Spoiler alert! The following contains (graphic) details fromthe Season 2 finale of "The Pitt."
There have been many hugely memorable medical emergencies onHBO Max's "The Pitt,"the Emmy-winning phenomenon set during a single shift at a Pittsburgh emergency department. From the blood-soaked floors of the hospital during the response to a mass shooting, to disgusting moments of urination and defecation to the realities of hospice death, "The Pitt" doesn't shy away from the good, the heartbreaking and the gross parts of modern medicine. And the Season 2 finale (now streaming) has given us a new medical case for the TV hospital history books: An emergency C-section performed by Dr. Robby (Noah Wyle) and Dr. Abbott (Shawn Hatosy) right there in the ER.
It's a big scene, and not just because the episode graphically shows Robby and Abbott cutting into a pregant abdomen, pulling aside muscle and fascia and organs. It's tense, viscerally and emotionally, for all the characters involved. And it was a heck of a thing to pull off, according to Dr. Joe Sachs, a producer and medical advisor on "The Pitt."
"We needed to come up with something for the season finale that was rather dramatic," he said in a recent interview with USA TODAY.
Mission accomplished for "The Pitt" crew. Here's how they pulled off that gory emergency surgery, why they put it in the show and whether it really is what would happen if a pregnant woman had these complications.
How 'The Pitt' made that graphic C-Section look so real
In the episode, 15 hours into what is supposed to be Dr. Robby's final shift at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center before taking a sabbatical, a pregnant woman is brought in to the hospital. Complaining of a raging headache and with ankles so swollen poking them leaves an indent, she's rushed into the trauma room with Dr. Abbott (Shawn Hatosy), the attending physician on the night shift crew. The doctors and nurses quickly discover that the patient (Nicole Wolf) has opted for what she calls a "wild pregnancy," meaning she has not pursued prenatal care with an OBGYN or a midwife. That also means no one has diagnosed two life-threatening pregnancy complications she experienced that led to her ER visit: HELLP Syndrome and Preeclampsia. Her condition rapidly deteriorates to the point where Abbott and Robby are forced to do a C-Section in the ER, with seconds to spare to save her life and the life of the baby.
"It's at least two months of preparation," just for that one scene, says Sachs. "The [actor's] body is laser scanned and we create an entire silicone replica of the person's body. ... The silicone prosthetic piece will go on the upper chest and be blended seamlessly. So while we're doing the scene, you can have the real actor's head and arms, so it looks very real. Then, the special effects department is building a special gurney so that the actor's body can submarine under the bed."
Then, the actors are able to work on the prosthetic piece and the series shows them "cutting into the uterus, a flow of amniotic fluid, bringing the silicone baby out, floppy, and a real-looking umbilical cord that we could cut."
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Most of that was done with practical effects, but they had to use CGI for one important element in order to keep the look right when the fake baby was removed. "When you pull the baby out, the (prosthetic) belly kind of goes down by 50%. And, you know, we didn't want to spend thousands of dollars building a second one."
Is 'The Pitt' emergency C-section accurate? An OGYN fact-checks the scene
In a case like the one "The Pitt" presents, things would happen as fast and furious as they do in the episode, says Dr. Dillon Knight, OB/GYN at Northwell’s Lenox Hill Hospital and Women’s Primary and Specialty Care at Astoria, both in New York City.
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"In a true emergency, the cesarean is performed at the bedside wherever the patient arrested, not in an operating room," she says. "The goal is for the fetus to be delivered as quickly as possible and in most cases the time from skin incision to delivery is less than 60 seconds. The room would be chaotic with a large, multidisciplinary team working together to save the patient and her child. There would be ongoing CPR, multiple team members performing chest compressions, managing the airway, administering medications, and someone performing the surgery simultaneously. ... When performing a cesarean delivery outside of an operating room, there is no sterile field preparation or surgical draping; antiseptic solution may simply be poured on the abdomen."
Eagle-eyed parents who have been involved in c-sections for the birth of their own children might have noticed that Robby does a large vertical incision down the pregnant belly, not the horizontal lower abdomen incision that is most common in standard practice today. That's how things would be done in true emergency, Knight says. "In resuscitative cesarean delivery during maternal cardiac arrest, guidelines specifically recommend a vertical midline skin incision because it's fastest and provides options for further exploratory surgery if needed."
Do people really choose to have 'wild pregnancies'? Is it safe?
"The genesis of the story was an article [titled] 'Influencers made millions pushing wild births. Now the Free Birth Society is linked to baby deaths around the world,'" Sachs says, referencing aninvestigation published in The Guardian in 2025.
When Sachs discusses "wild pregnancy" and "free birth," he's not talking about women who choose to give birth at birthing centers or at home with a qualified midwife. He's talking about those who forgo any type of prenatal care at all, and choose to have only friends and family present during labor.
"Home births are fine. Midwives are excellent. But to do a free birth is extremely risky," Sachs says. Knight, the OBGYN, agrees.
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"The risks are substantial and well-documented" when women forgo prenatal care, she says. Risks include "undetected and untreated conditions like preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, infections, including syphilis and HIV," for the mother, and "increased risk of stillbirth, respiratory distress, sepsis, and long-term developmental problems" for the baby.
Why does the finale C-Section matter to 'The Pitt' and Dr. Robby?
Wyle's Dr. Robby has been struggling with his mental health for the entire 15-hour shift that makes up Season 2 of "The Pitt." Over the 15 episodes the character has made troubling statements to his colleagues that hint he might be having suicidal thoughts. The producers wanted him to reckon with life and death in the finale, with a focus on life's beginnings.
"Robby in an existential crisis," Sachs says, of the character in the finale. He's "at the end of the shift, exhausted, possibly suicidal, yet being pulled in with Abbott, the night shift doctor, to do a crazy, heroic procedure, and being able to put that aside and focus on the excellence of his skill, his education, his experience to do something miraculous, even in the mental state that he's in. So that's the dramatic need of the story."
The "wild pregnancy" storyline is what allowed the emergency to be so intense and the need for Robby's skills to be so great: Preeclampsia affects 5-8% of pregnancies and HELLP affects about 10-20% of women with preeclampsia. Both are often diagnosed much earlier in pregnancy and can be treated in a variety of ways.
"We have to do character development in 15 hours, in one day," Sachs says.
"How much do you develop and change in 15 hours? How much do your friends develop and change?"
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How 'The Pitt' finale pulled off crazy emergency C-Section accurately
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