Grey’s Anatomy Season 18: Addison is back in Seattle, but how long will she stay after her surgery?

Ellen Pompeo Meredith Grey Kate Walsh Addison Montgomery Greys Anatomy 1200x675 2

Grey’s Anatomy is an American medical drama television series that debuted as a mid-season replacement on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) on March 27, 2005. The show follows surgical interns, residents, and attendings as they grow into experienced surgeons while juggling personal and professional relationships. The eighteenth season of the American television medical drama Grey’s Anatomy was ordered on May 10, 2021. It premiered on September 30, 2021, for the 2021–22 broadcast season. The season marked the return of Kate Walsh as Addison Montgomery for three episodes, after her last appearance on the season 8 episode “

On the most recent episode of Grey’s Anatomy, Addison Montgomery returned to Grey Sloan, and she was a welcome addition. “Should I Stay or Should I Go” depicted the ramifications of Meredith’s decision to accept David Hamilton’s full-time job offer in Minnesota, which featured practically every veteran in the hospital acting like a child toward her. Addison may have salvaged the show with her witty one-liners, but how long will she stay in Seattle after a catastrophe in the operating room?

Addison came back to check on her uterine transplant patient, who was 11 weeks pregnant with her late husband’s child. She believed this her final hope, having exhausted the rest of his sperm. Despite the measures they went to avoid injuring the woman or kid by removing a deadly blood clot, Addison discovered after the treatment that there was no longer a foetal heartbeat. Both the patient and the surgeon were upset, so what does this imply for Addison, and is her time at Grey Sloan over?

Catherine, who appeared unflappable, vented her anger in an unethical manner after Addison’s difficult surgery, storming into the operating room and berating Meredith for her decision to leave. Addison was even caught in the crossfire before reminding everyone — correctly — of the patient nearby who had suffered a profound loss.

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