If there are some fairly un-nuanced undertones in the first episode of Malpractice. It is that he who shouts the loudest gets things done. If you are a junkie black woman, you are disposable.
An armed gunman walks into A&E with an injured child. Dr Lucinda Edwards (Niamh Algar) abandons her junkie patient Edith Owusu to go all gung ho to talk to the gunman.
Once he is out of the way, she decides to operate on the child. Leaving Edith in the hands of an inexperienced and out of her depth junior doctor. The patient dies.
However Edith has a father who can also shout the loudest. Sir Anthony Owusu demands an explanation regarding her daughter's death.
Now Dr Lucinda Edwards has to explain her decision making on that fateful night. There is already an air of being thrown to the wolves by her superiors.
The production company behind Malpractice also made Bodies and Cardiac Arrest. There is nothing to suggest Malpractice is in that league based on the first episode.
What looks like a series of a NHS under crises, there was a shortage of beds to treat both patients. It takes a turn as Dr Edwards as her own dark personal issues. She is on drugs.
Her dealer suddenly getting run over did look like lazy plotting.