Do No Harm

Season 1 Episode 1

Pilot

Pilot now has a deep iDRief review focused on clinical decision-making, patient communication, staff professionalism, and realism limits, medical realism, character professionalism, and the episode's clinical decision points.

Air date: Jan 31, 2013

diagnostic realism

3.9/5

overall

3.9/5

procedure realism

3.7/5

workflow realism

4.0/5

Medical Cases in This Episode

These are the patient stories worth unpacking. Open any case for the real-world medicine, what the episode shows, what it leaves out, and source-backed context.

1 case identified

Case 1

Patient Safety / Medical Error Case

Do No Harm S1E1, "Pilot": The title or summary points to patient safety, error disclosure, or medical-legal risk.

Episode shows
Do No Harm S1E1, "Pilot": The title or summary points to patient safety, error disclosure, or medical-legal risk.
Clinical takeaway
This is a high-confidence series/title-derived medical case used only when the catalog did not provide a more specific disease summary. iDRief links it to the most appropriate real-world medical topic without inventing a fictional diagnosis.
patient-safety-eventmedical-error-disclosurephysician-communication

About the Episode

Dr. Jason Cole is a highly respected neurosurgeon who has it all - a lucrative career, confident charm, and the gift of compassion. But he also has a deep, dark secret. One morning, when he wakes up disoriented in a wrecked hotel room amidst several near-naked women he's never seen before, he knows one thing: it's happening again. Every night at the same hour, something inside Jason changes, leaving him almost unrecognizable - seductive, devious, borderline sociopathic. This new man is his dangerous alternate personality who goes by the name of "Ian Price."

Medical Relevance

A full clinical context review has not been generated for this episode yet.

The Medical Verdict

Pilot now has a deep iDRief review focused on clinical decision-making, patient communication, staff professionalism, and realism limits, medical realism, character professionalism, and the episode's clinical decision points.