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A medical drama is a television movie or film [1] in which events center upon a hospital, clinic, doctor's office, a paramedic, or any other medical topic or environment.Most recent medical dramatic programming goes beyond the events pertaining to the characters' jobs and portray some aspects of their personal lives.
Iryu: Team Medical Dragon (2006–07, 2010) Code Blue (2008, 2010) Team Batista no Eikō (2008) GodHand Teru (2009) Jin (2009-2011) General Rouge no Gaisen (2010) Saijou-no-Meii (2011) Doctor-X: Surgeon Michiko Daimon (2012–present) Clinic on the Sea (2013) Iryu: Team Medical Dragon (2014) A LIFE (2017) Koi wa Tsuzuku yo Doko Made mo (2020 ...
ABC's Grey's Anatomy is a medical drama that employs the use of medical romance heavily throughout its narrative. The series follows the life and medical practice of the titular Meredith Grey as she balances her own personal life with the demanding stress of hospital bureaucracy and practice. Beginning in 2005 and currently still in production ...
The show is the second longest-running primetime medical drama in American television history behind Grey's Anatomy. The highest awarded medical drama, ER won 128 industry awards from 442 nominations, including the Peabody Award in 1995, TCA Award for Program of the Year in 1995, and Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series in 1996. [1]
More than 30 years after rising to global fame as John Carter, a wide-eyed, fresh-faced intern, on the NBC smash-hit medical drama “ER,” Wyle has returned to the same genre as an overworked ...
The medical drama, which aired from 1994 to 2009, followed the inner life of an emergency room in a fictionalized version of Chicago's real Cook County Hospital. Wyle starred as Dr. John Carter ...
NBC; Max/Warrick Page Noah Wyle's newest medical drama The Pitt feels reminiscent of his days playing John Carter on ER — but that doesn't mean the shows are the same. ER, which aired from 1994 ...
Set in a large metropolitan hospital, the show dealt with both the professional and the personal sides of doctors' lives. Crane was City Hospital's medical director, and episodes usually related to him directly or as he was advising other doctors. Having Crane, a female doctor, "was rather uncommon for medical shows of this period." [3]