It may have been an unusually stylized episode, but its flashbacks to such personal moments in the surgeon's lives lent it all the drama and emotion fans expect of a Grey's episode. So he began imagining his mother to humanize his patients for himself and perform better. Grey an experience in which he lost a patient who also died of pancreatic cancer, just like his mom, and that his training to remain emotionally detached while performing surgery worked against him. Of course, he was only a child at the time, so there was no way he would have been able to spot her symptoms and give a diagnosis.īut it's clear that her suffering for so long, only to be given six months to live when she finally was diagnosed, motivated Richard to become a doctor. Eventually, it becomes clear that Gail is Richard's mom, and that he still feels guilty over not being able to intervene when she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Based on the way she's dressed, and the way she talks about her sons and "the war," it seems like she's a figure from Richard's childhood. Webber's memory was of a woman named Gail, a cello teacher for whom he recalls very specific details. Jerrika Hinton, who plays Stephanie, told TVGuide in an interview: "The way that this is set up with all of the magical realism in there, all of the spectacle.standing in the room and seeing the special sets they built specifically for this and the little shadowboxes built into the set, it was all super theatrical on the day." As the episode unfolds, however, treating John Doe dredges up memories for each of the doctors, which come into focus right in the operating room. It's a teaching technique from Eliza Minnick, and, since resident Stephanie is in the room, he decides to deploy it for her benefit. Patients say that they trusted the providers decisions and the provider explained conditions well. Webber gave surgeons the directive to imagine a backstory for the patient on the table in an effort to stop Meredith and Owen's quibbling over how best to treat him. Richard Webber, DDS receive good ratings from patients There is a star rating of 5/5 for Dr. This episode felt markedly different from the usual fare on Grey's for a reason - it was stylized to feel like a one-act play. He named the patient Gail and started making up personal details for her, but who is Gail on Grey's Anatomy? She seemed like more than just a figment of Richard's imagination. Webber inventing a backstory for a surgical patient in critical condition to help the doctors treat him better. Grey's Anatomy's Season 13 episode "The Room Where It Happens" started off oddly, with Dr.
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