Surprise, surprise, right? TV shows aren’t realistic. But why should this matter? Because our country is increasingly sedentary and learns from what they see on TV.
Here’s the article, but here is a brief excerpt of the statistics:
“The study looked at the depiction of seizure care for all episodes of “Grey’s Anatomy,” House, M.D.,” and “Private Practice,” and the last five seasons of “ER.” The research will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s annual meeting in Toronto, Ontario, in April.
In nearly 46 percent of seizure cases, characters on these shows delivered inappropriate treatments such as holding the person down, trying to stop involuntary movements or putting something in the person’s mouth, the study said. The shows did show proper treatment about 29 percent of the time, and in the remaining 25 percent of the time, the accuracy of the portrayal couldn’t be determined.”
The disturbing part is that these shows all have medical consultants, so it would be easy to get it right. (Side note: How funny is it the American Academy of Neurology is having their annual meeting in Canada?) Of course, the odds of your average person having to care for someone in the middle of a seizure, I would imagine, are pretty low. Of greater concern is how something like CPR is depicted on these shows. I started laughing once it was so bad. The article even goes on to discuss this:
“There have been other studies showing that television medical shows do a poor job of portraying procedures appropriately and accurately. Of concern is one about cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, Sanders said. A 1996 New England Journal of Medicine study of “ER,” “Chicago Hope” and “Rescue 911″ found that in the episodes viewed, 75 percent of patients survived cardiac arrest immediately, and 67 percent appeared to be well enough to leave the hospital. In real life, long-term survival rates vary from 2 to 30 percent for cardiac arrest outside a hospital and 6.5 to 15 percent for arrests inside a hospital, the study said.
False depictions of CPR are probably more alarming than misrepresented seizure care, Sanders said. Normally, seizure care is left to doctors, who don’t get their information on treatments from television. But CPR is a procedure that lay people do learn how to do, and they might get false impressions from watching dramas, she said.”
CPR is something every lay person should learn. While the statistics for survival are low, it is typically still the best hope, and CPR is not technically difficult. You can learn in a half-day, if that.
And now the humor I promised in my last post. Dr. Centor of DB’s Medical Rants recently linked to our blog. He is on the faculty of the institution that brought us the following: