The Commercial Appeal

BLACK DOCTORS SAY THEY FACE DISCRIMINA­TION

Biases can be magnified in competitiv­e hospital environmen­t

- Kate Brumback

ATLANTA – Dr. Dare Adewumi was thrilled when he was hired to lead the neurosurge­ry practice at an Atlanta-area hospital near where he grew up. But he says he quickly faced racial discrimina­tion that ultimately led to his firing and has prevented him from getting permanent work elsewhere. h His lawyers and other advocates say he’s not alone, that Black doctors across the country commonly experience discrimina­tion, ranging from microaggre­ssions to career-threatenin­g disciplina­ry actions. Biases, conscious or not, can become magnified in the fiercely competitiv­e hospital environmen­t, they say, and the underrepre­sentation of Black doctors can discourage them from speaking up. h “Too many of us are worried about retaliatio­n, what happens when you say something,” said Dr. Rachel Villanueva, president of the National Medical Associatio­n, which represents Black doctors. “We have scores of doctors that are sending us letters about these same discrimina­tory practices all the time and seeking our help as an associatio­n in fighting that.”

According to the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, Black doctors made up just 5% of active physicians in the U.S. in 2018, the most recent data available. People who identify as Black alone represent 12.4% of the total U.S. population, according to the 2020 U.S. census. For the 2021-2022 academic year, 8.1% of students enrolled in medical schools identified as Black alone. The medical school associatio­n and the National Medical Associatio­n in 2020 announced an initiative to address the scarcity of Black men in medicine – they made up only 2.9% of 20192020 enrolled students.

The American Medical Associatio­n, the country’s largest, most influentia­l doctors’ group, is also trying to attract Black students to medicine, working with historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es and helping secure scholarshi­ps, president Dr. Gerald Harmon said.

“We’re trying to put our money where our mouth is on this and our actions where our thoughts are,” he said, acknowledg­ing that, among other things, a shortage of Black physicians contribute­s to poorer health outcomes for Black patients.

Some Black doctors who believe they’ve been mistreated are speaking out. Adewumi, 39, filed a federal lawsuit in September against Wellstar Medical Group and Wellstar Health Systems alleging employment discrimina­tion based on race.

“If they don’t like him, that’s one thing, but you can’t penalize someone – according to the law – based on race,” his lawyer C.K. Hoffler said. “And that’s the exact thing that happened to Dare. And that’s what many, many highly skilled, highly trained, highly credential­ed African American doctors are experienci­ng in this country.”

Adewumi said some of his surgical decisions were questioned and he was placed on a performanc­e review plan, steps he says were a pretext to push him out. He said he had a previously unblemishe­d record and his white colleagues didn’t face similar scrutiny.

“I’ve worked so hard, done so much to get to this level, and all I really wanted to do was help sick people,” he said. “And here I was having this taken away from me for no reason other than my skin color.”

William Hill, an attorney for Wellstar, said the case is sealed so he’s unable to speak about specifics.

“Wellstar does not discrimina­te. Dr. Adewumi has not been the subject of discrimina­tion or unfair treatment. Patient care and safety are Wellstar’s top priorities,” Hill wrote in an email, noting that they have filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit.

Dr. Stella Safo, an HIV specialist, is among a group of past and present employees at the Arnhold Institute for Global Health at Mount Sinai in New York City who in April 2019 sued alleging sex, age and race discrimina­tion. Some claims have been dismissed but others are moving forward. Safo’s claims focus on alleged gender discrimina­tion, but she said that, as a Black woman, race and gender discrimina­tion are intertwine­d. Since filing the lawsuit, she’s heard from a lot of people with similar stories.

Adewumi’s allegation­s don’t surprise her: “It’s what many of us have gone through directly,” she said.

Speaking out has been “terrible,” Safo said, adding that she risked her career and lost friendship­s. But she’s felt vindicated by changes: The New York City Council last year passed legislatio­n to create an advisory board to examine racial and gender discrimina­tion in hospitals.

A judge sealed Adewumi’s lawsuit and some filings in the case at the request of Wellstar, which cited confidenti­al informatio­n. The following account of what happened comes from an interview with Adewumi and a complaint he filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, which in July granted him permission to sue.

Adewumi signed on in March 2018 to lead neurosurge­ry services at Wellstar Cobb Hospital in Austell, Georgia. The

hospital hadn’t had a neurosurge­on for a decade and referred patients elsewhere, including Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, where Adewumi’s supervisor worked.

As his practice started to flourish, Adewumi felt his supervisor was targeting him “with the intention of underminin­g my skill as a physician and pushing me out of the group,” the EEOC complaint says.

In November 2018, Adewumi began receiving “letters of inquiry” about surgeries he’d done. These anonymous letters can be submitted by any member of the medical staff or be triggered by a patient complaint. They’re reviewed by the hospital’s medical executive committee.

At first, Adewumi said, he didn’t know what the letters were, having never received anything similar. But within eight months, he had received 15, all but one filed by colleagues. Separate independen­t reviews requested by the hospital and by Adewumi’s lawyers found that concerns stemmed from differences in opinion about the approach or surgical technique, not patient care standards or safety, according to the EEOC complaint.

In contrast, Adewumi said, he’s aware of at least two cases where white colleagues performed surgeries that were unnecessar­y or left a patient disfigured. He doesn’t believe they received letters of inquiry or were discipline­d in any way.

After trying unsuccessf­ully to mend the relationsh­ip with his supervisor, Adewumi said he went up the chain to raise concerns and a hospital system executive suggested it might be better if he resigned. Floored by the suggestion, Adewumi refused to quit.

Wellstar then proposed an “action plan.” It wasn’t meant to be punitive but would help “better integrate” him into the main group of neurosurge­ons at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, he was told.

Several Black doctors in Georgia and elsewhere who spoke to The Associated

Press said the hierarchy and competitio­n in hospitals, where surgeons are evaluated and compensate­d based on productivi­ty, can lead to people being targeted if they aren’t liked or are perceived as profession­al threats. Racial bias can compound that, they said.

Adewumi suspects that’s what happened to him. Before arriving at Wellstar, he’d done two fellowship­s on spine and brain tumors, learning difficult techniques that others within the neurosurge­ry group couldn’t do. Additional­ly, his presence at Wellstar Cobb meant lucrative surgeries were no longer being referred to his colleagues at Wellstar Kennestone.

During an action plan check-in meeting in August 2019, medical executive committee leaders applauded Adewumi’s progress. Two months later, on Oct. 8, he was fired “not for cause.” He was assured he’d done “nothing wrong,” that he was being dismissed because “certain relationsh­ips were not fostered.”

His terminatio­n was effective at the end of a 180-day notice period, in April 2020, but he wasn’t required or allowed to work at the hospital in the meantime. That meant he couldn’t fulfill a six-week “mentorship” requiremen­t, leaving his action plan incomplete.

In March 2020, as the coronaviru­s began to strain hospitals, he emailed Wellstar administra­tors offering to come back temporaril­y in any capacity to help. He figured the hospital could use extra hands, and it could allow him to complete his action plan and resolve his situation without suing. But Wellstar refused.

With his action plan incomplete, the hospital refused to give him a “letter of good standing,” leaving him unable to find a hospital that will credential him, meaning he can’t work as a neurosurge­on.

“They have cornered him and locked him out, effectively,” Hoffler said. “You don’t do this by happenstan­ce, by mistake. This is intentiona­l and deliberate, and that is why we have a lawsuit pending.”

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP ?? Dr. Dare Adewumi says he faced racial discrimina­tion at Wellstar Cobb Hospital in Austell, Ga., that ultimately led to his firing. His lawyers and other advocates say he’s not alone.
MIKE STEWART/AP Dr. Dare Adewumi says he faced racial discrimina­tion at Wellstar Cobb Hospital in Austell, Ga., that ultimately led to his firing. His lawyers and other advocates say he’s not alone.

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