The Good Doctor 6x4 ((LINK))
At this point, it seems that Morgan made a huge mistake turning down that job in New York. She and Park are back to doing nothing but sniping at each other, and for good measure, she had some silly argument with Glassman over who had to take an undesirable patient.
The Good Doctor 6x4
On the other hand, Lim is getting ready for work and she runs into her handsome neighbor by the elevator. She had a meltdown before him a few weeks back and he wants to know if she is okay. She tells him that she had some honest discussions with the bane of her existence aka Shaun Murphy and she feels good about it.
Asher and Powell get into a misunderstanding as he tries to understand her better. Powell mistakes his curiosity about her military life before becoming a doctor as a sign of a lack of confidence. In actuality, Asher is trying to understand her but his methods were a bit ignorant and judgmental. In the end, Powell opens up to him and tells him why she chose the military.
Petitioner testified that her husband had been regularly employed as a grip for at least ten years; was in good health and never complained; that he was five feet six inches in height, and weighed one hundred thirty-two pounds and was very strong for a man of his size; that on the evening of October 18, 1938, he returned home from his day's work and said he did not feel well; that he ate very little dinner and retired early but did not sleep; that he told her in lifting a parallel that day the weight had shifted a little more to him and he felt something break in his chest, and that he hurt his knees; that he ached all over and complained of a pain in his chest through the heart region. The next day, October 19th, he returned home after working about three hours and said he "felt awfully bad and seemed to be in considerable pain ... through the heart region, and across his back and his knees. ... He couldn't eat anything." He worked on the 20th and during that day was sent to the first aid department and in turn was sent to Drs. Dickey and Cass, doctors for the insurance carrier, who put him under a light, but did not examine him; that he still complained to her of the pain in his back and chest. On the 21st he again returned to work but in the evening he said he felt awfully bad and stated to his wife, "I think I would be pretty well if I hadn't gone over and helped the fellow lift those planks ... We had to lift them up and it seemed to hurt me." That night petitioner called the family physician, Dr. Ringnell, and for the next two days decedent remained in bed most of the time, complained of pain in his chest and seemed exhausted. On the morning of the 24th "he got up in the morning and sat out in the sun for about two hours that day, and then he went back, he said he guessed he felt better in bed; so he went back to bed again until evening, he got up and went to the bathroom and that was where I found him. He had fainted and fallen on the floor ... he had fallen against the glass knobs on the doors and cut his head in two places." Petitioner then called Dr. Reinhart, the neighborhood doctor, who dressed the wounds and gave him some shots, which produced a coma from that time until he passed away at 5:10 o'clock the next morning, October 25th. Petitioner further testified that so [36 Cal. App. 2d 693] far as she knew, when her husband fainted and fell on the night of the 24th, it was the first time he had fainted in his life, and that he never had any spells of unconsciousness prior to that time.
Harland West, foreman of the grip department at R. K. O. Studios for eight years, testified that decedent was a "very good workman, very trustworthy and dependable", and performed his duties properly and satisfactorily; that decedent on October 19th complained to him of feeling nauseated and ill, and told him that he had strained himself when he lifted a parallel the day before.
Dr. Reinhart testified that he attended decedent on the night before he died and was also present at a post-mortem examination made by the coroner's physician which showed a hemorrhage into the heart muscle, coronary thrombosis and pleurisy and that an acute myocarditis must have formed; that taking into consideration the fact that there was no history of any prior heart trouble, it was his opinion that the condition found to exist was attributable to the strain of lifting of which decedent had told him when he called to see him; that he also discovered at the post-mortem examination that the muscles of the heart had ruptured and separated. When asked with reference to chronic myocarditis being present at the time of the examination, he replied: "If there had been chronic enlargement of the heart, unless it was some time prior to the accident, it would not cause a rupture of the heart." This doctor defined chronic myocarditis as enlargement of the heart which is to be expected in people of decedent's age, but not a cause of death by itself, "especially when there are no complaints any other way".
[1] From the foregoing resume, it becomes at once apparent that both the doctors and the laymen, who observed the decedent shortly after the lifting incident, with the exception of Dr. Cass, were of the opinion that death was directly attributable thereto, while the medical experts representing the insurance carrier, as well as the surgeon, who performed the second autopsy at the request of such carrier, were of the opinion that death was caused by a preexisting pathological condition of the heart without reference to the strain of lifting the parallel which weighed between 500 and 700 pounds.
In the case of Mark v. Industrial Acc. Com., 29 Cal. App. 2d 495, 500 [84 PaCal.2d 1071], the court held that expert testimony is no stronger than the facts upon which it is predicated, citing in support of such theory Winthrop v. Industrial Acc. Com., 213 Cal. 351, in which latter case the Supreme Court said at page 354 [2 PaCal.2d 142]: "The case does not present a true conflict of evidence. The opinions of the doctors who were of the view that the fall did not produce the twisting of the pedicle, as stated in their letter reports, were based on the theory that severe symptoms did not appear until some time after the fall. The evidence, on the other hand, shows that petitioner suffered severe abdominal pains almost immediately thereafter, although her condition naturally become aggravated as time elapsed. Said opinions being based on a state of facts not shown by the record to exist, are not in conflict with the opinions of the doctors whose statements were based on the facts actually shown to exist by the evidence of petitioner and the doctors who attended her."
'the good doctor temporada 6' Online Completa Cuevana Un cirujano joven y autista que padece el síndrome del sabio empieza a trabajar en un hospital prestigioso. Allá tendrá que vencer el escepticismo con el que sus colegas lo reciben. 041b061a72