← Back to episode
Emergency MedicineAccuracy 3.7/5

Drive: Black Eye and IPV Concern

Visible injury in a partner context should prompt private, nonjudgmental safety screening and resource offering.

In Plain English

Visible injury in a partner context should prompt private, nonjudgmental safety screening and resource offering.

What Happened in the Episode

Pratt is concerned when Chen comes to work with a black eye.

Clinical Concept

Black Eye and IPV Concern; Visible injury in a partner context should prompt private, nonjudgmental safety screening and resource offering.

What ER Teams Would Evaluate

A real team would stabilize urgent problems, verify patient identity, review history and exposures, use targeted testing, involve specialists when needed, document decisions, and reassess when new risk appears.

Treatment and Management Overview

Management depends on cause, severity, capacity, consent, available resources, specialist input, and safe follow-up.

What TV Gets Right

The episode summary supports this as a concrete medical, safety, diagnostic, or care-pathway thread.

What TV Compresses

The summary does not support adding unshown vital signs, medication doses, test values, exact procedure timing, consent dialogue, or outcomes.

Sources and Further Reading