Dr. Nicole Martin Took ‘Real Housewives Of Miami’ Out Of Her Instagram Bio As Cast Films Without Her-quang

   

dr nicole martin out fired not asked back to rhom miami housewives

Dr. Nicole Martin took ‘Real Housewives of Miami‘ out of her Instagram bio causing Bravo TV fans to believe she’s not returning to the show.

The wife/mother/board-certified anesthesiologist’s return to RHOM is “uncertain,” according to Page Six. Filming for the reality tv show began this week with several familiar faces, but Nicole was nowhere in sight.

Page Six believes Alexia Nepola, Lisa Hochstein, Larsa Pippen, Julia Lemigova, Guerdy Abraira, Adriana de Moura, Marysol Patton, and Kiki Barth will return to the cast.

Allegedly, “a few new faces are expected to film soon, too.” Typically, that’s when show runners decide who earned a full time role and who will appear in a ‘friend of’ role.

Fans aren’t happy with rumors of Nicole leaving the show:
While Nicole hasn’t posted about her status on RHOM, fans took to the comments of an unrelated post on her Instagram grid to share their displeasure.

 
A disgruntled fan wrote, “Uhm Dr. Nicole please dispel these rumors ASAP before we spazz !!!! @bravoandy FIX THIS !!!!!!” Another commented, “Better be a joke!!! You are my favorite on the show!!! Pls pls pls come back    .” A third fan slipped into Nicole comments to add, “MIAMI NEEDS YOU BB   .”

Nicole’s best off-screen moment, imho:
While Nicole DELIVERED onscreen, she even showed up for Bravoholics when Real Housewives of Beverly Hills was airing its 13th season. ICYMI, Dr. Nicole Martin, gave her professional opinion on the drama surrounding RHOBH‘s Sutton Stracke and Annemarie Wiley.

Nicole spoke directly to her followers about the drama Bravo TV fans saw on the RHOBH episode called EsophoGATE. While Nicole thinks Annemarie is “a lovely person,” she isn’t on board with her “gaslighting” Sutton’s esophagus issues. “It does not matter where you fall in the spectrum – all the way from being a tech to being a doctor,” began Nicole. “You join the profession to be an advocate for patients.”

“It is not our place to belittle, question, or demean a patient’s symptoms or diagnosis,” continued the anesthesiologist. “We are there to facilitate and help the patient through the medical process. It was very uncomfortable and cringey to watch Annemarie belittle Sutton’s symptoms in such a way.”