All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 To Save a Life

    • September 14, 1969
    • NBC

    A young man, injured in an auto accident, appears to have ceased to live - but is he dead? That's the question facing his physician, who's agonizingly aware that another patient desperately needs a donor for a kidney transplant.

  • S01E02 What's the Price of a Pair of Eyes?

    • October 5, 1969
    • NBC

    Dr. Hunter joins with research doctor Ralph Simpson in an attempt to develop artificial sight. Dr. Stuart hopes it will help a new patient of his, a young woman Casey Woods, who has recently lost her vision.

  • S01E03 Rebellion of the Body

    • October 19, 1969
    • NBC

    An explosion in a chemotherapy lab leaves Dr. Paul Hunter with extensive exposure to radiation, and a severely weakened immune system.

  • S01E04 Man Without a Heart

    • November 9, 1969
    • NBC

    After hotshot malpractice attorney Henry Speiser accuses Dr. Theodore Stuart of misconduct in court, he request that he performs his open heart surgery.

  • S01E05 A Small Step for Man

    • November 23, 1969
    • NBC

    The doctors at the Craig Institute solve a medical emergency on board an Apollo mission to the Moon.

  • S01E06 Crisis

    • December 7, 1969
    • NBC

    Fervent Doctor Lanier receives a directive to desist when he performs an experimental heart operation which causes him to abandon Craig Institute for another medical facility sparking a competition for a lucrative grant.

  • S01E07 And Those Unborn

    • December 21, 1969
    • NBC

    The doctors are using experimental tests on a fetus to see if the baby will be born healthy.

  • S01E08 If I Can't Sing, I'll Listen

    • January 18, 1970
    • NBC

    In this episode, a young woman is facing serious surgery and she decides if she can't play a musical instrument, she will sing and if she can't sing, she will listen. It was a very powerful and inspiring episode.

  • S01E09 This Day's Child

    • February 8, 1970
    • NBC

    The doctors try experimental treatments to save the life of a severely retarded teen with contagious hepatitis.

  • S01E10 Dark is the Rainbow, Loud the Silence

    • March 1, 1970
    • NBC

    A friend of David Craig who works for the President of the United States is having psychotic episodes of wanting to kill and the medical team investigates the cause.

Season 2

  • S02E01 This Will Really Kill You

    • September 20, 1970
    • NBC

    Teen-age drug abuse is the subject here. The stories ... Dr. Craig (E.G. Marshall) fights for a drug treatment center; Drs. Hunter (David Hartman) and Stuart (John Saxon) try to save the life of a pregnant girl suffering from a heroin overdose; police search for the thief stealing narcotics from local doctors.

  • S02E02 Killer on the Loose

    • October 11, 1970
    • NBC

    A mysterious virus invades the hospital as the doctors struggle to find a cure.

  • S02E03 Giants Never Kneel

    • October 25, 1970
    • NBC

    A tycoon checks himself into the Craig Institute to manipulate the stock of his company, but also actually is concealing a real illness.

  • S02E04 First: No Harm to the Patient

    • November 15, 1970
    • NBC

    The hospital has been receiving patients with previous botched surgeries and Dr. Stuart investigates.

  • S02E05 In Dreams They Run

    • December 13, 1970
    • NBC

    In this episode directed by Jerry Lewis, patients in the neurological unit include a golf pro who is showing symptoms of a possible muscular disease and a boy with muscular dystrophy whose parents disagree as to whether he should be at home or in the hospital.

  • S02E06 A Matter of Priorities

    • January 3, 1971
    • NBC

    Dr. Ted Stuart spends an evening helping in Dr. Bartell's low income clinic. After returning to the hospital he is confronted by the effort and cost in keeping Harry Miller, a high profile patient, alive after risky surgery. Dr. Stuart struggles with the ethical dilemma of allocating medical resources.

  • S02E07 An Absence of Loneliness

    • January 24, 1971
    • NBC

    Dr. Paul Hunter falls for a patient who has a terminal illness and is having trouble on how to break the news to her, while Craig deals with a similar problem with a longtime friend who is dying.

  • S02E08 Tender Predator

    • February 14, 1971
    • NBC

    Budget cuts put Craig in the difficult position of deciding which valuable research programs will have to be dropped, including one that is necessary for determining the cause of a young woman's seizures and blackouts. What's more, the young doctor in charge of that program is falling in love with the girl.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Broken Melody

    • September 19, 1971
    • NBC

    Two patients' lives intersect: a singer who is suffering from hearing loss; and a little boy who shows signs of having been battered though his parents deny it.

  • S03E02 The Angry Man

    • October 3, 1971
    • NBC

    A caring but cynical paramedic has been treating indigent patients himself in a small inner-city office with very little medical facilities, and removing items from the hospital in order to treat them.

  • S03E03 One Lonely Step

    • October 24, 1971
    • NBC

    Dr. Karnes and Dr. Hunter fight to restore a sickle cell anemia research program that may save a black child.

  • S03E04 Close Up

    • November 7, 1971
    • NBC

    A model suffers from sudden excruciating pain in her face. However, she refuses to have the common surgery for her condition---cutting off the nerve---because she fears it will disfigure her. Instead, Dr. Stuart agrees to implant his newly perfected electric stimulator which will stop her pain whenever it starts. But before he can implant it, his hands are severely burned in a lab fire.

  • S03E05 The Convicts

    • November 21, 1971
    • NBC

    A Doctors segment focuses on organ transplants in "The Convicts." Five prison inmates, temporarily released as volunteers for medical research, aid Doctors Craig, Hunter and Stuart in an experiment toward saving lives with transplants from nonmatching donors.

  • S03E06 The Glass Cage

    • December 5, 1971
    • NBC

    Three people enter a new program at the institute for treating and discovering the causes of alcoholism.

  • S03E07 Dagger in the Mind

    • December 19, 1971
    • NBC

    Dr. Stuart is trying to find the cause of his mentor's illness when the man arrives from Europe with his much younger wife. The hospital colleagues began to suspect it's psychological in nature. An anthropologist, who has neglected her heart condition while in the jungle, also checks in for a dangerous operation.

  • S03E08 Moment of Crisis

    • January 2, 1972
    • NBC

    An argument Dr. Hunter has with his girlfriend Amanda has her first getting drunk, than causing a school bus accident. Dr. Craig is dealing with a board member who is determined to replace him with a prejudiced surgeon. That becomes secondary as the crash victims arrive, including his granddaughter who is severely injured.

  • S03E09 Short Flight to a Distant Star

    • January 23, 1972
    • NBC

    The boastful, heavy-drinking father of Dr. Hunter's date is severely injured in a shooting. With a bullet fragment dangerously floating in the brain, Hunter and Stuart look to space-age technology to save the patient's life.

  • S03E10 A Threatened Species

    • February 6, 1972
    • NBC

    A 37 year old surgical nurse is having a baby and she has decided to sell it once it's born.

  • S03E11 Discovery at Fourteen

    • March 5, 1972
    • NBC

    Young Corey is found to have an ulcer and Dr. Fallon is determined to find the cause. It seems a secret visit to his estranged father has exposed lies his mother told him and Corey worries he is just like dad.

Season 4

  • S04E01 Five Days in the Death of Sgt. Brown

    • September 19, 1972
    • NBC

    Sgt. Ed Brown decides to go through with the surgical procedure that will hopefully restore mobility to his legs. The procedure involves the a process where his nerves will be reconnected in a procedure invented by Dr. Ritter as well as an infusion of polypeptides administered by Dr. Paul Hunter. However, a complication arises when the daughter of Dr. Ritter, the man who will be performing the surgery, is kidnapped by someone who was hired by the person who wants to see Ed dead. Also, Chief Ironside has flashbacks to the events surrounding his own paralysis and ...

  • S04E02 Is This Operation Necessary?

    • September 26, 1972
    • NBC

    Gritty story of an aging gynecologist, portrayed credibly by Richard Basehart, who is accused by Dr. Hunter(David Hartman)of performing unnecessary operations. Dr. McLain, the besieged doctor, is promoting lake side property investments which requires substantial capital. Dr. Craig (E.G. Marshall) is a long time friend of Dr. McLain and defends the renown surgeon until it becomes evident that his practice must end. Dorothy Malone plays Basehart's wife and Vic Tayback is featured as a man who loses his wife when she is subjected to an unnecessary operation.

  • S04E03 A Nation of Human Pincushions

    • October 3, 1972
    • NBC

    Arthur Gravis (Carl Reiner) advances acupuncture as a treatment, while Ira Goldberg worries about the cost of medical care.

  • S04E04 Time Bomb in the Chest

    • October 10, 1972
    • NBC

    Dr. Frank Stedman is a cardiac specialist who himself has a heart attack.

  • S04E05 A Standard For Manhood

    • October 17, 1972
    • NBC

    A man suffering from impotence learns that a brain tumor is the cause. The benign tumor is successfully removed, but that does not solve the impotence or the emotional problems between him and his wife.

  • S04E06 A Substitute Womb

    • October 24, 1972
    • NBC

    Julie Garner is a pregnant, thirty-something wife who longs for a child. But a heart condition means any pregnancy may result in her death. Drs. Hunter and (Belasco?) present the couple with an alternative: Would Mrs. Garner be willing to allow them to transplant her present embryo into another woman's uterus? Mrs. Garner nominates her kid sister to be the surrogate, and the operation is a success. But, in short order, the sisters fall out.

  • S04E07 A Very Strange Triangle

    • October 31, 1972
    • NBC

    Dr. Cohen is interested in a relationship with Valerie, a nurse, unaware that she is already in one with a woman named Eleanor. Valerie starts seeing a psychiatrist to help her deal with her feelings. Professionally Dr. Cohen tries to find out why a young woman was admitted due to a drug overdose.

  • S04E08 A Quality of Fear

    • November 14, 1972
    • NBC

    Dr. Hunter interacts with cancer patients with different attitudes toward their disease which are not always commensurate with the patients' prognoses while dealing with medical professionals not always in alignment with the doctor.

  • S04E09 An Inalienable Right to Die

    • November 28, 1972
    • NBC

    Janice, a TV reporter, incurs permanent paralysis during a speedboat accident. Facing a future she finds hopeless, the quality of her life and medical care is debated by her husband, her doctor, and a hospital review board. The ultimate decision though belongs to Janice.

  • S04E10 A Purge of Madness

    • December 5, 1972
    • NBC

    Harry Burke has violent psychotic episodes and the doctors want to perform psycho surgery.

  • S04E11 End Theme

    • December 12, 1972
    • NBC

    A recording artist goes into a depression, and decides to fight it by taking amphetamines to perform to his own satisfaction. He then refuses to take the lithium medication Hunter subscribed for him.

  • S04E12 The Velvet Prison

    • December 19, 1972
    • NBC

    Marcus, a hemophiliac, requires an appendectomy and falls under the care if Dr. Hunter. The doctor learns the disease has led to his father being estranged and his mother overprotective, so he becomes over involved to give Marcus a bit of normality.

  • S04E13 Terminal Career

    • January 2, 1973
    • NBC

    Dr. Hunter's most recent girlfriend, a resident at the Institute who is on the verge of obtaining her license, has an intense fear of dealing with patients which is obvious in her very poor bedside manner. When she is tasked with informing a patient that he is in the initial stages of ALS, she is forced to ask herself if she really has what it takes to be a doctor.

  • S04E14 A Tightrope to Tomorrow

    • January 9, 1973
    • NBC

    Four candidates experiencing chest pains undergo stringent tests for a bold new heart procedure to relieve their pain: Coronary bypass surgery.

  • S04E15 The Night Crawler

    • January 16, 1973
    • NBC

  • S04E16 And Other Things I May Not See

    • May 4, 1973
    • NBC

    After saving a pregnant 16-year-old from a fiery car wreck, Dr. Amanda Fallon attempts to mend a deep rift between the troubled girl and her divorced mother, who is insisting she have an abortion.