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Old 02-15-2010, 01:18 AM
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Don't do what the TV docs do!

TV medical dramas show viewers the wrong response

Sun, Feb 14 2010
NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Medical teams from "ER" or "House" may race to respond to a seizure but nearly half of the time the TV doctors and nurses do the wrong thing, according to a Canadian study.

Researchers from Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, screened the popular medical dramas "Grey's Anatomy," "House," "Private Practice" and "ER" to see if TV medical dramas were helping to educate the public about first aid and seizures.

The researchers found in 327 episodes screened, 59 seizures occurred. Fifty-one seizures took place in a hospital. Nearly all first aid was performed by nurses or doctors.

But the study found inappropriate practices such as holding the person down, trying to stop involuntary movements or putting something in the person's mouth, occurred in 25 cases, or nearly 46 percent of the incidents.

First aid management was shown appropriately in 17 seizures, or about 29 percent, and appropriateness of first aid could not be determined in 15 incidents, or 25 percent, according to the study released Sunday.

Researcher Andrew Moeller said television dramas were potentially a powerful method of educating the public so it was a concern to find that TV shows inaccurately showed seizure management half the time. "People with epilepsy should lobby the television industry to adhere to guidelines for first aid management of seizures," Moeller said in a statement.

The study is to be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's Annual Meeting in Toronto in April.

From Reuters
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Old 02-15-2010, 02:23 PM
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but proper practice makes for dull tv... gotta fake the drama ya know... tv is all about what the people what to see, not what they should see

practically every industry proper practice that has been on tv/film has been screwed up by the tv to make it more appealing... forensics, driving, cooking, IT, healthcare, sports, you name it

tv is escapism.. if it was real and educational, it would be a documentary
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Old 02-15-2010, 02:32 PM
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Medical procedures portrayed incorrectly on TV are nowhere near the butchering of technology. It's comical watching 24 for me.
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