Man with swastika tattoo refuses to let black nurse touch his newborn

DETROIT (AP) - It's been called one of medicine's "open secrets" - allowing patients to refuse treatment by a doctor or nurse of another race.
In the latest example, a white man with a swastika tattoo insisted that black nurses not be allowed to touch his newborn. That led several black nurses to sue the Michigan hospital, claiming it bowed to his illegal demands, and a rapid settlement in one of their lawsuits.
The Michigan cases are among several lawsuits filed in recent years that highlight this seldom-discussed issue, which quietly persists almost 60 years after the start of the civil rights movement.
The American Medical Association's ethics code bars doctors from refusing to treat people based on race, gender and other criteria, but there are no specific policies for handling race-based requests from patients.
"In general, I don't think honoring prejudicial preferences ... is morally justifiable" for a health care organization, said Dr. Susan Goold, a University of Michigan professor of internal medicine and public health. "That said, you can't cure bigotry ... There may be times when grudgingly acceding to a patient's strongly held preferences is morally OK."
Those times could include patients who have been so traumatized - by rape or combat, for instance - that accommodating their request would be preferable to forcing on them a caregiver whose mere presence might aggravate the situation, she said.
Tonya Battle, a 25-year nurse at Flint's Hurley Medical Center, filed the first lawsuit last month against the hospital and a nursing manager, claiming a note posted on an assignment clipboard read, "No African-American nurse to take care of baby." She says the note was later removed but black nurses weren't assigned to care for the baby for about a month because of their race.
That case, which was recently joined by three other nurses, was settled this week. Hospital officials said in a statement Friday that the incident was "triggered by conduct which is not consistent with Hurley's policies" and that it "fundamentally opposes racial discrimination."
No details about the settlement were released.
Earlier this week, Hurley President Melany Gavulic denied Battle's claim, saying the father was told that his request could not be granted. Gavulic said the swastika tattoo "created anger and outrage in our staff," and supervisors raised safety concerns.
Multiple email and phone messages left for Battle through her attorney were unreturned, and a listed number for her had been disconnected. She told the Detroit Free Press she "didn't even know how to react" when she learned of her employer's actions following her interaction with the father.
She said she introduced herself to the man and he said, "I need to see your supervisor." That supervisor, Battle said, told her that the father, who was white, didn't want African-Americans to care for his child and had rolled up his sleeve to expose the swastika.
"I just was really dumbfounded," Battle said. "I couldn't believe that's why he was so angry (and) that's why he was requesting my (supervisory) nurse."
Attorney Tom Pabst, who is representing nurse Carlotta Armstrong in a second lawsuit that wasn't part of the settlement, said the hospital's actions left nurses in the neonatal intensive care unit "in a ball of confusion."
"She said, 'You know what really bothered me? I didn't know what to do if the baby was choking or dying. Am I going to get fired if I go over there?'" Pabst said.
The Michigan cases follow a 2010 decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which held that the federal Civil Rights Act prohibits nursing homes from making staffing decisions for nursing assistants based on residents' racial preferences. The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit filed by a black nursing assistant who sued her employer for racial discrimination.
In another federal lawsuit filed in 2005, three black employees of Abington Memorial Hospital near Philadelphia claimed they were prevented from treating a pregnant white woman by her male partner, who was a member of a white supremacist group. The man used a racial slur when forbidding any care by any African-Americans.
The complaint alleged that supervisors honored the man's request. The case was settled confidentially before going to trial, and the hospital admitted no liability. Frank Finch III, the attorney for the employees, said hospital officials also cited employee safety in their defense.
"That defense doesn't fly under the anti-discrimination law," Finch said. "Hospitals cannot use that as a defense in nonemergency situations."
He said every hospital has a policy against discrimination and "undoubtedly acquiescing to such a demand is a violation of a written, internal policy in addition to being a violation of the law."
Fordham University law professor Kimani Paul-Emile said she suspects nurses file more discrimination suits than doctors.
"With nurses and other sorts of staff, the hospital is telling them they can or cannot do something," she said. "That might go to why you might see more lawsuits brought by nurses."
She wrote an article last year in the UCLA Law Review titled "Patients' Racial Preferences and the Medical Culture of Accommodation." It was the source of the "open secrets" phrase.
Paul-Emile's research cited a 2007 study at the University of Michigan Health System and others on how physicians respond to patients' requests to be assigned providers of the same gender, race or religion.
The survey of emergency physicians found patients often make such requests, and they are routinely accommodated. A third of doctors who responded said they felt patients perceive better care from providers of shared demographics, with racial matches considered more important than gender or religion.
"The notion of white patients rejecting minority physicians for bigoted reasons in emergency departments and other hospital settings is deeply troubling and uncomfortably reminiscent of the type of discrimination that the civil rights statutes were designed to eliminate," Paul-Emile wrote in her article.
Another study she cited found that patient requests for care by a physician are most often accommodated when made by racial minority patients.
Lance Gable, a law professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, said he believes such requests "are made more often than we'd like to think about" even if they aren't frequently agreed to by hospital management. He suspects a supervisor might honor them but not say anything explicit to employees and only in rare instances would signs be posted as alleged in the Flint case.
"Maybe their explanation is an accurate description of what happened - the supervisor was scared of the father of this patient and made a decision that was ill-advised," Gable said. "It might have been the right thing to do for the safety of the staff, and it still might be a violation of anti-discrimination laws."
In the latest example, a white man with a swastika tattoo insisted that black nurses not be allowed to touch his newborn. That led several black nurses to sue the Michigan hospital, claiming it bowed to his illegal demands, and a rapid settlement in one of their lawsuits.
The Michigan cases are among several lawsuits filed in recent years that highlight this seldom-discussed issue, which quietly persists almost 60 years after the start of the civil rights movement.
The American Medical Association's ethics code bars doctors from refusing to treat people based on race, gender and other criteria, but there are no specific policies for handling race-based requests from patients.
"In general, I don't think honoring prejudicial preferences ... is morally justifiable" for a health care organization, said Dr. Susan Goold, a University of Michigan professor of internal medicine and public health. "That said, you can't cure bigotry ... There may be times when grudgingly acceding to a patient's strongly held preferences is morally OK."
Those times could include patients who have been so traumatized - by rape or combat, for instance - that accommodating their request would be preferable to forcing on them a caregiver whose mere presence might aggravate the situation, she said.
Tonya Battle, a 25-year nurse at Flint's Hurley Medical Center, filed the first lawsuit last month against the hospital and a nursing manager, claiming a note posted on an assignment clipboard read, "No African-American nurse to take care of baby." She says the note was later removed but black nurses weren't assigned to care for the baby for about a month because of their race.
That case, which was recently joined by three other nurses, was settled this week. Hospital officials said in a statement Friday that the incident was "triggered by conduct which is not consistent with Hurley's policies" and that it "fundamentally opposes racial discrimination."
No details about the settlement were released.
Earlier this week, Hurley President Melany Gavulic denied Battle's claim, saying the father was told that his request could not be granted. Gavulic said the swastika tattoo "created anger and outrage in our staff," and supervisors raised safety concerns.
Multiple email and phone messages left for Battle through her attorney were unreturned, and a listed number for her had been disconnected. She told the Detroit Free Press she "didn't even know how to react" when she learned of her employer's actions following her interaction with the father.
She said she introduced herself to the man and he said, "I need to see your supervisor." That supervisor, Battle said, told her that the father, who was white, didn't want African-Americans to care for his child and had rolled up his sleeve to expose the swastika.
"I just was really dumbfounded," Battle said. "I couldn't believe that's why he was so angry (and) that's why he was requesting my (supervisory) nurse."
Attorney Tom Pabst, who is representing nurse Carlotta Armstrong in a second lawsuit that wasn't part of the settlement, said the hospital's actions left nurses in the neonatal intensive care unit "in a ball of confusion."
"She said, 'You know what really bothered me? I didn't know what to do if the baby was choking or dying. Am I going to get fired if I go over there?'" Pabst said.
The Michigan cases follow a 2010 decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which held that the federal Civil Rights Act prohibits nursing homes from making staffing decisions for nursing assistants based on residents' racial preferences. The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit filed by a black nursing assistant who sued her employer for racial discrimination.
In another federal lawsuit filed in 2005, three black employees of Abington Memorial Hospital near Philadelphia claimed they were prevented from treating a pregnant white woman by her male partner, who was a member of a white supremacist group. The man used a racial slur when forbidding any care by any African-Americans.
The complaint alleged that supervisors honored the man's request. The case was settled confidentially before going to trial, and the hospital admitted no liability. Frank Finch III, the attorney for the employees, said hospital officials also cited employee safety in their defense.
"That defense doesn't fly under the anti-discrimination law," Finch said. "Hospitals cannot use that as a defense in nonemergency situations."
He said every hospital has a policy against discrimination and "undoubtedly acquiescing to such a demand is a violation of a written, internal policy in addition to being a violation of the law."
Fordham University law professor Kimani Paul-Emile said she suspects nurses file more discrimination suits than doctors.
"With nurses and other sorts of staff, the hospital is telling them they can or cannot do something," she said. "That might go to why you might see more lawsuits brought by nurses."
She wrote an article last year in the UCLA Law Review titled "Patients' Racial Preferences and the Medical Culture of Accommodation." It was the source of the "open secrets" phrase.
Paul-Emile's research cited a 2007 study at the University of Michigan Health System and others on how physicians respond to patients' requests to be assigned providers of the same gender, race or religion.
The survey of emergency physicians found patients often make such requests, and they are routinely accommodated. A third of doctors who responded said they felt patients perceive better care from providers of shared demographics, with racial matches considered more important than gender or religion.
"The notion of white patients rejecting minority physicians for bigoted reasons in emergency departments and other hospital settings is deeply troubling and uncomfortably reminiscent of the type of discrimination that the civil rights statutes were designed to eliminate," Paul-Emile wrote in her article.
Another study she cited found that patient requests for care by a physician are most often accommodated when made by racial minority patients.
Lance Gable, a law professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, said he believes such requests "are made more often than we'd like to think about" even if they aren't frequently agreed to by hospital management. He suspects a supervisor might honor them but not say anything explicit to employees and only in rare instances would signs be posted as alleged in the Flint case.
"Maybe their explanation is an accurate description of what happened - the supervisor was scared of the father of this patient and made a decision that was ill-advised," Gable said. "It might have been the right thing to do for the safety of the staff, and it still might be a violation of anti-discrimination laws."
One of those moments that I sincerely wish the gentleman would have shown up to an ER with only an African American doctor on staff while having a heart attack, or serious injury.Â
"Well, sir. We will gladly oblige your request, and you can die... Or, you can let this trained and licensed physician work on you. Your call. "
I mean really, folks. This is pretty simple stuff. Your child is born, and is cared for by a licensed, accredited professional health care provider. If you don't like the demographics of the staff, you're welcome to go somewhere else. That's it. Period. End of discussion. I don't give a good gosh darn if they're male, female, black, asian, gay, tall, blue-eyed or muslum. They're Doctors and Nurses. If they did not possess the prerequisite skills and knowledge to do their job, they wouldn't have accredidation, and would not be working unsupervised in the maternity ward. Â
If the dimwit becomes confrontational after this fundamental reality is explained to them, or attempts to move a medically fragile paitent or infant from the hospital, the police get called.Â
...The irony is that in Detroit, there's a good chance that the responding officer would be African American. Wonder how THAT would go over? LOL.Â
Well as Ann Coulter said""besides our blacks are better than their blacks""
well i won't let a bald guy at a barber shop cut my hair. does that mean he can sue his boss if he obliges my request?
No. Bald and fat are still two acceptable groups to discriminate against.
I like how there is a correlation with the commentors on here that somewhat "side" with this swastika tattooed idiot on "it's his choice" or "the black nurses" need to get over it are the same ones that seem to hate that black guy in the whitehouse.
Oh as added measure do any of you knitwits think this DOESN'T add costs to an already expensive system ?? Thought you rightwingnutjobs were FOR cutting costs ???
Well, I certainly don't like the President we have now, but I wouldn't have liked Romney or McCain any better, so where do I fit in.
For the record, I think it's the guy's choice to not want a black practicioner to touch his baby. However, it'd be really interesting if the only RNs or doctors on staff in that wing at that time were black. I'd love to see the raction on the guy's face. "Okay, no black doctors/nurses, that's fine. Have fun delivering your kid."
PS: I also think the racist guy is a complete idiot. I simply do not understand any reasonable pro in racism.
What a creep.Â
I remeber a time I was in one of Stuart Anderson's Black Angus Restaurants There was an African-American cocktail waitress, and a guy (maybe a relative of the guy in this story?) announced to the world that he wasn't "gonna be waited on by no [you -know the word]." The manager got a round of applause when he suggestedthat the guy patronize the White Angus down the street.
@Mechanic"suggestedthat" What? You know, pointing out grammatical, punctuational, and typographical errors that other people make is kind of fun.
And, even if the statements understood perfectly well, keeps the dialogue off subject. So mighty oz, you don't want us to look behind the curtain....I get it !
@Mechanic Maybe she was a lousy waitress
"said the swastika tattooed goofball"
That was you who got tossed out, wasn't it?
This strangely makes me miss the old time racists. Back in the good old days, the racists would let black people touch their babies. Heck they probably even expected it, but these modern racists are just plain mean. I guess this mean type of racist probably did exist back in the old days, they were just called 'white trash' by everyone back then.
@JTesla That's when they worked for us
"said the bald wife beater beer bellied idiot"
They shouldn't have left Idaho if their baby was due.
Why do we have to like everybody?
@Bert I don't like everyody. Difference between you and I is the fact someone has to make me dislike them. You just dislike people right off the cuff. Oh, by the way, you have managed to make me dislike you. You win; sir syphilis. A recurring and irritating troll should be named for the disease they resemble!
@Bert  Coexist!                            Or else!
When will Al Sharpton show up? Looks like the National Action Network is his baby. I'm sure this was hurtful for these nurses. But I agree with Bert,
BertYou should be comfortable with your health care provider.
You should be comfortable with your health care provider.
I say if a emergency comes up when life saving measures are needed and the onlly staff available is black and they don't black people touching them or their infants,I say let them elfin die.Although I know that the black doctors and nurses would still rise above the fray which would make them better than people like myself.
good grief both sides need to grow up for crying out loud.
dumb on both sides. Home boy shouldn't been such a tard, and nurse should have just accepted he was a racist and done something else.
@TreeWizard The nurse should have done what, exactly?  Gone back to scrubbing floors like a "proper" black woman should be doing?  According to several of the national news websites the black nurses lost shifts or were moved to other positions to bow to his demands.  It wasn't just him being a rude jackazz, it was threatening their jobs.
@Emi-Lynn @TreeWizard "According to several of the national news websites the black nurses lost shifts or were moved to other positions to bow to his demands." So several black nurses lost their shifts or were switched to other position because of one baby? Hmmm, that makes sense.  "The nurse should have done what, exactly? Gone back to scrubbing floors like a "proper" black woman should be doing?" ROFL, you must be one of them closet racists.
So now you want hospitals to accommodate this sort of buffoonery ? Moving staff around so this idiot is comfortable in his wacko thinking ? You do know when staff needs to be rescheduled there are consequences like COST increase....sheeze as if we don't have enough problems lets let a swastika tattooed idiot dictate cost increases !
Would this have been a different story if the father were black and the nurse white? Â If the guy is on welfare or some other type of taxpayer handout, then he shouldn't have any say in it. Â But, if he has insurance or is paying out of his pocket, then he should have the right to make that decision.
@Shadow I want you to test your theory next time you are pulled over by a black cop.  It is your tax dollars paying for it right?.?.  You should get to choose.
Let me know how this experiment goes.
Ha! or maybe a judge ! I could see that, ah your honor ? I movethe court to have a judge ...of ...well...my skin color.....D'OH !
He tells a lot about himself with his choice of tattoos.
It should not matter if the nurse or doctor is green, pink,purple or orange....as long as they know what they are doing.
It too bad the child will suffer through life with a numbskull for a parent. Hopefully the child as it grows older, will not follow the path of the parent.
Yes, it may be his choice, but he needs to get out of the woods.
Discrimination will never go away. It has been going on for thousands of years.
I can see ignorance on both sides so with that being said the penalties offset each other.
Illegal demands? Â Last I recalled, it's HIS child and he can always choose another hospital that would meet his demands if they didn't. Â It's fair to say he has far more discretion as to who should handle the child than a complete non-relative or employee of a business.
Wether we agree with his beliefs or not, it's his choice. Not a small group of offended nurses. Â We like to tell ourselves that we are a culturally inclusive society, but we obviously are not. Â Suing your EMPLOYER because a PATIENT had a specific request and the hospital obliged on the basis of SAFETY (Angering what may appear to be a member of the Aryan Brotherhood or at the very least , a white supremist perhaps?) is not a smart idea.
Hospitals are not institutions dedicated to equal and fair treatment, otherwise the almighty dollar wouldn't determine your level of treatment at such facilities. Â But they are a paid service by a consumer of that service. Â Sometimes, meeting the demands of your customer so you get paid is the bottom line.
Costing your employer more time and resources doesn't help your situation any and forcing your view of equal and fair treatment on others is pure fantasy. Â Can't force your own will onto someone else and people are free to choose what they believe in.Â
That poor child!
@GladiOla I don't sense that the baby was in any danger, other than having an idiot for a father.
@felines99 @GladiOla Oh it's in danger it's in danger of being raised in the same house with it's dad.
@sargerator Exactly!!!
Ya cause he wouldn't pass on any of his "bad" traits....D'OH !
@old_dollor @felines99 @GladiOla I see your point, but who knows he could be a great father aside from his racism.
@felines99Â Yes that was more of what I meant, I feel sorry for the child for having an idiot for a father.