![]() ![]() Sanders aims to diagnose the cases of patients’ who have been brushed off by other doctors as “it all being in their head” to those in which small, but crucial, details have been overlooked. Families sob and squabble and speechify to the camera, but there are also educational infographics and maps showing responses sailing in from all over the world." In fact, Sanders’ Times' column was part inspiration for the popular show, Women’s Health reports.Īccording to Wired, the show falls between a “Dateline-ish daytime television and a nerdy online social experiment. ![]() If you’re thinking the seven-episode “Diagnosis” sounds like a real-life version of the old Fox TV show “House,” you’d be correct. RELATED READ: Jefferson doc assesses medical mysteries on TNT's new 'Chasing the Cure' show Sanders and her crowdsourced panel of medical experts to figure them out. ![]() Similarly, “Diagnosis” features patients submitting their perplexing, undiagnosed, medical conditions and taps into the expertise of Dr. ![]() This is the second medical mystery-style show to launch this summer, following TNT’s series “ Chasing the Cure,” which features a Jefferson Health doctor as one of the medical experts on the series' panel. Lisa Sanders’ medical advice column in New York Times Magazine, the new Netflix documentary series, “ Diagnosis” features Sanders working with a network of global experts and the internet to solve medical mysteries. ![]()
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