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Character death and 15th season. He died in the Season 15 premiere, "Life After Death," from injuries sustained in an explosion. Dr. Morris tried to save him, but failed. It was further revealed in the episode that Pratt was going to receive an offer to become the new Chief of the ER.
Greg succumbs to his injuries in the ambulance explosion, and with no brain activity, is pronounced dead, leaving the rest of the ER staff distraught.
The death shocked fans, and it was particularly difficult to witness his co-workers’ grief as his organs were harvested for donation. What made his passing even more tragic was the fact that Pratt was about to receive an offer to become the new Chief of the ER, a job he had pursued for months.
Every lingering hope was subsequently dashed when the premiere episode of season 15 confirmed that despite all the efforts that were made to save Pratt’s life, he succumbed to his injuries and...
In the first episode of season 15, after appearing to survive his injuries from the explosion, he dies of a probable air embolism. Pratt is pronounced dead after his brain shows no signs of...
Pratt died in the season 15 premiere from injuries sustained in that explosion, despite the efforts of Dr. Morris and the team, which greatly devastated his ER colleagues. He ends up having to be put on a bypass machine due to damage to his heart while he displays signs of brain death, presumed to be from an air embolism caused by the explosion.
Many of the doctors in ER die during the 15 seasons of the NBC medical drama. Here are all the doctors who died on ER. Which ER doctors left and how did they die?
A little video of the last moments of Greg Pratt (Portrayed by Mekhi Phifer) in the last season of ER...Music by Pete Yorn - Lose You (Also used in House, MD.)
Slapping fans in the face, ER's 15th season opens with a bang — literally, as Dr. Greg Pratt (Mekhi Phifer) is severely injured in an ambulance explosion. More than half the episode is spent ...
In many ways it was just as bad, if not worse than All in the Family in season 6. Air embolism (“bubbles” in a vessel, likely from the impact trauma, that move to the brain) was the cause of death. The expanding pustatile mass (the lump on his neck) was a weird addition that didn’t make any sense.