Doctors Weigh In On The 40 Times House M.D. Got It Totally Right Or Horribly Wrong
For eight gripping seasons, Dr. Gregory House limped his way through some of the most complex, rare and dramatic cases ever seen on television, often insulting his team while at it… the Vicodin never far behind.
Millions watched in awe, amazed by how this sarcastic, wildcard of a medical professional could solve the deepest mysteries while breaking almost all the rules. House had many believing that any sneeze could be lupus, any rash could be deadly and any headache could point to copper poisoning.
Oh, the drama. The tension. The chaos. And the relief... It had viewers on the edge of their seats.
But how accurate was the show, really? We might never have known were it not for one curious netizen who recently asked doctors online, "Which House M.D. diagnoses were brilliant medicine, and which patients would have had no hope of surviving the treatment in the real world?"
Over a thousand responses came pouring in, faster than House could say, "It's lupus." Bored Panda has dissected all of them, to come up with a list of only the best. A few of these expert opinions might surprise you.
We also explore why some doctors love watching medical series, even when they aren't accurate. You'll find that info between the images.
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I think it's worth keeping in mind the the show wasn't strictly "medically themed" as such. It was more of a "modern Sherlock Holmes-style mystery" show that was set in a hospital. They were never really going for medical realism.
For those who never realised this: Holmes - House. Watson - Wilson. And House's address was 221B Baker street.
I doubt many people know that House was based on Lisa Sanders' monthly "Diagnosis" column in The New York Times Magazine. Each week she'd write about an obscure or rare disorder/disease.
Gripping, fascinating, entertaining, and wildly unethical, House, M.D. wasn't your average medical drama... and it was never meant to be.
The online media database IMDb describes the main character Dr. Gregory House as "an antisocial maverick doctor specializing in diagnostic medicine [who] does whatever it takes to solve puzzling cases that come his way."
While House was marketed as one of the most accurate medical tv series out there, many experts would beg to differ. But even some of the real doctors who call BS on House's diagnoses admit they thoroughly enjoyed watching the show.
None of them had a chance of affording him in the US healthcare system.
Especially the ordinary folks. I cured you! Here’s your bill and your new cardboard apartment under the freeway!
Its not a "healthcare system", what the US has is a medical profit system.
That's why it was clearly stated to be a teaching hospital. A flimsy excuse, but the best they could do.
I lost my job last week, which also means I lost my health insurance. I take three prescription medications. Two of those are expensive beyond my level of affordability. I am so glad that I had just picked up refills the week before, but even then I am still going to have to rotate taking/not taking them in order to stretch them until I can find a new job and new insurance. There are many wonderful things about this country, but there are also many terrible ones.
Due to my age and disability, nearly everything is covered by my health insurance, including very expensive prescriptions. Problem is that most doctors who accept this insurance graduated at the bottom of their class, so I'm paying in other ways.
Ugh. I know this means nothing in the scheme of things, but I'm sorry that you have to go through that.
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Not a doctor, but it’s my all-time favorite show. Watching it with my daughter - she was inspired to study science and found she loves it. She is considering becoming a doctor as a result.
I don’t care if the show is accurate or not - it inspired a love of science in my kid, and I’m forever grateful.
My daughter was addicted and found it fascinating (House and Scrubs) She decided she wanted to be a doctor....and is now a Resident (Registrar) in A+E.
Congrqtulations! I'm sure you're very proud of your daughter, and thankful to the show. Although I think your daughter had in mind the idea of working helping others before starting to watch the show.
Load More Replies...Yes as a kid, you get idea of the field not so much take a tv show for gospel, except one time with sister act when I wanted to briefly be a nun cos that’s what I thought it was, I didn’t have a religious upbringing or family members at this stage .
Take an expert who goes by Scott, for example. He spent hours reviewing and dissecting every episode of House on his blog, Polite Dissent. The blogger is a family practitioner, and has been lauded by experts as "one of the most dependable and dedicated analysts of medical TV shows."
While Scott has ripped apart the medical accuracy of House, he also doesn't hold back from praising it. "While it's certainly true that the quality of the show has suffered some over the past few seasons, it still remains the best medical show, if not the best show outright, on television," Scott once wrote.
I always laugh when I watch House and the MDs are administering the meds and taking blood/tissue samples, rather than nursing staff. There's almost no nursing staff portrayed on the show. ABSURD.
One of my coworkers (an RN) once had a patient insist that a “real doctor” draw their blood. So we (just for fun) told the doctor, who looked horrified. “Tell him I haven’t done it since med school, well over a decade ago.” The doc told us to tell him she was refusing for his own safety.
Any patient with a lick of sense should know this. If the task is usually done by a nurse, clearly they are the ones most experienced in it. Drawing blood is maybe the most obvious of these. I have veins that are quite hard to stick, but most of the time I gave blood the nurses could manage to do it in a jiffy, although they always mentioned that it was hard. One time I had to have blood drawn for a medical test at the GPs office, and even though two nurses were present, the doc insisted that he'd do it. I warned him in advance that it's not easy, and the nurses offered to take over. No, he'll do it! He stuck me about 5 times, then tried with the veins on the back of my hand, then a few more tries on my other arm, before he finally succeeded. By the next day I was black and blue. If I ever have to do this again, I'll walk out of the office before I let him come near me with a needle.
Load More Replies...And there's minimal laboratory staff portrayed. House and his merry men do all the processing that biochemists, haematology, toxicology, etc all train for years to do. There was an episode where a patient had a brain tumour. House sat in the corner of the operating theatre, unscrubbed, no gloves, ordinary clothes, and watched the neurosurgeon dig around the patient's brain and then got handed a lump of tumour. He put it onto a glass slide, held it up to the light and said "that's a XXX tumour" So no biomedical scientist involved (4-5 years of training), and no pathologist (12-13 years of training (UK). No, just House, who can do every other búggers job and all at the same time.
I love Hugh Laurie and watched some of the show, it was wildly inaccurate with respect to medicine but a pretty entertaining show.
But hilariously inaccurate. Pro tip: you don't need 3 specialist doctors to run an MRI, it's a huge waste of time and very unlikely any of them have any idea how to get a scan started in the first place, let alone how to read the images.
I used to watch it with friends and we’d joke at each diagnosis until it was time for the right diagnosis to be delivered.
I just saw a Dermatologist, a specialist, and I had to ask, "shouldn't I remove my clothes so you can examine my skin?" I wasn't impressed.
Well, that depends a bit why you went to the dermatologist. It might be news to you but it is not all just skin. A dermatologist is also a specialist for many other things including such charming things like syphillis ( not in every country) so we usually evaluate why you come to visit before we ask you to remove your clothes. There is no need for it if you have a long history of psoriasis for example. If you came for a screening, then yes, you should remove your clothes 🤣, but still we usually have a short conversation before not because it is allways necessary but to make the patient more comfortable. For reasons i can not understand people do not like it so much if they just walked in and the first thing you say is " get naked". Weird, i know
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No comment on his diagnostic skills. However, I have shown the scene of him asking a woman who kept running out of her MDI to demonstrate to him how she was using it as an example to my students of why patient teach back is so important. Don’t assume they understand their medications just bc they don’t have any questions!
Just because medical staff and pharmacists know how it works doesn't mean patients do. Make sure they know how to take their meds/treatments BEFORE they leave your office.
No one told me not to drink coffee before taking my Thyroid meds, coffee reduces it's efficiency
Load More Replies...As one John Hopkins Medicine School newsletter pointed out, Scott's love for the show probably has to do with the fact that he wasn't watching it to learn, or to fact-check.
He was glued to the screen purely for entertainment purposes. And as many of us will agree, House was, and still is, wildly entertaining, even though it has been years since the show was discontinued.
"But there's also something about House's rude, blunt personality that appeals to viewers, especially doctors who would never be able to blow off clinic duty in real life," reads the newsletter. "The hero-as-a-villain is rarely done well, and while we probably wouldn't want to have House's heart, we wouldn't mind getting access to his brain."
Not a physician, but there's an episode where he's treating a lady in just the brief clinic thing not the main case of the episode. She hit her head in a car wreck like a week prior and damaged her pituitary gland causing diabetes insipidus from a lack of anti diuretic hormone. He figured it out because she'd been drinking a lot of water. I saw that episode just before my interview for my first paramedic job. During the interview I was given an oral scenario for a fairly similar patient. Now DI wasn't really covered during paramedic school back then(it's still not given much attention). I don't think it was ever covered in class and was like two sentences in the entire textbook basically just saying it existed. I took the risk and sent it explaining that I thought the patient had damaged their pituitary in a fall family mentioned they'd had prior to symptoms starting and had developed diabetes insipidus causing their electrolytes to be out of balance because they wasn't reabsorbing water normally. They were so impressed I got immediately offered the job and was able to negotiate higher starting pay. I've made more money and gotten better opportunities at every agency I've ever worked based on that one stupid interview where I rolled the dice on a random writer on House having done their homework. Looking back at the show now with a lot more medical education and experience the main cases tended to be really exaggerated and incorrect, but the little random throw aways were often fairly accurate.
I loved those clinic clips the most. It was either a really basic, silly problem or some huge, unexpected thing.
Yes! I remember him telling a patient with chronic diarrhea and stomach issues to smoke one or two cigarettes a day. This actually helps ulcerative colitis.
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As an er doctor. When the altered patient or trauma patient hasn’t gotten their head ct until a week in the admission. Son, that ct is the first thing I’m ordering out of the ED.
That is the correct answer. Take it from someone who has brain damage from TBIs that weren't taken seriously by ER staff.
I've been to the ER for concussion more than once and a head CT was done withing minutes.
When a patient arrives in the emergency room after a traumatic event or with a change in alertness, the first step is to rule out bleeding or other brain injury using a CT scan of the head. Time is of the essence – the faster action is taken in these cases, the better the outcome for the patient.
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House was like Scooby-Doo for adults. Mystery solved g**g!
"I would have been diagnosed sooner if it weren't for those meddling interns."
Another doctor, Kyle Bradford Jones, MD has also admitted to binge-watching House. He once wrote an entire post on the physicianspractice.com site about what he's learned from the show, saying being a viewer has actually made him a better physician.
Jones adds that he can't pinpoint why he loves House so much but there could be several reasons. "Maybe it's because I like to appear smart by pointing out the ways in which the writers got a medical term or concept wrong. Maybe it's because I want to imagine my practice as dramatic as those on TV, saving lives in a thrilling and effective manner. Or maybe I just find it entertaining," he wrote.
I will say the episode where they used ketamine to treat House’s leg pain was ahead of its time and I have to credit it with being able to discuss alternative treatments for chronic pain. Not a doctor, just someone with chronic pain that no one was willing to treat without narcotics for a long long time.
Ketamine is classified as a dissociative anesthetic - Schedule III non-narcotic substance - in the US.
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House diagnosed a patient with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and let's assume it was correct for a second. His treatment was tic-tacs in a pill container because "it's all in the patient's head" and a placebo would "fix them". CFS (now called Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) is a neuro-immune mess that can be seen in a laboratory setting, and is not psychological. It needs to be managed with rest and pacing, not weird placebos. Patients who are given placebos often over-exert, which can make the already-debilitating disease permanently worse. ME/CFS has the lowest average quality of life of any disease studied, including various cancers, depression, and more, and it's because the most debilitating forms of it are completely awful. [https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0132421](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0132421) So House probably gaslit this patient into making themselves permanently worse, leading to much worse quality of life and/or death.
THIS!!! It’s because of shows like this that people with ME/CFS are not believed and not helped.
I’m old enough now to remember when other now perfectly accepted diagnosis were once ‘all in the patient’s head’ and ‘the problem is them sharing their beliefs and creating almost a mass hysteria’. These include coeliac disease, multiple sclerosis, and Lyme disease. The medical profession doesn’t know everything and never will.
None of them. Honestly the show was just so insanely inaccurate it's impossible to remember and track. There's no central all diagnosis super team. There's no super surgeon Robert Chase that is on said diagnosis team and then also somehow a plastic surgeon, neuro surgeon, orthopedist, general surgeon and cardio thoracic surgeon. The dude would have been in residency until he was 65.
The Pitt was crazy accurate, albeit the nature of that shift wasn't accurate.
Scrubs was oddly and beautifully close to accurate.
One of the things the show has taught Jones is to always advocate for his patients. "For all of Dr. House's faults and eccentricities, he will fight tooth and nail for his patients. He will buck all administrators, colleagues, and standard practices to ensure that his patient gets the utmost care to save or improve their lives," writes the expert.
"Patients obviously come to us at their sickest and most vulnerable, at a time when they most need an advocate against any barriers they may be facing," he adds. "Patients may not have a way to recognize the extent of your medical knowledge, but they will never turn on someone who fights fiercely for them."
I gotta say, prescribing 1 cigarette to help a patients constipation has always stuck with me.
Smokers know how quick that first one of the day can get your guts going.
A cigarette and a cup of coffee is one of the most effective laxatives.
It took a long while to figure out how to help things along in the morning after I quit! 🤣
Foreman getting Naegleria fowleri and surviving it without any brain damage kind of ruined the show for me. It is almost always fatal, and there is no known treatment regimen with proven efficacy. The handful of known survivors reported in medical literature typically have a prompt diagnosis and initiation of amphotericin B (Foreman was definitely delayed). Because those patients survived with it, amphotericin B (with or without other d***s) is pretty much universally given in Nargleria cases, and the vast majority still die anyway.
Don’t swim in freshwater lakes and ponds, and definitely plug your nose if you do.
I'm not a doctor, but I'm pretty sure there are more nurses at a real hospital. There's like five people working there and they're all House's team.
Yep, that is because they do the nurses job as well 🤣. And the also the scans and operations 🤣. I am surprised they did not the cleaning too. If a nurse had the misfortune to show up in any episode, they were usually yelled at for doing their job. Once and for all, a nurse is not there to do what a doctor cant be bothered with. Those are ( in most countries at least) highly trained professionals too. Nurses know many things some doctors have no clue about. For example, a nurse working in cardiology knows for sure a lot more about hearts than a doctor working in another field
You guys get a lot more floor / real life experience in bulk daily. It’s kinda funny when you compare the time and people a Dr will see over you guys, the more experience and knowledge you’d pick up and get they are driving around acting like gods, albeit my fire incident (Dr Fiona wood treated me personally). Every hospital experience I’ve had, the nurse teams are the ones that saved me and made me better
Load More Replies...Jones concludes that while House, M.D. is a "dramatic television show with multiple inaccuracies and stretches of reality," it's a useful t**l for real doctors, and a reminder of how they can improve in their own professions.
And as the Collider site rightfully points out, "If we wanted every bit of a medical drama to be realistic, we’d be better off going and sitting in a hospital. We wouldn’t want to do that, though, because the point of TV is to be entertained."
Not a doctor (shh!) but there was a doctor who maintained a blog throughout the original run of the show commenting on the accuracy of the presentation and diagnostics of each case. The original site is gone now, but the Internet Archive has it saved. It was fun to re-read it while doing a rewatch last year.
And I'll bet there are cops and firefighters out there who could write a blog on emergency/police procedurals. TV shows aren't documentaries, they're merely entertainment.
Yeah, my forensic anthropology prof had some definite opinions about Bones. But she did say it was entertaining, at least!
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When you go to medical school, one of the phrases you hear over and over again is "when you hear hoof beats, think horses, not zebras." In other words, investigate the common things first, because you will rarely encounter rare conditions. Not only is House SOLELY zebras, it's the rarest zebras of all, things that you might see once in a career (but more likely might only read about), on a weekly basis.
There's a reason nobody ever roleplays being an accountant.
Load More Replies...Not totally on topic but, as an ex vet nurse, I can't help wonder if you really should think zebras if you work in South Africa or a zoo?
I trained at a teaching hospital. I never once saw an appendectomy, but I did see Amsterdam dwarf syndrome.
I’m an ENT and the kid with the cochlear implant stood out to me. 1 A general surgeon can’t do a cochlear implant. Not all ENTs even do them. 2 He did it at the same time as a “dirty” abdominal case. You don’t do “clean” and “dirty” cases together. That’s how you get ecoli meningitis 3 Cochlear implants require you to order an expensive device (they don’t just keep a device that’s more expensive than your car on the shelf) and have a specialty trained audiologist in the OR with you to program it.
I remember an episode where they ruled out something by doing a muscle biopsy. It was such a throwaway thing like it was as simple as a blood test and they got instant answers.
I’ve had a muscle biopsy. It’s a full proper surgery, I couldn’t walk for 2 weeks, and it took 4 weeks for results to come back because it’s apparently quite complicated pathology.
There was one ep that featured a disease I happen to be very familiar with, POTS. And to their credit, the patient of the week did have a very classic presentation of it. But where it fell off for me was a whole team of fancy diagnosticians taking a week to reach the diagnosis, when it was SUCH a classic presentation that anyone who'd so much as done an internship round in cardio would have known it instantly. It wasn't bad writing exactly - not by the lax standards of that show, anyway - but it definitely c*****d me up because it SHOULD have been one of the ten-second bits of House looking at a chart, yelling a diagnosis, and wandering off again.
I've seen every episode of House several times, and can't remember one where the patient had POTS. I remember one where he THOUGHT it was POTS but it turned out the guy had narrowing at the base of his skull. Anyone know what episode this is referring to??
Here's the list https://house.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_medical_diagnoses; it's never POTS. In S6E20 (the episode you're referring to) the patient is treated for POTS but that makes things worse. On the bright side: it's the Midnight Train to Georgia karaoke episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-CygvcDoME
Load More Replies...I know quite a few people who have POTS, and they all had to fight to get a diagnosis. Even my friend who completely failed the tilt table test. I don’t know why physicians are so hesitant about diagnosing POTS, but they are.
Dr. House should have been dead from Tylenol o******e/liver failure like 3 episodes in.
this would rather spoil the entertainment for the rest of us, though. Maybe he's an outlier? Just a suggestion ;-)
It's like the Bond film where he's kllled in the opening scene. "Dang, I didn't know it was a 4 minute movie!"
Load More Replies...OMG that reminds me of the methadone episode (where House is on methadone). They made the whole deal where if he had just *one* shot of alcohol he’d stop breathing and die. The amount of opiates/alcohol he was used to, no. Like, it’s still a super-bad idea, but one ounce of an alcohol ain’t gonna do it.
Foreman. When he contacted a *Naegleria fowleri* meningoencephalitis in the episodes Euphoria. [S2E20-21] (the episode with the w**d farm watering system and blind pigeon).
I saw it during the year in medical college when we had the subject of Microbiology. We had to study the amoeba, and even looked it up for this episode. We even had a discussion about the topic in question amongst us friends, because mortality at that time (2014) was 99% with only 1 or 2 reported survival cases. Current mortality rate still is 97-98%. So at the time it aired, in 2006, survival stats had to be even lesser.
Not exactly what you're asking for, but I have an example of something most real world doctors could have caught.
There was an episode where the patient turned out to have Hemochromatosis. This essentially means that the body has a large build-up of iron in the bloodstream. I'd be amazed if an actual doctor missed that on the bloodwork
TIL: There are cases of this happening. Score 1 for House, I guess.
IIRC, the discovery that some people accumulate iron instead of metabolizing or passing it was caused by an older man in a hospital wearing only a hospital gown and slippers who set off a metal detector in the hallway. They kept running him through the metal detector until they thought to check his blood. IIRC, he had about 3-4 grams of dissolved iron in his body, just enough to trip the detector.
Also, IIRC, there was no established safe upper limit for iron in the blood before this incident.
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I have myasthenia gravis. The f*****g tensilon test on the bicycle road racer was hilarious.
I went from drooping eyelids and severely slurred speech to having control over my face and hands and then back again in like 5 minutes.
I didn't fall down, but I was right back to slurring.
I also have myasthenia gravis, and I had an interesting tensilon test as well! I was in full myasthenic crisis, on a ventilator and everything, the gave me the shot and I sat bolt upright and ripped out my intubation tube and started cursing. Then pretty much fell backwards and stopped breathing again. Scared the devil out of every one!
Foreman was negligent for not seeing rabies in that woman. A f*****g bat flew from her homeless shanty tent.
Oh that episode! If i remember correctly the bat bit him and he showed symptoms allready wich meant he was a dead man walking irl. You show rabies symptoms, you are dead. Period
A number of years ago a girl was bitten by a rabid animal, maybe a hat?, and recovered. It was a long and iffy treatment though. Never heard of another one.
Load More Replies...Firstly, not every bat is rabid, regardless of your housing. Secondly, you need an 'exchange of fluids' to catch rabies, usually a bat bite or bat saliva on an open wound. Thirdly, it can take up to 8 - 12 weeks before rabies symptoms appear. Lastly, any sane, or halfway intelligent, person who touches or is touched by a bat (or other possible source of rabies) reports this and gets prophylactic treatment. But, House is fiction and enjoyable fiction at that.
It was just for plot drama and internal conflict. Foreman had a brother who was in prison and sometimes homeless, if I remember correctly.
As a doctor, House was probably my favorite medical drama. All the others except Scrubs are kind of all the same. That being said the medicine in it was all over the place, I wouldn’t say any of the diagnoses were particularly brilliant bc the almost of none of the conditions were diagnosed the way they would be in real life.
For UK viewers, by far away the best and the most accurate medical drama series was "Cardiac Arrest." Well worth watching if you can, although if you've ever carried a bleeper or pager, it'll give you horrible flashbacks...
Years ago, I brought the show up to my Rheumatologist when my relatively rare disease was the diagnosis. He went on a long angry rant about how any competent doctor can diagnosis that show within the first 5 minutes.
I didn't care. I'm not a doctor.
They can maybe "Spot the Diagnosis" on the show, maybe, but real life people with the same diagnosis can present with widely varying symptoms. For example, The DVT sufferer usually has pain, redness, minor swelling and skin warmth. My brother had none of these, just gradually worsening pain in his leg. The ED docs were surprised then the ultrasound sowed a very large clot. Doctors are fallible humans, and humans are a wild and unpredictable lot. Please remember, Medicine is as much an art as it is a science: there are still a myriad of unknowns.
You have to understand, the show wasn’t written by doctors. It was written by TV writers with no background knowledge of medicine.
None of it is brilliant medicine, it’s just entertainment. .
Lisa Sanders was the primary medical consultant and she wrote a book *Diagnosis : solving the most baffling medical mysteries. Broadway Books. August 13, 2019* which discussed quite a few of the conditions in the 'House' series.
One of the lead writers, DR. David Foster, is, checks notes, A DOCTOR… 🤦♀️
Perhaps, but the writers should have a medical consultant so they don't make obvious mistakes. It might actually help viewers that have the real medical issues instead of getting misdiagnosed.
There are several rare genetic diseases (like factor V Leiden, which my mom has) that would have been immediately obvious in infancy or childhood so it is just an idiotic thing to include in a differential of an adult. Yeah, they might have overlapping symptoms but obviously the cause is different.
I can not remember that particular episode and i do not know where OP is from but factor 5 is not something you randomly test for unless there is family history or symptoms wich not necessarrily occur. I maybe missed the point of that post here, it is written a bit confusing to me
I have a rare lung issue called tracheo-broncomalasia. ( Could have spelled it wrong). Usually presents in premature babies and I was diagnosed in my early 60's. Never heard of it before and since, but it has been life altering and limiting. No cure, just symptom relief.
I have to disagree. Anyone who shows up with a DVT should get tested for Factor V. Heterozygous (you get one good version and one bad version from your parents) for Factor V is not that uncommon. Homozygous is (bad version of the gene from both parents.) is much more uncommon, but also much more dangerous. The test takes a while, so be sure to follow up to get your results. I was discharged before my results came back, so no one saw it. This was pre-electronic medical record, and so long ago that people with DVTs were admitted for a week of IV heparin. Lots of places still don't have electronic patient management/medical record, so be sure to ask.
Anyone who shows up with DVT IS tested for factor V, at least in a proper hospital. Like i said above, not done just because... but with family history AND symptoms of DVT for example an absolute must. From what you write i assume it was some time in the 90s? Even then, the doctor should have told you to follow up, american healthcare i guess? Some people there are really a waste of oxygen but it is not surprising if you read that people are going to medschool with a shady degree from some online highschool 🙄
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Brilliant: House diagnosing rare autoimmune or metabolic disorders with just a hunch—stuff like the guy with the exploding leg veins or the girl whose body literally produced its own p****n. Those are surprisingly plausible in the real world; some clever doctors actually do solve crazy cases like that.
No hope IRL: pretty much every patient who follows House’s ‘break all the rules’ treatments. Giving someone a risky d**g with 0 testing, doing experimental surgeries without consent, or letting them near a tapeworm trial? Most of those people would have died or sued in real life. Basically, House’s genius works on TV, not in any hospital worth its malpractice insurance.
Yet look at the damage caused by Christopher Duntsch due to hospitals moving him on instead of dealing with him.
From Wikipedia: Christopher Daniel Duntsch (born April 3, 1971)[1] is a former American neurosurgeon who has been nicknamed Dr. Death[2] for 33 incidents of gross neurosurgical malpractice while working at hospitals in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, which maimed 31 patients and caused 2 deaths.[3] He was accused of injuring 33 out of 38 patients in less than two years. He was allowed to continue practicing because hospital officials and regulators found it hard to believe a surgeon could be so incompetent and dangerous. His license was finally revoked by the Texas Medical Board in 2013.[4][5] In 2017, Duntsch was convicted of maiming one of his patients and sentenced to life imprisonment.[6]
Load More Replies...Bringing a live pig into the hospital to exchange blood with a patient? Totally normal, I do it all the time.
If it's the episode I'm thinking it is (does it feature mafioso and a gender change?) The pig was used to filter blood, not exchange it. The pig died.
It’s never lupus.
WRONG. Sometimes it IS lupus. Just ask my daughter, who was misdiagnosed for years. When she finally got her lupus diagnosis, it was almost a relief for her to finally know the truth.
There's one episode where House sees a red thong and decides they must do a Congo red stain to test for amyloid.
He comes in " quick, put the Congo red on, polarise the light..."
Dude, it takes me an hour to do a Congo red stain and there ain't any magic microscope computer that can tell you it's type AA.
There is one episode where Chase is tasked with doing gram stains all night, next morning House asks him if he had anything, and he says "purple fingers" which amuses me greatly.
Not a doctor but i work in the lab. One of the first episodes had a patient that they were worried was deficient in potassium. They broke into this persons house to see if they were right. A test for potassium can be done easily within 15 minutes of that blood work being drawn.
There was also one episode where they were checking for lupus? More specifically they did an ANA test and irl this test is done using a fluorescent microscope and looking at where fluorescent bound antibodies are binding on special cells. In the show one of the characters kinda shook a clear test tube and was like “well their ANA is negative!”.
Wow. I've had potassium deficiency more than once, and all it took was a blood test. I would have hated if they'd broken into my apartment to check for that.
Back in the day the basic pre-clinical test for potassium deficiency was 2 bananas a day and see if symptoms start to ease off. If so, proceed to labs.
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There used to be a Twitter thread about how all the House episodes would have been solved with basic medicines and all House did was prolong the process.
I don’t remember the link, maybe someone else has it.
Really? Prolong the diagnosis? It was a 50 minute show, I can't even get an appointment in that period of time ;)
I loved House as a show. But deep down I think it was created by Big Health Insurance to normalize doing insane tests at ridiculous cost to maximize profits. I also think CSI was created to normalize an increased surveillance state, so take it with a grain of salt!
I am binge watching House M.D., everyone's favourite diagnostician for the first time, and some of the fantastical scenarios while implausible are still interesting.
The show has some wild cases... and of course, the classic House diagnostic loop: throw out three exotic conditions, treat the wrong one, nearly k**l the patient, then circle back to the first idea they had. So I’m curious:
- Which diagnoses or treatments were actually brilliant medicine?
- Which ones would never have worked outside of TV land?
- And if the patients were real, how many would’ve actually survived? For days, months, or years?
I'm only part way through the show but enjoying every moment :).
THIS! THIS is what always pissed me off: the classic House diagnostic loop: throw out three exotic conditions, treat the wrong one, nearly k**l the patient, then circle back to the first idea they had, or a new one. So many times he preached the patient needed to do what he said against their wishes because he was so knowledgeable, only to be wrong...
Don't get me wrong, I adore House. But I think those writers only knew like five diseases. I think they had to bring in a guest writer for every episode just to have something to write about. Everything was either lupus or whipples. The one episode where somebody would definitely have died is (trying not to give spoilers) the kid whose cat died and dad breaks doc's nose, or the girl with a tick in her nethers. My favorite episode, though, is the chess kid with an attitude problem and a fondness for shrooms.
No, the best one was the woman with syphilis! I loved that game old gal.
I wrote this above but it bears repeating. There's a reason nobody ever roleplays being an accountant. If they show the world as mundane as it really is, we don't need the show. We can just go outside.
Couldn't stand this show. It got really old really fast.
That is true, when it aired first i was still in residency and i have to admit i found it rather amusing. If i watch it now the lack of empathy and the way the patients are all portrayed as absolute idiots makes me angry
Load More Replies...If cop shows were accurate, they'd show cops doing paperwork 80-90% of the time.
So true. Like a show about lawyers would be them basically doing paperwork all day.
Load More Replies...As someone with a chronic illness that took from 1998-2011 to be diagnosed. Most people with chronic conditions WISH for someone like House. I've met doctors who seem to think they need to act like him, but without his brains.
That is sadly a trend that was caused by the show. Suddenly bedside manners were a thing for pussies. Never liked that because the people who did that were in most cases just kunts. Making the patient comfortable is a vital part of the job because they are much less likely to cooperate if they do hate you. What those people do not get in their empty head is: the patient knows what the problem is and thw patient will tell you of you ask the right questions. You just have to fcking listen!
Load More Replies...In the real world, Holmes would be wrong as often as House. Remember the time he deduced a man was smart based on hat size? It's only in their own stories that they are good at reasoning.
I liked it when it aired. Looking back now (and I have a few DVDs etc of it) I don't really know why I did. I think Hugh Laurie is fab, but I prefer him with his proper accent. I also like Jesse Spencer, but he wasn't around for the whole thing. House as a character was grating, obnoxious and generally unlikeable, and he never had strong support characters (I've forgotten his name, as that's how memorable he is(n't) to me), but edit: I need to reword this, the character of House's best friend was just wet. No issues with the actor himself. Thankfully, I hate watching TV so I never actually watched the whole series; I resorted to wikis and fandom for summaries. Looking back now, I'm grateful I didn't waste my time.
Due to family history, I found nothing heroic in the idea of a functioning, medical genius d**g a****t…the fact that this hospital, and this medical team would have bankrupted every single one of their patients: Oh, you “thought” they might have one of these five diseases, so you ordered all five tests? Yeah, we’re denying coverage of all of them. And the fact that House, his staff, the Board, and the hospital would have been sued into oblivion by the third case: you broke into my house?!…We cured you…You broke into my home!!!
Spot on. I worked in public hospitals, including in an a*******n medicine clinic. The clinic specialized in treating doctors with a*******n issues. Just one example - I would not want be a patient of one particular client, an anesthetist who would regularly drink and party all night, then sleep in their car outside the hospital before they came into anesthetize patients that morning. The guy was in his late 40s/early 50s, and this was a regular occurrence! I could never see anything funny or endearing about House.
Load More Replies...I wrote this above but it bears repeating. There's a reason nobody ever roleplays being an accountant. If they show the world as mundane as it really is, we don't need the show. We can just go outside.
Couldn't stand this show. It got really old really fast.
That is true, when it aired first i was still in residency and i have to admit i found it rather amusing. If i watch it now the lack of empathy and the way the patients are all portrayed as absolute idiots makes me angry
Load More Replies...If cop shows were accurate, they'd show cops doing paperwork 80-90% of the time.
So true. Like a show about lawyers would be them basically doing paperwork all day.
Load More Replies...As someone with a chronic illness that took from 1998-2011 to be diagnosed. Most people with chronic conditions WISH for someone like House. I've met doctors who seem to think they need to act like him, but without his brains.
That is sadly a trend that was caused by the show. Suddenly bedside manners were a thing for pussies. Never liked that because the people who did that were in most cases just kunts. Making the patient comfortable is a vital part of the job because they are much less likely to cooperate if they do hate you. What those people do not get in their empty head is: the patient knows what the problem is and thw patient will tell you of you ask the right questions. You just have to fcking listen!
Load More Replies...In the real world, Holmes would be wrong as often as House. Remember the time he deduced a man was smart based on hat size? It's only in their own stories that they are good at reasoning.
I liked it when it aired. Looking back now (and I have a few DVDs etc of it) I don't really know why I did. I think Hugh Laurie is fab, but I prefer him with his proper accent. I also like Jesse Spencer, but he wasn't around for the whole thing. House as a character was grating, obnoxious and generally unlikeable, and he never had strong support characters (I've forgotten his name, as that's how memorable he is(n't) to me), but edit: I need to reword this, the character of House's best friend was just wet. No issues with the actor himself. Thankfully, I hate watching TV so I never actually watched the whole series; I resorted to wikis and fandom for summaries. Looking back now, I'm grateful I didn't waste my time.
Due to family history, I found nothing heroic in the idea of a functioning, medical genius d**g a****t…the fact that this hospital, and this medical team would have bankrupted every single one of their patients: Oh, you “thought” they might have one of these five diseases, so you ordered all five tests? Yeah, we’re denying coverage of all of them. And the fact that House, his staff, the Board, and the hospital would have been sued into oblivion by the third case: you broke into my house?!…We cured you…You broke into my home!!!
Spot on. I worked in public hospitals, including in an a*******n medicine clinic. The clinic specialized in treating doctors with a*******n issues. Just one example - I would not want be a patient of one particular client, an anesthetist who would regularly drink and party all night, then sleep in their car outside the hospital before they came into anesthetize patients that morning. The guy was in his late 40s/early 50s, and this was a regular occurrence! I could never see anything funny or endearing about House.
Load More Replies...
