NBC’s Chicago Med has showcased several fascinating medical cases over 10 seasons. As the doctors and nurses at Gaffney Chicago Medical Center come across various patients in every episode, some of these strike a chord with the audience and are remembered for years.
One such character is Shiloh Kane, a young girl who is admitted to the hospital in season 1 episode 11. Shiloh on Chicago Med is played by actress Aubree Young. The girl arrives at the medical center with a headache and fever.
However, she ultimately becomes the center of a larger theme as it is revealed that her parents did not get her vaccinated. Shiloh suffers from Haemophilus influenza type B, and the contagious disease starts spreading to others.
Shiloh suffered from Haemophilus Influenzae B on Chicago Med
In Chicago Med season 1 episode 11, Intervention, Dr. Natalie Manning treats a young girl named Shiloh, who comes into the emergency room with a fever and a bad headache. Concerned that it might be meningitis, Natalie and Dr. Will Halstead talked to Shiloh's parents and ordered tests to confirm how she got sick.
When the test results come back, they show that Shiloh has Haemophilus influenzae type B, a serious bacterial infection that can cause hearing loss. Natalie quickly tells the nurses to isolate Shiloh from other patients as the infection is contagious and also contact the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Meanwhile, she informs the parents that their daughter’s condition could have been prevented with vaccinations. However, the parents reveal that none of their children are vaccinated, and they refuse to give shots to them even now.
Natalie and Will try to convince them, but they stand firm in their decision. Later, the two go to Shiloh’s school to give booster shots to other children who may have been exposed to the bacteria.
While there, one of the teachers suddenly collapses, and the doctors realize that she has been infected by Shiloh. Natalie rushes to help and tries to give her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, but it does not work. She and Will then perform an emergency procedure using a pair of scissors and a marker to create an airway for the teacher until the ambulance arrives.
Afterward, Will scolds Natalie for giving mouth-to-mouth, pointing out that she may have exposed herself to the infection. He returns to the hospital and confronts Shiloh’s parents for putting so many lives at risk by refusing to vaccinate their children.
With Shiloh’s case, Chicago Med highlights the important issue of vaccination, depicting how easily preventable diseases can spread when people do not take precautions. Though Shiloh does not make any more appearances on the show afterward, her story remains memorable for the issue it raised.
Chicago Med has been going on for 10 seasons now and has depicted multiple cases that resonate with the real world. The first season of the show starred Nick Gehlfuss as Dr. Will Halstead, Torrey DeVitto as Dr. Natalie Manning, Colin Donnell as Dr. Connor Rhodes, Yaya DaCosta as April Sexton, Rachel DiPillo as Sarah Reese, and Brian Tee as LCDR Dr. Ethan Choi.
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