it provides for good television.

Once you get over that, the process of coming up with a differential diagnoses and  thinking through medicine is actually quite good (at least for television which never shows this part).  A few years ago I started following the blog of a doctor who evaluates all the House episodes for their medical merit (http://www.politedissent.com/).  It has been really helpful as a student to read his stuff and sort through the crap of each episode.  He also reads comics which is awesome.

In the pilot episode, a woman named Rebecca Adler (another Holmes reference to Irene Adler, the only woman who ever got the better of him) becomes aphasic and seizures during class.  The aphasia goes away eventually but no one seems to be able to find out what's going on with her which is how she comes to House. After several missteps, avoidance of patient contact, and illegal breaking and entering, House leaps to the idea that she has a tapeworm from eating pork products (which I am guessing wasn't really considered because she was assumed to be Jewish because Wilson lied about his relation to her but it could have also just been that pork triggered tapeworm in House's mind which really is the way it works sometimes).  The medicine, itself, is a little haphazard with inferences made on the smallest of details but to be honest, I've seen worse in real life.  The reality is that there is a lot of uncertainty in medicine and House navigated it in his own way that is conveniently entertaining for television.  

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