Is Dr. Al-Hashimi About to Change the Game at The Pitt? Here’s What You Didn’t See Coming!

Is Dr. Al-Hashimi About to Change the Game at The Pitt? Here’s What You Didn’t See Coming!

As The Pitt hurtles toward the crescendo of its second season, the plot thickens like a Pittsburgh fog—mysterious, gripping, and utterly unmissable. We’ve been tagging along through the whirlwind lives of doctors and patients, all carrying their own baggage and battling their own demons. But here’s the kicker: just when you think you’ve got the script figured out, Dr. Al-Hashimi steps in as the wildcard, shaking up the ER with a story that’s been quietly bubbling under the surface all season long. What happens when empathy, cutting-edge tech, and old-school grit collide? And how does living with a hidden seizure disorder change the game for a doctor sworn to save lives? Yeah, there’s a lot to unpack here—and trust me, it’s not your typical hospital drama. If you’ve blinked even once, you might have missed the clues. So, ready to dive in and unravel this medical mystery before the season finale hits? LEARN MORE

Estimated read time4 min read

AS THE PITT marches toward the end of its exciting second season, there are plenty of running storylines nearing conclusion. What will happen to Dr. Robby (Noah Wyle)? What’s the deal with Baby Jane Doe? Will Dr. Langdon (Patrick Ball) find redemption? What direction will Javadi (Shabana Azeez) and Dr. Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) take with their careers? Where does Mr. Digby (Charles Baker) go from here? Just about every character is carrying something that needs resolving, and that’s part of what makes all of our doctors and patients so compelling.

There’s also a storyline emerging late that has been simmering all season long—but if you haven’t paid close attention, there’s a chance you may have missed it.

Dr. Al-Hashimi(Sepideh Moafi) has come a long day over the course of season 2. At first introduced as the fill-in attending set to step in during Robby’s forthcoming three-month sabbatical, we quickly come to realize that her approach is very different from our favorite stressed-out man in charge. Where Dr. Robby has an old-school approach that’s fast-paced and puts patients first, Dr. Al-Hashimi is extremely empathetic, willing to engage with modern technological advances like AI, and just in general sees the world a bit differently from many of our other main characters.

She’s a classic character foil. But we also come to see her talent, kindness, and brilliance over the season as well. She’s helped doctors and patients in ways that Robby and Dr. Abbot (Shawn Hatosy) couldn’t have and wouldn’t have, and, in general, has widely won over The Pitt fans and viewers.

As a character, she, too, has had quite the day. While she wasn’t so sure about Dr. Robby at the start of the day, his expertise, demeanor, and willingness to stand up for what’s right eventually won her over. So much so, in fact, that after he called out some medics for making a mistake that could’ve cost a patient her life, she decided to ask for his opinion on a case—a case that, as episode 14’s cliffhanger leaves off, turned out to be herself.

The episode leaves us hanging until next week, wondering what will happen with Dr. Al-Hashimi and Dr. Robby, and where this revelation takes the show next. We went to an expert source to try to find a take ahead of time.

Watch The Pitt Here

What exactly is going on with Dr. Al-Hashimi at the end of The Pitt season 2, episode 14?

robby lays into the medics al hashimi asks for robby's opinion warrick pagehbomax

Warrick Page

We were just as intrigued by Dr. Al-Hashimi’s big reveal to Dr. Robby—that she’s been living with a seizure disorder for the past 35 years—at the end of The Pitt season 2, episode 14 as you were. So we went to Dr. Robert Glatter, the Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Lenox Hill Hospital, an experienced ER doctor, and a member of the MH Advisory Board, to help make some sense of it.

When you think back throughout the season about a couple moments that Dr. Al-Hashimi has had, her revelation makes sense. In the first episode, when she first saw Baby Jane Doe, she paused and then became emotional. The same thing happened while treating another young patient in episode 14, something Dr. Robby noticed from the doorway of the room, and which to some just seemed like she momentarily spaced out.

“Throughout season 2 of The Pitt, the recurring “freezing” episodes experienced by Dr. Al-Hashimi is portrayed well,” Dr. Glatter says. “Rather than dramatizing overt collapse or convulsions, the series depicts brief behavioral arrest, staring, and emotional after-effects—features that strongly resemble focal impaired awareness seizures or FIAS. FIAS may present in a subtle manner: a pause in speech, transient unresponsiveness, fixed gaze, or brief dissociation from the environment. In a high-pressure environment like the emergency department, these signs can be misinterpreted as distraction, stress, or burnout—making the show’s depiction particularly realistic.”

The realization of her disorder then raises a clear question: Can she responsibly and safely practice medicine? Dr. Glatter suggests that it’s largely situational and not always a deal-breaker.

“Emergency medicine requires uninterrupted situational awareness, rapid decision-making, and procedural reliability; even short lapses could affect patient safety,”he explains. “Therefore, Dr. Al-Hashimi’s symptoms would be considered serious but not automatically career-ending. The key question is if it poses a functional risk in the clinical environment.”

Clearly, this is something The Pitt will explore in the finale, as Dr. Robby comes to grips with what Dr. Al-Hashimi has just revealed to him. We’ll see how the show explores it in real-time, although obviously this is the kind of things that will take time, consideration, and honesty to work through.

“Importantly, there are doctors with epilepsy who still practice medicine. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act and physician-health-program frameworks, the emphasis is on safe accommodation rather than exclusion,” Dr. Glatter says. “Temporary duty modification—such as avoiding solo high-risk procedures or trauma leadership roles—may occur during evaluation. Once seizure control is confirmed, many clinicians return fully to practice without restriction. Thus, the storyline realistically portrays a threat to confidence and workflow continuity, rather than an inevitable loss of licensure or authority.”

The option is there, then, that with symptoms under control, Dr. Al-Hashimi could continue to practice in the ED. Obviously, with Dr. Robby’s three-month sabbatical set to begin momentarily, there’s not a ton of time to figure things out. But there’s one more hour in season 2 of The Pitt, so we’ll see what our favorite Pittsburgh doctors can do.

Headshot of Evan Romano

Evan is the culture editor for Men’s Health, with bylines in The New York Times, MTV News, Brooklyn Magazine, and VICE. He loves weird movies, watches too much TV, and listens to music more often than he doesn’t.

Post Comment

WIN $500 OF SHOPPING!

    This will close in 0 seconds