Dr. Ken

Season 2 Episode 2

Ken and Allison Share a Patient

Ken and Allison Share a Patient 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: Sep 30, 2016

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

Diagnostic Puzzle

Dr. Ken S2E2, "Ken and Allison Share a Patient": On Allison's first work day at Welltopia, she and Ken try to prove the other wrong when it comes to a patient's d...

Episode shows
Dr. Ken S2E2, "Ken and Allison Share a Patient": On Allison's first work day at Welltopia, she and Ken try to prove the other wrong when it comes to a patient's diagnosis. After Damona introduces her new boyfriend, Eric, to co-workers, Pat surprises everyone a...
Clinical takeaway
Diagnostic Puzzle is the medically relevant concept supported by the episode summary. The episode page explains the fictional scene; the linked topic page explains the real-world clinical concept without giving medical advice.
diagnostic-reasoningundiagnosed-illnessrare-disease-diagnostic-puzzle

About the Episode

On Allison's first work day at Welltopia, she and Ken try to prove the other wrong when it comes to a patient's diagnosis. After Damona introduces her new boyfriend, Eric, to co-workers, Pat surprises everyone and announces he's also dating someone. Meanwhile, it's Dave's first day of middle school, and he's nervous he won't be able to make friends, so he turns to D.K. to help reinvent his image.

Medical Relevance

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

The Medical Verdict

Ken and Allison Share a Patient 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.