Emergency

Season 6 Episode 1

The Game

The Game 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 25, 1976

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

Paramedic / Emergency Rescue

Emergency! S6E1, "The Game": Emergency! follows paramedics and emergency rescue. This episode is treated as EMS assessment/rescue care when no specific condition ...

Episode shows
Emergency! S6E1, "The Game": Emergency! follows paramedics and emergency rescue. This episode is treated as EMS assessment/rescue care when no specific condition is named.
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.
emergency-medical-servicesparamedic-assessmenttrauma-assessment

About the Episode

Squad 51 is assigned to work the game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum between the USC Trojans and the visiting Stanford Cardinals,, where they deal with a choking victim, a man with breathing difficulties, an injured photographer, and a TV announcer with heart trouble. After John and Roy have not been watching the game enough, Dr. Brackett and Dixie cut them out of Rampart. Meanwhile, a woman accidentally pulls her husband off the roof into a tree.

Medical Relevance

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

The Medical Verdict

The Game 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.