Yup, I scanned through my taping of it this morning (no way was I going to stay up til midnight and suffer through it -- I'll watch the whole thing later). So, I saw at the end where it says "Filmed on location in Vancouver, Canada." Figures. They say it's cheaper there to make movies, especially made-for-TV ones.
I got to the part where the nurse in the neonatal unit is giving report on one of her patients. She says that the baby had a "28-week gestational period. Mom delivered him prematurely." Um...duh! Redundancy. Obviously, you DON'T have to tell other NICU nurses that 28 weeks is premature and most viewers would know that too (wouldn't they?). Also, in an earlier scene, a paramedic bringing in the young girl from the car accident (see? I couldn't even watch long enough to learn the character's names) said, "Glascow coma score of 15 out of 15." That's redundant too. All he really needed to say was "GCS 15" which most medical personnel know means the patient is fully alert and responsive. No need to say "out of 15." But in that case, I suppose it was good for the viewers to understand. We never ever did the GCS unless it was someone with some sort of actual deficit.
And just what was with putting a cake in a fridge in a patient care area? Food goes in breakrooms, far away from any specimen handling or medical supplies. That fridge was right there in their charting area. The Joint Commission guys would have a field day fining them for stuff like that!
And to think, that's just nit-picky medical stuff from the first half-hour or so.
I don't know if I really want to watch the rest of it.