Medical drama

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A medical drama is a television movie or film[1] in which events center upon a hospital, clinic, physician's office, an ambulance staff, or any medical environment. Most recent medical dramatic programming goes beyond the events pertaining to the characters' jobs and portray some aspects of their personal lives. The longest running medical drama in the world is the British series Casualty, airing since 1986, and the longest running medical soap opera is General Hospital, running since 1963.[2]

History

Chicago Med. In 1986, Casualty started airing on BBC One in the United Kingdom. Casualty continues to be aired, making it the longest running TV medical drama. Its sister show Holby City aired from 1999 to 2022.[4] In 2000, the BBC commissioned Doctors, a medical drama soap that has continued to air since and has become the BBC's flagship daytime series.[5]

1964 work on the nature of media
, predicted success for this particular genre on TV.

One of the most vivid examples of the tactile quality of the TV image occurs in medical experience. In closed-circuit instruction in surgery, medical students from the first reported a strange effect-that they seemed not to be watching an operation, but performing it. They felt that they were holding the scalpel. Thus the TV image, in fostering a passion for depth involvement in every aspect of experience, creates an obsession with bodily welfare. The sudden emergence of the TV medico and the hospital ward as a program to rival the western is perfectly natural. It would be possible to list a dozen untried kinds of programs that would prove immediately popular for the same reasons. Tom Dooley and his epic of Medicare for the backward society was a natural outgrowth of the first TV decade.[6]

According to Professor George Ikkos, the president of the psychiatry sector of the Royal Society of Medicine, medical dramas have accumulated large audiences because the characters in the shows are often depicted as everyday citizens who have extraordinary careers, which promotes a sense of relatability among viewers.[7] Medical drama is sometimes used in medical education; a systematic review of such uses indicated that it is a "feasible and acceptable" complement to medical education.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Planca, Daphne (15 September 2015). "Andrew Garfield-starred true-life medical drama 'Breathe' jointly goes to Bleecker Street, Participant Media". ASZ News.
  2. ^ "Longest-running TV medical drama". Guinness World Records.
  3. ^ "The Show That Started It All". emsworld.com. January 18, 2012. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
  4. ^ Kanter, Jake (2 June 2021). "'Holby City': Stalwart BBC Medical Drama Canceled After 23 Years". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  5. ^ Honebeek, Talya (29 November 2021). "Where is Doctors filmed? All the BBC soap's Birmingham filming locations". Birmingham Mail. (Reach plc). Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  6. Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man
    . Chap. 31
  7. ^ Roxby, Philippa (2012-11-10). "Why are medical dramas so popular?". BBC News. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  8. S2CID 46842723
    .

External links