I’m not a doctor but I play one on TV: E.R. and the place of contemporary health care in fixing crisis

This paper is an examination of the popular TV drama E.R. What is notable for health geographers about E.R. is how the show offers a representation of health care and the role of place in creating ways to provide care. Indeed, the place of health care—the emergency room—is the point of reference for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health & place 2006-06, Vol.12 (2), p.180-194
Hauptverfasser: Lepofsky, Jonathan, Nash, Sally, Kaserman, Bonnie, Gesler, Wil
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper is an examination of the popular TV drama E.R. What is notable for health geographers about E.R. is how the show offers a representation of health care and the role of place in creating ways to provide care. Indeed, the place of health care—the emergency room—is the point of reference for the show's weekly dramas and centers the activity on the screen. We posit that the show's success stems from how crisis has become a central component of discourses about health care and that E.R. offers one highly seductive interpretation of how to deal with crisis in health care and care delivery. E.R. provides a representation of crisis by constructing three scales of intervention as the best sites to respond to and fix crisis: bodies, medical networks, and the urban social relations of the city. Order is designed around these scales which serve to map out where medical interventions can be made within the discursive regime of crisis. What E.R. provides is a powerful, if limited, “realistic” portrayal about the role of health care today—a role that is increasingly considered to be shaped by the need to intervene in crisis.
ISSN:1353-8292
1873-2054
DOI:10.1016/j.healthplace.2004.11.003