This story focuses on the most banal aspect of being a doctor.
News flash: Doctors are legally required to treat all lives equally, and to do everything in their power to save them.
The lead doctor would save more lives during a single shift than the antagonist has taken in 9 years (8-15). No head of any department would abandon his post to.. Spiral into the abyss because ONE of the countless lives he's saved is a serial killer.
The show is drowning in sub-teenage level logic, the art is basic and 4:3, I guess the audio wasn't a negative but that's about it.
TLDR:
If you've never seen a thriller or know absolutely nothing about being a functional adult (much like the original author) there's a chance this will do it for you
Cliff notes for being a functional adult:
Phone cut? Go to neighbour's
In danger? Get as many eyes on you as possible
Abducted? Distance yourself, then prior points
Corrupt cops? Point them out to the media
Saved a serial killer? Save a cop
Figure out massive breakthrough in a cold case? Call the federal agent with a perfect memory that you literally saw less than a week ago
Becoming fixated on a cold case that has nothing to do with you? See a councillor
Your patient runs out of hospital screaming? Admire the fact your stitches haven't blown, notify security, and get back to work
A different hospital wants you to come and save one of their patients? Tell them to pound dirt, and invest in their own staff like you have
Threatened by a law officer? Record the incident, then sue him
Get black balled by your boss? Go home
Your boss gets suspiciously murdered? GO HOME
I could go on forever, seriously. And I only watched 7/70!