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Chicago Med

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American television series (2015–present)
This article is about the fictional NBC TV series. For the current season, seeChicago Med season 11. For the medical schools and centers, seeChicago Medical School,University of Chicago School of Medicine, orUniversity of Chicago Medical Center.

Chicago Med
GenreMedical drama
Created by
Developed by
Showrunners
  • Andrew Schneider
  • Andrew Dettmann
  • Diane Frolov
Starring
ComposerAtli Örvarsson
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes205(list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Charles S. Carroll
  • Jeffrey Drayer
  • David Weinstein
  • Simran Baidwan
  • Will Pascoe
  • Safura Favavi
  • Niki Delone
  • Stephen Hootstein
  • Allen MacDonald
  • Meridith Friedman
Production locationChicago, Illinois
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time40–44 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseNovember 17, 2015 (2015-11-17) –
present
Related

Chicago Med is an Americanmedical drama series broadcast byNBC and created byDick Wolf as the third installment of theChicago franchise. It starsNick Gehlfuss,Yaya DaCosta,Torrey DeVitto,Rachel DiPillo,Colin Donnell,Brian Tee,S. Epatha Merkerson,Oliver Platt,Marlyne Barrett,Norma Kuhling,Dominic Rains,Steven Weber, Guy Lockard,Kristen Hager,Jessy Schram,Luke Mitchell,Sarah Ramos andDarren Barnet. It premiered on November 17, 2015.Chicago Med follows theemergency department doctors and nurses of the fictional Gaffney Chicago Medical Center. As they work to save lives, these members deal with the personal and professional pressures of their jobs.[1]

In March 2024, the series was renewed for a tenth season, which premiered on September 25, 2024.[2][3] In May 2025, the series was renewed for an eleventh season which premiered on October 1, 2025.[4][5]

Premise

[edit]

Set inChicago,Chicago Med is the third series in Dick Wolf'sChicago franchise. It focuses on theemergency department at Gaffney Chicago Medical Center and on its doctors and nurses as they work to save patients' lives. It sometimes crosses over with characters fromChicago Fire andChicago P.D.

Cast

[edit]

Main

[edit]
Main article:List of Chicago Med characters
  • Nick Gehlfuss as Dr. Will Halstead (seasons 1–8; guest season 11),[6] a former plastic surgeon, who at the start of the series becomes an ED supervising attending physician. He is originally from Chicago and is the older brother ofChicago P.D. character Detective Jay Halstead. He was engaged to Dr. Natalie Manning in seasons three and four.[7] He resigns from Chicago Med at the end of the eighth season after sabotaging Jack Dayton's OR 2.0 to prove its defects, and moves toSeattle to reunite with Natalie and her son.
  • Yaya DaCosta as April Sexton (seasons 1–6; recurring season 8), a first-generationBrazilian-American ED Senior Nurse. She has a younger brother, Noah, who began[clarification needed] as a third-year medical student at the hospital. She is also a childhood friend ofChicago Fire characterKelly Severide. In the sixth season, she is accepted into a nurse practitioner program in order to do more in caring for patients and in the seventh-season premiere "You Can't Always Trust What You See", it is revealed that she has started the program. She later returns in the eighth season after completing the program. She and Dr. Ethan Choi rekindle their relationship during this time, and marry in the middle of the season, with the intent of starting a mobile clinic for the impoverished people in the community.
  • Torrey DeVitto as Dr. Natalie Manning (seasons 1–6; guest seasons 7–8 and 11), an ED Paediatrics Fellow who did afellowship in emergency medicine in the first season and becomes an attending in the emergency pediatrics division in the fifth season. She is a widow, coping with the loss of her husband, Jeff, who was killed in action while serving in the U.S. military. In the first-season episode "Bound", she gives birth to her son Owen. In the seventh-season premiere "You Can't Always Trust What You See", she is fired by Sharon Goodwin and moves back to Seattle with Owen after admitting that she stole drugs for her sick mother from her ex-fiancé Dr. Halstead's clinical trial. She later reunites with Halstead following his resignation at the end of season eight.
  • Rachel DiPillo as Dr. Sarah Reese (seasons 1–3; recurring season 10; guest season 4), originally a fourth-year medical student, who does not feel drawn to emergency medicine and would rather become a pathologist. After she graduates from medical school, she immediately leaves pathology and becomes a First year resident in psychiatry, thanks to Dr. Daniel Charles in the season 2 premiere. In the fourth-season premiere "Be My Better Half", she transfers from Chicago Med to Baylor after Dr. Charles finds out her father is a suspected serial killer and they have a falling-out. She returns in Season 10, and following yet another argument with Dr. Charles about a patient's care, was able to make peace with her former mentor.
  • Colin Donnell as Dr. Connor Rhodes (seasons 1–5), a Trauma and Cardiothoracic Surgery Fellow from Chicago, who spent some time inRiyadh following his residency. In the first season, he is a trauma surgery fellow, but switches his specialty to cardiothoracic surgery. In the fifth season premiere "Never Going Back to Normal", he leaves Med, and Chicago completely, for a fresh start after the deaths of his father Cornelius Rhodes and his rival and ex-girlfriend Dr. Ava Bekker, who died by suicide after murdering Cornelius to win Connor back.
  • Brian Tee asLieutenant Commander Dr. Ethan Choi,United States Navy Reserve (seasons 1–8), the Attending Physician of Emergency Medicine specialising in infectious diseases who just returned to the United States after serving on theUSS Carl Vinson as a medical officer. He marries April Sexton in the middle of the eighth season and leaves Chicago Med afterwards to start a mobile clinic for the impoverished people in the community with her.
  • S. Epatha Merkerson as Sharon Goodwin, a former ED Charge Nurse and a Board-certified critical care nurse who currently is the Executive Director of Patient and Medical Services of Gaffney Chicago Medical Center.
  • Oliver Platt as Dr. Daniel Charles, the Chief ofPsychiatry and Behavioural Health, who is usually tasked with helping the other doctors deal with the psychological nuances of medicine or difficult patients. He is a graduate of theUniversity of Pennsylvania.
  • Marlyne Barrett[a] as Maggie Lockwood, the ED Charge Nurse and a Board-certified EMT-paramedic. (seasons 1–10[8]), the ED's charge nurse who is not afraid to speak her mind when it comes to schooling the residents, but she is caring and kind and fights for her patients.[9][10] In the fifth season, she is diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer, but is later cured and she marries former cancer patient Ben Campbell. She leaves Med temporarily after the tenth season for personal reasons.
  • Norma Kuhling as Dr. Ava Bekker (seasons 3–5; recurring season 2), aSouth Africa Second Year Fellow/later Attending Physician in Cardiothoracic Surgery. She butts heads with Dr. Connor Rhodes on professional boundaries, and eventually their rivalry becomes a romantic relationship, which eventually ends after Connor's father alleges that Ava seduced and slept with him to persuade him to fund Connor's hybrid OR. In the fourth-season finale "With a Brave Heart", Connor turns her down in reconciling their relationship and then suspects her of killing his father. In the fifth-season premiere "Never Going Back to Normal", she dies by suicide after admitting to killing Connor's father in a last-ditch effort to win him back.
  • Dominic Rains as Dr. Crockett Marcel (seasons 5–9), a new trauma surgeon fellow at Chicago Med introduced in the fifth season. At the end of the ninth season, he is devastated when a young patient, for whom he had to cancel a life-saving kidney transplant due to a last-minute infection, succumbs to his disease. Immediately after, the boy's aggrieved father commits suicide. The experience reminded Marcel of his own daughter's death, and in the tenth-season premiere, it is revealed he has moved to Boston for a fresh start.
  • Steven Weber[b] as Dr. Dean Archer (season 7 – present; recurring season 6), an experienced trauma surgeon and emergency physician and a mentor to Dr. Ethan Choi, with whom he formerly served in the Navy. He eventually takes over as Chief of Emergency Medicine before becoming co-head of the department in season 10, and eventually goes back to being an attending physician after Dr. Caitlin Lenox takes over all management responsibilities.
  • Guy Lockard as Dr. Dylan Scott (seasons 7 and 8), a pediatric emergency medicine physician. He is a former Chicago police officer who switched his career to medicine. In the eighth-season premiere "How Do You Begin to Count the Losses?", after the death of his lover Jo, an undercover cop whom he had crossed paths multiple times with during her assignment, he realizes that he will never be able to let go of his past as a police officer as long as he remains in Chicago, and leaves Med and the city altogether for a new start.
  • Kristen Hager as Dr. Stevie Hammer (season 7), a new Attending Physician in Emergency Medicine and former rival of Dr. Will Halstead from medical school. After many ups and downs in dealing with her homeless, addicted, and mentally-ill mother, she moves back to Michigan halfway through the seventh season to give her marriage another chance.
  • Jessy Schram as Dr. Hannah Asher (season 7 – present; recurring season 5; guest season 6), a Board-certified and attending physician in obstetrics and gynecology from Los Angeles who previously struggled with substance abuse before getting sober.[11]
  • Luke Mitchell[c] as Dr. Mitch Ripley (season 9 – present) an ED attending physician, a former violent delinquent who had been treated by Dr. Charles and has since turned his life around.[12]
  • Sarah Ramos as Dr. Caitlin Lenox (season 10 – present), an Army veteran and trauma General surgeon who becomes the new co-head of the ED, and eventually outright Chief of Emergency Medicine. Lenox is an often fearless physician with a measured, rational demeanor. When her compassion surfaces, it proves to be surprising, sincere, and creative.
  • Darren Barnet as Dr. John Frost (season 10 – present), an emergency pediatrics resident who joined Gaffney after the previous hospital he worked in closed. Frost is revealed to be a former teen heartthrob who was on a popular television series.

Recurring

[edit]
  • Julie Berman as Dr. Samantha "Sam" Zanetti (season 1), anattending trauma surgeon who briefly dates Dr. Rhodes[13]
  • Marc Grapey as Peter Kalmick (seasons 1–3 and 5–present; guest season 4), the head of Gaffney's legal department who occasionally butts heads with Sharon Goodwin over hospital protocol. He has a husband named Lawrence and a son named Zach.
  • Deron J. Powell as Tate Jenkins (seasons 1 and 2), a retired NFL player who begins dating Nurse April Sexton when she helps treat his son in season one. They become engaged in season two, but break it off shortly after she is infected with tuberculosis and miscarries their child.
  • Jeremy Shouldis as Dr. Marty Peterson, an anesthesiologist.
  • Peter Mark Kendall as Joseph "Joey" Thomas (seasons 1–2; guest seasons 3–4), a Pathology Lab Tech who dates Dr. Sarah Reese in seasons one and two[14]
  • Roland Buck III as Dr. Noah Sexton (seasons 1–5; guest seasons 6 and 8), a first-year ED resident and Nurse April Sexton's younger brother. In the sixth season episode "When Your Heart Rules Your Head", he is fired by Dr. Ethan Choi for negligence, due to assisting in Dr. James Coleman's suicide, and he leaves Chicago to take over Dr. Coleman's clinic in Atlanta. He later returns in the eighth season for April and Ethan's wedding.
  • Brennan Brown as Dr. Samuel Abrams, the blunt Chief of Neurosurgery.[15]
  • Gregg Henry as Dr. David Downey (season 1), a high-profile cardiothoracic surgeon who takes an interest in Dr. Connor Rhodes, and dies of cancer in the first-season finale "Timing."[16]
  • D. W. Moffett as Cornelius Rhodes (seasons 1–4), the father of Dr. Connor Rhodes. He runs the family business Dolen Rhodes, a high-end department store started by his father. Connor's choice to go into medicine lead to a bitter estrangement between father and son. He is murdered by Dr. Ava Bekker, Dr. Rhodes' ex-girlfriend, via insulin overdose in fourth-season episode "Forever Hold Your Peace" in an attempt to win Dr. Rhodes back, which is revealed later in the fifth-season premiere "Never Going Back to Normal", resulting in Dr. Bekker's suicide.
  • Christina Brucato as Claire Rhodes (season 1), the sister of Dr. Connor Rhodes
  • Paul Farahvar as Karam Haddad (season 1)
  • Lorena Diaz as Nurse Dolores "Doris" Perez, a Senior ED nurse. The ED's charge nurse when Maggie is out.
  • Courtney Rioux as Paramedic Courtney.
  • Mia Park as Nurse Beth (seasons 1–4; guest season 5), OR Nurse
  • Tonray Ho as Admitting Clerk Leah (seasons 1–5, 7 & 8), a nurse who works the front reception for admittance into the ED
  • Desmond Gray as Paramedic Desmond (seasons 1–8)
  • Cesar Jamie as Paramedic Cesar (seasons 1–9)
  • Cynthia Addai-Robinson as Dr. Vicki Glass (seasons 1 and 4), a Navy veteran and physician at the Veterans Administration hospital who briefly dates Dr. Choi
  • Jodi Kingsley as DCFS Officer Madeline Gastern, a Department of Child and Family Services social worker attached to Gaffney Medical Center
  • Amanda Marcheschi as Nurse Dina Garston, a Critical Care Nurse, sometimes assists in the surgical ward
  • Jeff Hephner as Jeffrey Clarke (season 2; guest season 1), a medical student, a former Marine and Iraq veteran, and Dr. Natalie Manning's old family friend. Clarke was briefly a firefighter at Firehouse 51 before returning to medical school after an injury. Clarke briefly dates Natalie until he confesses that her late husband did not approve of his feelings for her. Clarke matches with a hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii, after graduating from medical school.
  • Patti Murin as Dr. Nina Shore (season 2; guest seasons 1 and 4), anattending pathologist who briefly dates Dr. Halstead
  • Casey Tutton as Nurse Monique Lawson (seasons 2–5), ED nurse
  • Ato Essandoh as Dr. Isidore Latham (seasons 2–5; guest season 6), the Attending/later Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery who supervises Dr. Connor Rhodes' fellowship. Latham hasautism spectrum disorder, which sometimes makes it difficult for him to understand the emotional responses of the medical staff.
  • Mekia Cox as Dr. Robin Charles (seasons 2–4; guest season 5 and 10), an epidemiologist and Dr. Daniel Charles' previously estranged daughter. She dates Dr. Connor Rhodes during seasons two and three.
  • Eddie Jemison as Dr. Stanley Stohl (seasons 2–3; guest season 4), the Chief of Emergency Medicine, derisively referred to as "The Troll" by the staff because of his condescending and publicity-courting ways. In the fourth-season premiere "Be My Better Half", he is fired from Chicago Med after an arbitrary decision by Gaffney Chicago Medical Center's COO.
  • Carlos Rogelio Diaz as Nurse Hank (seasons 2 and 4–6; guest seasons 3 and 7–10), ED nurse
  • Gregory Alan Williams as Bert Goodwin (seasons 5 and 9; guest seasons 2–3, 6) Sharon's ex-husband
  • James Vincent Meredith as Barry (season 3), a paramedic who is Maggie Lockwood's on-again/off-again ex-boyfriend
  • Michel Gill as Dr. Robert Haywood (season 3; guest season 4), Dr. Sarah Reese's estranged father who was an astrophysics professor and a suspected serial killer
  • Arden Cho as Emily Choi (seasons 3–4), Dr. Ethan Choi's younger and previously estranged recovering drug addict sister
  • Elena Marisa Flores as Officer Anita Rosado (seasons 3–7 and 9–present), a Chicago police officer
  • Heather Headley as Gwen Garrett (season 4; guest seasons 3, 5 and 6), Gaffney's newly appointed Chief Operating Officer. She constantly butts heads with Sharon over hospital spending and sometimes uses her position to make retaliatory decisions against her.
  • Nate Santana as Dr. James Lanik (seasons 4–6; guest seasons 3 & 7), Chief of Trauma Surgery, formerly the interim head of the ED
  • C. S. Lee as Bernard "Bernie" Kim (season 4), Emily's boyfriend from Alcoholics Anonymous and father of her child
  • Colby Lewis as Terry McNeal (season 4), a third year medical student who gave up a football contract with the NFL to attend medical school
  • Dennis Cockrum as Ray Burke (season 4), a Chicago mobster who targets Dr. Halstead after he aids the police in investigating him
  • Devin Ratray and Adam Petchel as Tommy (season 4) and Tim Burke (season 4; guest season 5), the sons of mobster Ray Burke
  • Anna Enger Ritch as Agent Ingrid Lee (season 4), an FBI agent who works with Will in an undercover investigation against Burke.
  • Paula Newsome as Caroline "Cece" Charles (seasons 4 & 5), the first wife of Dr. Daniel Charles, who arrives at Med for a cancer treatment clinical trial, and eventually remarries him
  • Molly Bernard as Elsa Curry (seasons 4 & 5), a third, later fourth year medical student who ends up working closely with Dr. Daniel Charles
  • Ian Harding as Phillip Davis (seasons 4–5), a widowed father who is left to raise his daughter alone after his wife dies from an aneurysm in childbirth. He dates Dr. Natalie Manning during seasons four to five.
  • Michael Vaughn Shaw as Mike (season 4–present), an X-ray technician operating in the ED
  • Charles Malik Whitfield as Benjamin T. Campbell (seasons 5, 6 and 8; guest seasons 7 and 9), a cancer patient who Maggie bonds with while they both undergo chemotherapy treatments. They begin dating and eventually marry, divorcing in season 9.
  • Hannah Alligood (credited as Hannah Riley) as Anna Charles (seasons 5-7; guest seasons 8 and 10), teenage daughter of Daniel and Susan Charles
  • Jill Abramovitz as Susan Charles (season 6; guest season 5), Daniel Charles' third ex-wife and mother to their daughter Anna
  • Hampton Fluker as Michael Goodwin (seasons 5–6; guest season 9), Sharon's son, a pharmaceutical rep
  • Sarah Brooks as Paramedic Juliette (season 5–present).
  • Marie Tredway as Nurse Trinidad "Trini" Campos (season 5–present), ED nurse
  • Lynnette Li as Nurse Nancy (season 6–present), ED nurse
  • Tehmina Sunny as Dr. Sabeena Virani (season 6), a cardiologist with Kender Pharmaceutical Company who supervises a clinical trial for a new medication and approaches Halstead to lead the project[17]
  • Asjha Cooper as Dr. Vanessa Taylor (seasons 6–8), a first–year resident in Emergency Medicine, who initially had friction with Maggie who is her biological mother, which she[who?] prefers to keep private
  • Nora Dunn as Dr. Lonnie Richardson (season 7; guest seasons 1–2) Dr. Charles' therapist
  • Bonita Friedericy as Terri Hammer (season 7), the homeless mother of Dr. Hammer
  • Michael Rady as Dr. Matthew Cooper (season 7), a critical care specialist suspected of taking illegal kickbacks
  • Kellee Stewart as Carmen Walker (season 7), former romantic liaison of Dr. Scott, now married to his ex-friend Terrell
  • Jerod Haynes as Terrell Walker (season 7), Dr. Scott's former friend and Carmen's husband
  • Anthony B. Jenkins as Darius (season 7), the Walkers' young son and a cancer patient whom Dr. Scott treats
  • Deanne Lauvin as Zora Scott (season 7), Dr. Scott's sister, an officer in the Chicago PD
  • Curtiss Cook as Reginald Scott (season 7; guest season 8), Dr. Scott's father, a lieutenant in the Chicago PD
  • Sarah Rafferty as Dr. Pamela Blake (season 7; guest season 8), the Chief of Transplantation Surgery who clashes with, mentors, and romances Dr. Marcel
  • Johanna Braddy as Avery Quinn (season 7; guest season 8), a malpractice attorney and daughter of Dr. Pamela Blake
  • Angela Wong Carbone as Jessa Rinaldi (season 7; guest season 8), a product rep for Vasik Labs
  • Nicolette Robinson as Tara Goodwin (seasons 7 and 9; guest season 10), Sharon's daughter
  • Riley Voelkel as Milena "Jo" Jovanovic (season 7; guest season 8), an undercover police officer treated by Dr. Scott, who later enters a private relationship with. In the eighth-season premiere "How Do You Begin to Count the Losses", she is killed in an apartment fire, prompting Dr. Scott to leave Chicago.
  • Ivan Shaw as Dr. Justin Lieu (season 8), a resident in emergency medicine
  • Sasha Roiz as Jack Dayton (season 8), an entrepreneur, founder of Dayton Corp and inventor of the OR 2.0
  • T. V. Carpio as Dr. Grace Song (season 8), installed at Gaffney by Dayton Corp to improve ED efficiency through tech
  • Stan Shaw as Dr. George Thomas (season 8), a Retire and renowned Urologist and Gaffney's new board member promoted by Dayton
  • Mishael Morgan as Dr. Petra Dupre (season 8), an expert on Dayton Corps' OR 2.0
  • John Henry Ward as David Sullivan (season 8), a teenage schizophrenic treated repeatedly by Dr. Charles
  • Wayne T. Carr as Grant Young (season 8; guest season 7), Maggie's ex and Vanessa's biological father.
  • Alet Taylor as Liliana Wapniarski (seasons 8–9), a janitor at Gaffney in a romance with Dr. Charles
  • Kristof Konrad as Pawel Wapniarski (seasons 8–9), brother of Liliana
  • Conor Perkins as Dr. Zach Hudgins (seasons 8–9; guest season 10), a First year resident in emergency medicine. He is fired by Dr. Lenox after abandoning a patient during a crisis.
  • Luigi Sottile as Sean Archer (seasons 8–9; guest season 10-11), the addict son of Dr. Archer
  • Lilah Richcreek Estrada as Dr. Nellie Cuevas (season 8; guest seasons 9–10), a Psychiatry Fellow Physician and DACA recipient
  • Devin Kawaoka as Dr. Kai Tanaka-Reed (seasons 8–present), a First year resident in general surgery.
  • Henderson Wade as Dr. Loren Johnson (season 9–present; guest season 8), a medical helicopter pilot and trauma surgery fellow
  • Sophia Ali as Dr. Zola Ahmad (season 9), a third year resident in emergency medicine
  • John Earl Jelks as Dr. Dennis Washington (seasons 9–10), Chief of Hematology/Oncology at Gaffney
  • Daniel Dorr as Robert "Sully" Sullivan (seasons 9 and 10), a cancer patient, Ripley's friend from his delinquent youth
  • Natalie Zea as Jackie Nelson (season 10; guest season 9), a burn care nurse with a history of self-injury/cutting who transfers to the ED
  • Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut as Student Doctor Naomi Howard (season 9–present), a third-year student doctor, later a Surgery Resident
  • Logan Miller as Kip Lenox (season 10-11), Caitlin Lenox's younger, immature brother
  • Brendan Hines as Dr. Nicholas Hayes (season 10), a renowned Cardiothoracic Surgeon
  • Manish Dayal as Dr. Theo Rabari (season 11), an innovative psychiatrist on Gaffney's staff
  • Gbenga Akinnagbe as David Goodwin (season 11),[18] Sharon and Bert's oldest son
  • Kim Quindlen as Nurse Kacy (season 11), a crass, outspoken ED nurse

Episodes

[edit]
Main article:List of Chicago Med episodes
SeasonEpisodesOriginally releasedRankAverage viewers
(million)
First releasedLast released
PilotApril 7, 2015 (2015-04-07)8.43[19]
118November 17, 2015 (2015-11-17)May 17, 2016 (2016-05-17)379.83[20]
223September 22, 2016 (2016-09-22)May 11, 2017 (2017-05-11)289.47[21]
320November 21, 2017 (2017-11-21)May 15, 2018 (2018-05-15)2710.10[22]
422September 26, 2018 (2018-09-26)May 22, 2019 (2019-05-22)1511.04[23]
520September 25, 2019 (2019-09-25)April 15, 2020 (2020-04-15)1211.22[24]
616November 11, 2020 (2020-11-11)May 26, 2021 (2021-05-26)99.74[25]
722September 22, 2021 (2021-09-22)May 25, 2022 (2022-05-25)119.11[26]
822September 21, 2022 (2022-09-21)May 24, 2023 (2023-05-24)108.46[27]
913January 17, 2024 (2024-01-17)May 22, 2024 (2024-05-22)118.07[28]
1022September 25, 2024 (2024-09-25)May 21, 2025 (2025-05-21)179.50[29]
1121[30]October 1, 2025 (2025-10-01)TBATBATBA

Crossovers

[edit]
Main article:Chicago (franchise) § Crossovers
See also:Chicago Fire (TV series) § Crossovers, andChicago P.D. (TV series) § Crossovers
  • "The Beating Heart" (Chicago Fire Season 4, Episode 10) / "Now I'm God" (Chicago P.D. Season 3, Episode 10) – In the first crossover withFire andP.D., continuing on "Malignant", a member of Firehouse 51 is rushed to Chicago Med for a stabbing while an attempted suicide uncovers four cases of chemo overdose, leading to an investigation that becomes personal for Voight.
  • "Going to War" (Chicago Fire Season 7, Episode 2) / "Endings" (Chicago P.D. Season 6, Episode 2) – In the second crossover withFire andP.D., continuing on "When to Let Go", the victims of an apartment complex fire are rushed into Chicago Med and Intelligence races to find the culprit.
  • "Infection" (Chicago Fire Season 8, Episode 4/Chicago Med Season 5, Episode 4/Chicago P.D. Season 7, Episode 4) – In the third crossover withFire andP.D., a bioterrorist spreads a deadly virus throughout Chicago.
  • "In the Trenches" (Chicago Fire Season 13, Episode 11/Chicago Med Season 10, Episode 11/Chicago P.D. Season 12, Episode 11)

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

The series was greenlit byNBC for the show'spilot episode on May 1, 2015.[31]

On August 21, 2015, Andrew Dettman stepped down as showrunner due to "creative differences" following his appointment in June.[32]Andrew Schneider andDiane Frolov were appointed as new showrunners on August 27, 2015.[33]

NBC originally ordered 13 episodes for season one; on December 11, 2015, an additional 5 episodes were ordered, bringing the season to 18 episodes.[34]

On February 1, 2016, NBC renewed the series for a second season.[35] On May 15, 2016, it was announced that the series would be moving to Thursdays.[36] The second season premiered on September 22, 2016.[37]

On May 10, 2017, NBC renewed the series for a third season but opted to remove it from the fall schedule to midseason, after the premiere of Dick Wolf's sixthLaw & Order seriesLaw & Order True Crime.[38] The series moved back to Tuesdays after spending one season on Thursdays.[39]

On February 27, 2020, NBC renewed the series for a sixth, seventh, and eighth season.[40] Thesixth season premiered on November 11, 2020.[41] Theseventh season premiered on September 22, 2021.[42] Theeighth season premiered on September 21, 2022.[43]

On March 13, 2020, Universal Television shut down production on the series due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[44]

On April 10, 2023, NBC renewed the series for a ninth season,[45] which premiered on January 17, 2024.[46]

On March 21, 2024, NBC renewed the series for a tenth season which premiered on September 25, 2024.[2][3]

On May 5, 2025, NBC renewed the series for an eleventh season which is slated to premiere on October 1, 2025.[4][5]

Casting

[edit]

The Walking Dead starLaurie Holden was originally cast as Dr. Hannah Tramble, but dropped out due to "family reasons".[47][48] On May 29, 2015,Arrow starColin Donnell was cast as Dr. Connor Rhodes, the hospital's newest trauma surgeon.[49] In July 2015,Jurassic World starBrian Tee joined the cast as Dr. Ethan Choi, an expert in infectious disease prevention and a Navy Reserve medical officer.[50]Pretty Little Liars starTorrey DeVitto was cast on August 13, 2015, as Dr. Natalie Manning, the ED pediatrician.[51] On August 14, 2015,Jane the Virgin starRachel DiPillo was cast as Sarah Reese, a fourth-year medical student.[52]

On April 19, 2019, NBC announced that original cast memberColin Donnell andNorma Kuhling would be written out of the series at the end of the fourth season for creative reasons.[53] On May 12, 2021, NBC announced that original cast membersYaya DaCosta andTorrey DeVitto would leave the series at the end of the sixth season after deciding not to renew their contracts to pursue new roles.[54] On July 21, 2021, it was announced thatSteven Weber would be promoted to a series regular after recurring in the sixth season, and Guy Lockard andKristen Hager would join the main cast.[55] On October 12, 2022, NBC announced that Tee would leave the series after eight seasons.[56]

Reception

[edit]

Ratings

[edit]
Viewership and ratings per season ofChicago Med
SeasonTimeslot (ET)EpisodesFirst airedLast airedTV seasonViewership
rank
Avg. viewers
(millions)
18–49
rank
DateViewers
(millions)
DateViewers
(millions)
1Tuesday 9:00 pm18November 17, 2015 (2015-11-17)8.64[57]May 17, 2016 (2016-05-17)7.86[58]2015–16379.8330[59]
2Thursday 9:00 pm23September 22, 2016 (2016-09-22)7.02[60]May 11, 2017 (2017-05-11)7.01[61]2016–17289.4728[62]
3Tuesday 10:00 pm20November 21, 2017 (2017-11-21)6.19[63]May 15, 2018 (2018-05-15)5.62[64]2017–182710.1026[65]
4Wednesday 8:00 pm[66]22September 26, 2018 (2018-09-26)7.78[67]May 22, 2019 (2019-05-22)7.55[68]2018–191511.0425[69]
520September 25, 2019 (2019-09-25)7.53[70]April 15, 2020 (2020-04-15)9.33[71]2019–201211.2215[24]
616November 11, 2020 (2020-11-11)7.83[72]May 26, 2021 (2021-05-26)7.26[73]2020–2199.7414[74]
722September 22, 2021 (2021-09-22)6.81[75]May 25, 2022 (2022-05-25)6.43[76]2021–22119.1111[77]
822September 21, 2022 (2022-09-21)6.59[78]May 24, 2023 (2023-05-24)5.55[79]2022–2398.48[80]TBD
913January 17, 2024 (2024-01-17)6.93[81]May 22, 2024 (2024-05-22)5.49[82]2023–24128.20[83]TBD
1022September 25, 2024 (2024-09-25)5.46[84]May 21, 2025 (2025-05-21)5.81[85]2024–25TBDTBDTBD
1121[66]October 1, 2025 (2025-10-01)5.36[86]TBATBD2025–26TBDTBDTBD

Reviews

[edit]

OnMetacritic, season 1 has a weighted average score of 52 out of 100 based on 17 reviews, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[87]Rotten Tomatoes reported that 50% of critics have given the season 1 of the show a positive review based on 26 reviews, with an average rating of 5.52/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "While adding nothing new to the established medical procedural formula, Dick Wolf'sChicago Med hits its familiar beats forcefully enough to satisfy a few genre enthusiasts."[88]

Broadcast and streaming

[edit]

Chicago Med airs onNBC and is available through the network's streaming platforms, on demand and Hulu with previous season "stacking rights" on the former, and pay-per-episode purchase viaelectronic sell-through platforms. The series is available for streaming onPeacock along withChicago Fire,Chicago P.D.,Law & Order,Law & Order: Special Victims Unit andLaw & Order: Criminal Intent.[89]

The first 7 seasons of the show are available onAmazon Prime Video[1]

In Canada, the series aired on theGlobal Television Network for four seasons, then moved toCitytv. Season three aired at the start of the week ahead of the NBC air date later in the week.[90]

In Malaysia, the series aired onPRIMEtime for five seasons, then moved to Showcase.

In Southeast Asia, the series aired onRock Entertainment for more seasons.

In the UK,Chicago Med premiered on March 20, 2016, onUniversal Channel in the United Kingdom and Ireland. The second season aired on October 23, 2016.[91] Since the fifth season, it has aired onSky Witness.

In Australia, the series debuted on November 23, 2016, on theNine Network.[92]

In Romania, the series debuted on February 16, 2017, on the channelDiva under the title "Camera de gardă" (The guard room). The sixth season premiered on March 7, 2021.[93]

In Türkiye (Turkey/Turquie) Season 10 is streaming on TODTv[2]

Syndication

[edit]

The series was set to air syndicated reruns onUSA Network andLifetime in January 2025.

Awards

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNomineeResultRef.
2017Young Artist AwardsBest Performance in a TV Series - Guest Starring Teen ActressHaley Brooke WalkerWon[94]

References

[edit]
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  4. ^abAndreeva, Nellie (May 5, 2025)."'Chicago Fire', 'Chicago P.D.' & 'Chicago Med' Renewed By NBC For 2025-26 Season With Some Cost-Trimming".Deadline Hollywood.
  5. ^abSchwartz, Ryan; Nemetz, Dave (July 28, 2025)."NBC Reveals Fall Premiere Dates for #OneChicago,SVU and More — Plus,Organized Crime Returns!".TVLine. RetrievedJuly 28, 2025.
  6. ^Cordero, Rosy (August 26, 2025)."Nick Gehlfuss Returning To 'Chicago Med' As Dr. Will Halstead For Season 11".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedAugust 26, 2025.
  7. ^"Say Her Real Name".Chicago P.D.. Season 2. Episode 17. March 25, 2015.NBC.
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Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Barrett was credited as "Guest Starring" until Season 1 episode 13. From episode 14 onwards she's credited as "Starring".
  2. ^Weber was credited as "Special Guest Star" in all appearances until Season 9, upon which he received top billing.
  3. ^Previously recurred in the first eight episodes of the ninth season.

External links

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