He may have the right to choose who cares for his child, as kamn pointed out, but I do not believe he's got the right to dictate how the hospital utilizes its staff. The hospital should never have buckled to his demands.
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A New Father DEMANDS
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Originally posted by daleduke17 View PostIf it was religious grounds, would that have made a difference?
Also I do believe that religion is a protected class. Being a neo-nazi dickhead is not.
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Originally posted by bara View PostThe fact that he is a bigoted ass aside, does he not have a say on who cares for his child? It kinda puts the hospital in a spot. Do they do as requested and risk a lawsuit or deny his request and risk a lawsuit.
But to generalize it on race is not acceptable and creates problems for adequate staffing. I've worked a lot of places with a diverse staff; to avoid every single staff member on every shift of a particular race caring for the child is impossible, and puts undue burdens on everyone else who now has to fill in that hole.
Originally posted by Rageaholic View PostYeah that's the dilemma. The guy is an asshole and assholes shouldn't be accomodated, but at least they know he's an asshole. At that point, what good would it have done to have her care for the child?
Originally posted by kamn View PostAs long as he is the primary legal guardian of said baby...
Yes. Sadly, he has the right to choose his carers. Sadly because of the reasons and grounds on which he chooses them...
Now in regards to male caregivers vs female patients AND vice versa, that's a reasonable accomodation because it is so limited. I've never had a patient refuse ALL care from a caregiver of opposite gender; just care related to the potential exposure of the private areas.
It's a common issue in OB GYN nursing; usually the female is fine with a male caregiver as long as a female is in the room. The husbands are usually fine with it as well. If they really want a female OB, then they understand they may have to wait, or that in an emergency the male OB will step in and do what's necessary.
I've had male patients not want female nurses to put in foley catheters. And I've had male patients not want a male nurse to do it. Those are short term issues easily accomodated.
Rarely a patient has stated they prefer a nurse of their own gender only; they've always been told that if we have the staff we will accommodate them but if we don't we can't.
Race is a horse of a different color. I've had the issue come up and the patient has always been told NO. I have had some patients leave because of it . . . but it was always a non-emergency situation. I've never seen it an issue when it was a matter of life and death. Funny about that.Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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