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Accommodating Bigotry

  • Autores: Meghan Lane-Fall
  • Localización: JAMA: the journal of the American Medical Association, ISSN 0098-7484, Vol. 311, Nº. 2, 2014, págs. 139-140
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • Gregory McGriff is an Ivy league–trained internist who was once dismissed from a patient’s room because McGriff is black. National Public Radio aired the physician’s story in May 2013 as part of its Race Card project.1 McGriff went on to relate a different incident in which a patient complained that he was “uppity,” having used terminology that the patient did not understand. McGriff’s narrative brought to mind an occasion when I cared for an elderly member of the Ku Klux Klan. The man found himself in our surgical intensive care unit in Philadelphia, cared for by me, a black physician, along with a rainbow of Jewish, Latino, and Asian health professionals. His endotracheal tube prevented him from commenting on his United Nations health care team, but he did look somewhat wide-eyed whenever we entered his room.


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