In the engrossing and shocking new Netflix documentary series Critical: Between Life and Death, 40 cameras are embedded for 21 days across the entire London Major Trauma System, which includes major trauma centres at The Royal London Hospital, St George's Hospital, King's College Hospital and St Mary's Hospital.
I studied at City St George's, University of London, and during my rotations, I fell in love with orthopaedic surgery. I liked the power tools – the screwdriver, mallet, and my favourite, the drill! I did my five-year orthopaedic training at the Royal London Hospital. I then spent a year at Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, a major trauma centre in Paris. I came back to a job at King’s College and it was very fast-paced. I thrive on stress.
I appeared in Channel 4’s Emergency and 24 hours in A&E. The same production company behind those shows told us Netflix loved them and would like to do their own medical series. With Netflix it’s a great opportunity to expose the NHS to the world.
The camera crew followed me everywhere I went, but they never got in my way. They were constantly checking they weren’t doing anything that would cause an issue, or they’d say, “Are you OK? Do you want us to take a step back?” The only time I’d switch off my mic was when I went to the loo! There were usually two, sometimes three, cameras. Before I saw a patient, the production team asked them or their relatives if it was OK to film them. Then the camera crew would either get the green light or stand down.
View Green Video on the source websiteMost consultants say no to being filmed, because they’re worried about something bad happening. I'm dealing with complex, unpredictable injuries, so there’s a much higher risk of patient dissatisfaction and problems, but I'm confident in my skills, so I'm not too concerned about what others say or think. Every surgeon encounters complications – there was one that happened intraoperatively on Emergency where I had to intervene to stop it from becoming a disaster – but we discuss them and learn from them so we can better ourselves. We're constantly pushing the boundaries and improving.
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