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- REVIEW, Page 94TELEVISIONKindly Cuts
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- By RICHARD ZOGLIN
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- SHOW: The Human FActor
- TIME: Thursdays, 10 P.M. EDT, CBS
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- THE BOTTOM LINE: A familiar prescription still produces
- feel-good results.
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- "I've done over 500 of these procedures, and I haven't
- lost a patient yet," snarls a brilliant surgeon to the lowly
- medical student who has dared to offer a pre-op suggestion. What
- happens next (as if you didn't know) is that because of his
- arrogance, the surgeon almost loses a patient.
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- Such morality tales are part of the daily rounds in cbs's
- new medical series The Human Factor, which debuts this week.
- The show's guiding thesis is that doctors don't pay enough
- attention to the emotional side of treating patients. Viewers,
- however, may well glean another message: ban all senior medical
- experts from your hospital-room door, and put yourself in the
- hands of the first caring youngster you see roaming the halls.
- Oh, well, who said TV medical shows had to make sense?
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- Executive producer Dick Wolf (Law & Order) at least
- doesn't trivialize the well-worn subject. He avoids Bochco-like
- comic subplots and focuses on weighty medical-ethical issues
- rather than on hospital soap opera. Early stories range from a
- boxer showing symptoms of Parkinson's disease to a couple who
- refuse surgery for their young son because of religious
- convictions. And John Mahoney, as a doctor who teaches a course
- in humanistic medicine, is the best gruff-but-kindly TV
- physician since Dr. Gillespie hung up his stethoscope.
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