Cool-Beans
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- Joined
- Apr 24, 2006
- Messages
- 16,604
The kids just called out, "Asystole!"
As always, I called, "They shocking?"
And came the reply, "They got him back!"
It's a long tradition. I watch all medical shows with a grain of salt. The drama is more important than the accuracy. I'm sure the same can be said of the legal world and Law & Order, etc. When you know a little more than the writers do, you have to back off.
And the drama of seeing a flatline, followed by the rush for the paddles...and the moment where you wait to see if it worked and a normal sinus rhythm returns...well, it's cool. People are glued. They made a whole movie about it - "Flatliners."
But, as my kids know, it isn't possible. You don't bring people back by shocking asystole (flatline.) You do shock some stuff, but not that. The kids know it irks me, so they always call out when TV or movie people go asystolic.
For asystole, you do CPR, epi and atropine. Not as dramatic, I know.
But it is my pet peeve of the day.
As always, I called, "They shocking?"
And came the reply, "They got him back!"
It's a long tradition. I watch all medical shows with a grain of salt. The drama is more important than the accuracy. I'm sure the same can be said of the legal world and Law & Order, etc. When you know a little more than the writers do, you have to back off.
And the drama of seeing a flatline, followed by the rush for the paddles...and the moment where you wait to see if it worked and a normal sinus rhythm returns...well, it's cool. People are glued. They made a whole movie about it - "Flatliners."
But, as my kids know, it isn't possible. You don't bring people back by shocking asystole (flatline.) You do shock some stuff, but not that. The kids know it irks me, so they always call out when TV or movie people go asystolic.
For asystole, you do CPR, epi and atropine. Not as dramatic, I know.
But it is my pet peeve of the day.