The purpose of this study was to compare sociodemographic and medical characteristics of patients depicted on television vs. actual United States (US) Emergency Department (ED) patients.
Two independently working coders analyzed all 22 programs in one complete year of the popular ¡°emergency room¡± drama ER. Inter-rater reliability was excellent, and all initial coding differences were easily adjudicated. Actual health data were obtained from the National Heath and Ambulatory Medical Care Survey from the same year. Chi-squared goodness-of-fit tests were used to compare televised vs. real distribution across key sociodemographic and medical variables.
Ages at the extremes of age (i.e., ¡Ü 4 and ¡Ý 45 years) were less commonly represented on television compared with reality. Characters on television vs. reality were less commonly women (31.2 % ?vs. 52.9 % , respectively), African-American (12.7 % vs. 20.3 % ), or Hispanic (7.1 % vs. 12.5 % ). The two most common acuity categories for television were the extreme categories ¡°non-urgent¡± and ¡°emergent,¡± whereas the two most common categories for reality were the middle categories ¡°semi-urgent¡± and ¡°urgent.¡± Televised visits compared with reality were most commonly due to injury (63.5 % vs. 37.0 % , respectively), and televised injuries were less commonly work-related (4.2 % vs. 14.8 % , respectively).
Comparison of represented and actual characteristics of ED patients may be valuable in helping us determine what types of patient misperceptions may exist, as well as what types of interventions may be beneficial in correcting that potential misinformation.