The
staff at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center's (PTMC) emergency room have had a helluva day on The Pitt Season 2. They've reached the end of the day shift and wound down on the Fourth of July on the show. But what happens to the doctors and nurses after a very tiring holiday and more importantly, how is Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch (Noah Wyle) holding up after stating that he admitted to having suicidal thoughts? The final hour of the day shift gives us an update of where the doctors are headed as the staff winds down on a stressful day. Warning: Major Spoilers Ahead!
What happens to rest of PTMC staff?
The Season 2 finale titled
9:00 P.M. has everyone's favourite nepo physician, Dr. Victoria Javadi (Shabana Azeez), thinking about going into emergency psychiatry after the day she's had. Victoria also receives Dr. Robby's blessing on this. He tells her that she can continue her TikTok account as Dr. J, as long as she doesn't violate any HIPAA protocols. Now that it's confirmed that Dr. Mohan (
Supriya Ganesh) isn't coming back, we don't get an affirmative glimpse of what she will do next, though geriatrics does seem to be a possibility for her. She and Robby also make up after the latter seemingly apologises and wishes her well on her journey.
Robby also makes up with Dr. Langdon (Patrick Ball), who urges his former mentor to confront his own demons soon. Langdon has also regained his confidence after coming back from rehab. Elsewhere, Nurse Dana (Katherine LaNasa) further solidifies her decision to return to the ER, having mentored a new nurse Emma (Laëtitia Hollard) and confronted her anxieties at being assaulted in the ER. Meanwhile, Dr. Mel King (Taylor Dearden) learns to move on and let her sister Becca (Tal Anderdson) live her own life. The majority of the staff, doctors and nurses, close out the day by watching the fireworks on the rooftop of the hospital.
What will happen to Dr Al-Hashimi?
Previously, Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) confided in Robby that she had been having seizures again during this shift. She first started getting them after being diagnosed with viral meningitis when she was five. She had been seizure-free for a long time, but she has had at least two this shift. Later, when she informs Robby that she has been cleared to work by her neurologist, she is shocked when Robby states she has no business working in an ER and he'll make sure she doesn't come back. As she leaves the hospital at the end of the day, she breaks down crying in her car. If Al-Hashimi returns next season, will she still be an attending physician?
Is Dr. Robby having a breakdown?
All season, viewers have been hearing about Robby's motorcycle trip where he takes off on the open road. Robby finally tells his friend Duke (Jeff Kober) that he can't work in an ER anymore and eventually, Dana and night shift head Dr. Abbot (Shawn Hatosy) try to talk some sense into him. Giving him a pep talk, Abbot says that even though they see death and destruction every shift, they can't succumb to it. He encourages him, "Yes, life can suck. It can be unbearable and brutal and ugly and heartbreaking. But it’s also beautiful—and hilarious."
And yes, Robby does have a breakdown as he admits to his friend that the most important thing that he has done is work in a hospital. But watching people die every day is quietly killing him and he's not sure he can continue. But the season does end on a bit of an optimistic note as Robby revisits a patient who has been around since the first season: Baby Jane Doe. In the same room where he broke down and cried in Season 1, Robby goes to soothe the abandoned baby.Covering her in a swaddle, Robby shares a lullaby and talks to the little one. He admits that he too is an abandoned child. But he assures that if he got through it, so will she. Robby tells her that she will be fine and she has "so many wonderful things to see, people to love ahead of you." As he tells Baby Jane Doe she's going to be okay, it's a way of the show letting audiences know that in the end, Robby will be okay too.
Is there a post-credits scene?
Yes, to burn off their energy after a long and hard shift, Dr. King (Taylor Dearden) and Dr. Trinity Santos (Isa Briones) let down their hair, literally, singing
You Oughta Know by Alanis Morissette. It's a cute end to a harrowing season. The first two seasons of
The Pitt are now streaming on JioHotstar.