The Pitt Season 2's Patient Log: All 101 Medical Cases Explained
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Jun 5, 2026, 10:00 PM EDT
Ben is a Senior Writer on the New TV team at Screen Rant. He graduated from the University of Central Lancashire with a First Class B.A. Degree in English Literature and History.
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The Pitt season 2 welcomed dozens of new patients into the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital as the Fourth of July saw the ER get busier and busier. Dr. Robby and the team had an extremely challenging shift in season 1 that saw them handle dozens of patients, including victims from a mass shooting at a festival, and it seems as though season 2 is on track to be just as action-packed.
With that, and the chaos of the online systems going down, it's almost impossible to track all the patients that came into the ER, and yet, here is everyone who passed through the doors of Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital in The Pitt season 2.
Non-Urgent Patients:
Warrick Page/HBO Max
As with any functioning emergency room, The Pitt crew are frequently forced to deal with a constant onslaught of patients who have reasonably minor issues. For the most part, these cases can be turned around quickly, and usually have a happy ending.
However, in some rare circumstances, what appears to be a routine or low-priority visit can end in tragedy, either due to mistakes made by the doctors, or unexpected complications. Whatever the situation, these are all 50 of the non-urgent patients who appeared throughout season 2 of The Pitt.
Brenda Azurmendi - Altered mental state - Alive, held in an involuntary psychiatric hold
Margaret Walker - Hypochondriasis - Alive, discharged
Tina Yardley - Pneumonia, tuberculosis - Alive, being treated in the hospital
Semi-Urgent Patients:
via MovieStillsDB
Slightly more pressing issues arise when patients have problems that need to be seen and handled quickly, though they are unlikely to die if left for a short waiting period. In this scenario, there are a wide range of patients, with some who arrived in a lower category and unexpectedly moved up the list.
Across the board, these patients tend to do well, because they are treated in a timely manner, and their injuries are not immediately life-threatening.
Jude Augustin - Lost two fingers while playing with fireworks - Alive, recovery after surgery
William Booker - Puncture wound - Alive, stitches
Claire Burns - Sigmoid volvulus - Alive, surgery due to a delay in treatment
Alex Burton - Freeze burn - Alive, debriding of the large chest wound
Debbie Cohen - Necrotizing fascitis - Alive, surgically removed her leg above the knee
Jackson Davis - New-onset psychosis - Alive, psych admission
Baby Jane Doe - Rhinovirus - Alive, being cared for
John Doe - Knife wound in the chest - Alive, stable
John Doe - Multiple lacerations from boat propellor - Alive, sent for CT imaging
Barrett Dunkle - Pneumothorax - Alive, sent to surgery
Duke Ekins - Ascending aortic aneurysm - Alive, further testing and monitoring
Elliot Green - Syncope - Alive, cooling treatment
Roxie Hamler - Advanced lung cancer - Deceased, requests pain medication and no further treatment
Nancy Yee - Spleen injury - Alive, taken to surgery
Urgent Patients:
Image via MovieStillsDB
Finally, there are the most severe cases that arrive in the emergency room and require immediate action without delay. If left untreated, these patients will certainly die. However, with timely and considered treatment from the doctors, they can recover and get the proper treatment for whatever may ail them.
These cases can lead to some majorly devastating narrative threads, with individuals who end up becoming part of the furniture and frequently get updates shared throughout later episodes.
Micah Azurmendi - Heatstroke - Alive, transferred to pediatric ICU
Ben Baker - Laryngeal fracture - Alive, emergency surgery before being transferred for further treatment
Grady Barnhill - Asthma and pneumothorax - Alive, stable and recovered
Allen Billings - Luxatio Erecta - Alive, surgery and stable
Dante Casella - Scalp laceration, sternal fracture, cardiac tamponade - Alive, raney clips and a pericardiocentesis
Vince Cole - Concussion, laceration - Alive, sent for a CT scan
Orlando Diaz - Diabetic ketoacidosis, tib-fib hematoma, deformed right forearm, basilar skull fracture - Alive, but possibly permanently disabled
John Doe - Open skull fracture after motorcycle accident - Deceased
Judith Lastrade - Preeclampsia, HELLP syndrome, refractory seizures, cardiac arrest - Alive, baby in NICU
Emily Werner - Tib-fib amputation - Alive, stable
Mark Yee - Hypokalemic periodic paralysis - Alive, taken for further treatment
Over the course of an incredibly busy holiday season, The Pitt manages to depict 101 individual cases, which is just a fraction of what a real ER is likely to encounter in such a busy period as the Fourth of July setting, which was the setup for The Pitt season 2.
Regardless, with so much going on and only a handful of doctors to keep everything balanced, it clearly establishes just how dedicated and motivated these characters are. Hopefully, The Pitt season 3 can continue the momentum established across the first and second seasons, but it feels like a real challenge to increase the number of cases in an already stacked series.