Toronto Star

‘Oh, no sweetie . . . we are looking for actual physicians’

Flight attendant rebuffed young, black female doctor during medical emergency

- CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON

When Tamika Cross heard a woman screaming for help for her husband who fell ill on a Delta flight last weekend, she sprang to action. The young black doctor, on her way home from a wedding in Detroit, took off her headphones, put her tray table up and unbuckled her seatbelt.

A flight attendant called out for medical assistance for the man, who was unresponsi­ve. Cross, a fourthyear resident at McGovern Medical School at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, raised her hand.

“She said to me, ‘Oh, no sweetie, put Ur hand down, we are looking for actual physicians or nurses or some type of medical personnel, we don’t have time to talk to you,’ ” Cross wrote in a Facebook post that has gone viral. “I tried to inform her that I was a physician, but I was continuall­y cut off by condescend­ing remarks.”

A request went out over the PA system, asking any doctors on board to press their call buttons. Cross pressed hers. But the incredulou­s flight attendant asked if she was an “actual physician,” according to Cross, and requested to see her medical credential­s. The attendant quizzed her about why she was in Detroit and where she practised medicine. When a white man approached and identified himself as a doctor, she said they no longer needed Cross’s help.

A Delta Air Lines spokeswoma­n, Catherine Sirna, said that discrimina­tion of any kind was unacceptab­le.

“We’ve been in contact with Dr. Cross and one of our senior leaders is reaching out to assure her that we’re completing a full investigat­ion,” Sirna wrote in an email.

Cross said that what she experience­d on the plane was depressing­ly familiar. She is black, female and young, and people make all kinds of incorrect and sometimes outright offensive assumption­s about her medical expertise.

Although she felt personally disrespect­ed and humiliated, Cross said she’s pretty desensitiz­ed to situations like that because they happen so often. She decided to go public with her story because a flight attendant’s inability to believe she was a physician — for whatever reason: race, age or gender — could have threatened a person’s life. Fortunatel­y, the man recovered and walked off the plane, Cross said. But if he had not, the time the flight attendant spent questionin­g her about whether she was a doctor would have been time she could have spent trying to help him.

For years, minority doctors have grappled with the thorny and painful question of how to deal with racist patients. Female doctors often find themselves mistaken for nurses.

What Cross experience­d may highlight a more subtle and common kind of “implicit bias” than the overt sexism and racism we’re used to talking about. Overt bias certainly exists, but there is also a growing body of scientific literature that’s revealing an even more uncomforta­ble truth — deep-seated unconsciou­s biases help steer our thinking and behaviour, even when we don’t realize it.

Caroline Wilmuth studied implicit bias as a graduate student at Harvard University, and she frequently used variations of a well-known riddle in her research: A father and son are in a bad car accident. The father dies at the scene. The son is brought to the operating room. The surgeon walks in, sees the boy and says, “I can’t operate on that boy — he’s my son!” How could this be the case?

In Wilmuth’s experience, the majority of people fail to solve the riddle. The simplest answer is this: the doctor is the boy’s mother. But not only do people not think of this, they will often go to great lengths to come up with a solution.

The way people grapple with the question — and their embarrassm­ent once they’re told the real answer — displays to Wilmuth just how strong these implicit cognitive biases can be. Our assumption­s about how the world is organized go so deep that it doesn’t occur to most people that the doctor might be a woman.

But Cross wasn’t asking anyone to solve a riddle. She was sitting calmly in her seat, informing the flight attendant that she was a doctor. But what she had to overcome were the same sorts of biases that make it so hard for people to realize that the surgeon in the riddle is a woman.

“Even when informatio­n that disconfirm­s one’s biases is presented, people struggle to accept that their previous beliefs about the world, what a doctor looks like, what a president looks like, etc. might be false,” Wilmuth wrote in an email. “What happened on that plane is what women, particular­ly those of colour, face every day. They have to prove themselves, their credential­s and their qualificat­ions more so than men do. White men are given the benefit of the doubt, whereas black women are saddled with the burden of proof — their word not being good enough to overcome the bias that works against them.”

Cross hopes that Delta will investigat­e what happened, but she has no desire to see the flight attendant fired — although perhaps sensitivit­y training might help, she said. Cross said that the flight attendant apologized multiple times.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Delta Air Lines spokespers­on said that discrimina­tion of any kind is unacceptab­le and that they are investigat­ing the incident.
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Delta Air Lines spokespers­on said that discrimina­tion of any kind is unacceptab­le and that they are investigat­ing the incident.
 ??  ?? Dr. Tamika Cross, a fourth-year resident at McGovern Medical School in Houston, says the discrimina­tion faced on the flight is depressing­ly familiar.
Dr. Tamika Cross, a fourth-year resident at McGovern Medical School in Houston, says the discrimina­tion faced on the flight is depressing­ly familiar.

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