INTERVIEW

The Metaphorical Medicine of House

Written by Diane Kristine
Published January 06, 2008
Part of House
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6

Morrison believes most viewers get a positive impression of science from television, but worries "there are a significant number of viewers who cannot always discern what is real and what is fiction."

"Every doctor has had patients come in complaining of a disease they saw on Grey’s Anatomy or desiring some treatment they saw on House," he added. "I wish patients wouldn’t watch medical shows for answers, but many do. This has been going on since the first medical shows appeared, and will continue as long as there are medical dramas. It’s something we have to bear in mind, both as doctors and writers. The most important aspect of this for the writers, as far as I'm concerned, is that they not give false hope to patients with a serious disease, and conversely, that they don’t exaggerate the seriousness of other diseases."

Hugh Laurie and Janel Moloney in HouseSanders isn't as concerned. "I think people have enough real-life experience that they're consistently and accurately able to draw a line between fiction and reality. The specifics of disease, which House often gets wrong, no one cares about that."

"But I know that people know that when they're in a hospital, if they don't want something done to them, they say no," she said. "I think most people know that in a hospital, nobody is going to stab you with a scalpel or a needle just to see what happens."

"I think the ways House is outrageous are ways people are familiar with and understand."

Sanders is most bothered by the questionable ethics of House. "I think there are very few doctors who set out to kill a patient, even out of mercy, and yet that has happened more than once on House. I think there are very few doctors who would be willing to force their perspective on a patient. Not only is it against the law, as House has touched on, not only is it assault, but it really goes so deeply against so many of the things we value."

"The way House stabs people with syringes when they're not expecting it, it's only because he's such a limited human being that he has to resort to that," she continued. "The rest of us use our relationship with the patient."

However, while she believes the viewer is on House's side even in his darker ethical moments, she doesn't worry that he'll be taken as a role model. "What can you say, the guy's a jerk. Doctors shouldn't be impaired when they're taking care of patients, either."

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6

Diane is a publications manager who's addicted to television, movies, and books and justifies her pop culture obsessions by writing about them for Blogcritics. She also runs the TV, Eh? website, a compilation of news and information about Canadian television series.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
The Metaphorical Medicine of House
Published: January 06, 2008
Type: Interview
Section: Video
Filed Under: Interviews, Video: Drama, Video: Television
Part of a feature: House
Writer: Diane Kristine
Diane Kristine's BC Writer page
Diane Kristine's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
Articles in this series
BC articles by Diane Kristine
Interviews
Video: Drama
Video: Television
All Video Articles
Diane Kristine's personal weblog
All Interview articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — January 7, 2008 @ 09:49AM — Namaste

Thanks for the interviews, DK. It's good to get the point of view of the people who are medical professionals out there -- and who have nitpicked with the best -- and to know that they appreciate the difference between reality and entertainment as well. I do agree that it's sometimes a wide gulf, but I always say that if I want reality, I'll watch Discovery Health (and even reality is heavily edited).

#2 — January 7, 2008 @ 15:15PM — Diane Kristine

Hi Namaste, good to "see" you. I agree, and it's funny that we seem to expect more from a medical drama than a cop show or show set in an office, for example. There's not a lot of accuracy about any workplace you see on TV.

#3 — January 8, 2008 @ 22:16PM — Mary K. Williams [URL]

This was very, very good Diana. Glad you're keeping track of the good Dr. still.

#4 — January 9, 2008 @ 10:05AM — Phillip Winn [URL]

If work environments were realistically portrayed on television, what would be the point of watching? We could just go to work!

Real-life hospitals are fascinating at first, then dreadfully boring most of the time. A TV show has to remain interesting 17 hours a year for as many years as it can. I've watched 79 episodes of House and I'm still interested. I can't imagine still being fascinated after 55 hours of observing a real hospital.

#5 — January 15, 2008 @ 19:29PM — Karen Smith [URL]

Thank you Diane for a well written, very insightful look at the BEST show on television. Great job!

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/72674)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments