From the looks of twitter this week, I am not the only person who was devastated by the loss of Lady Sybil on Downton Abbey. She died of Eclampsia shortly after giving birth to her daughter. In my house, there was complete silence while we watched Sybil convulsing and struggling to breathe. After she died, our horror and sadness quickly turned to anger. There were two doctors in the room (one of whom made the correct diagnosis)- how could this happen?
As I contemplated this question, I was fascinated to see how this story line impacted the public health messaging that started appearing on twitter. I recognized a few trends:
In addition to the discussion on social media, many news outlets and foundations also took the opportunity to post information on their websites about the condition that killed Sybil. For example, ABCNews wrote, "Eclampsia Death in 'Downton Abbey' Highlights Pregnancy's No. 1 Killer".
I would love to see some evaluation data to follow this teachable moment. Some questions that I have:
- How many people searched for Preeclampsia and Eclampsia following the episode? (As a side note, this episode aired months ago in the UK- was there a similar searching pattern?)
- How many physicians/midwives/clinicians received inquiries from patients following the episode?
- Beyond knowledge- did this episode change any clinician behaviors? Did they go back and review a suspicious case after seeing a reminder of the severity of this condition? Did they perform a more comprehensive screening?