— from Seattle Times —
BELLINGHAM – An emergency room physician who publicly decried what he called a lack of protective measures against the novel coronavirus at his workplace, PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center, has been fired.
Ming Lin, who has worked at the hospital for 17 years and became a local cause célèbre for his pleas for more safety equipment and more urgent measures to protect staff, was informed of his termination as he was preparing for a shift at the hospital Friday afternoon, he said.
“I got a message that said, ‘Your shift has been covered,’” Lin told The Seattle Times. He phoned his supervisor and was told, “You’ve been terminated.” Lin said he was told he would be contacted by human resources staff from his employer, TeamHealth, a national firm that contracts with PeaceHealth’s emergency department.
TeamHealth could not immediately be reached for comment. A spokesperson for PeaceHealth St. Joseph confirmed that Lin had been fired but said the hospital had no comment because Lin wasn’t a PeaceHealth employee.
Lin said supervisors threatened his employment more than a week ago after he spoke to reporters and made social media posts accusing PeaceHealth of a lack of urgency to protect health care workers from the virus.
He continued to post daily updates on Facebook after shifts at the emergency room, although many of his posts had shifted away from hospital practices to efforts to help secure more protective equipment for hospital workers.
Specifically, Lin had written that PeaceHealth St. Joseph refused to screen all patients outside the hospital, rather than in an often-crowded emergency room waiting area where the virus could easily spread. Two emergency department workers, who both asked not to be named for fear of reprisals, told The Times they shared Lin’s concerns about the possible spread of infection because of that practice.
Lin and other doctors have also persistently complained about the availability of testing approved by PeaceHealth, even as testing capacity ramps up in Washington state.
Hospital administrators this week announced a series of protective measures, such as temperature screening of staff entering the building, plans to enhance separation of staff from infected patients, and the availability of tents to conduct outside screening if deemed necessary.
Lin and other hospital staff noted that most or all of these measures came after Lin’s treatises prompted a community outcry. Meanwhile, Lin maintains the measures fail to meet standards set by other regional hospitals and even smaller health care facilities.
PeaceHealth St. Joseph is the only emergency facility for some 250,000 people in the state’s northwest corner.
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This is of great concern if true. Unfortunately this sounds like the Peace Health I knew when I worked for them!
Looks like the Catholic church has come up with yet another form of buggery.
The administrators who handled this matter at Peace Health Bellingham should be the ones looking for other employment. And I’d wager they well be.
I’m sure St. Joseph would have more protective equipment if there was a outbreak around the World..
Company’s are working hard to meet the demand of equipment needed…
Stresses of the steep curve. What lessons —institutional and personal— can we ALL draw from 20/20 hindsight? Can we really make future sacrifice and healthy changes, or just panicked bailouts and civil infringements?
No wonder I just received a supposedly soothing, smoothing letter from CEO Liz Dunne. Too little, too late.
Dr. Lin took care of my husband this past Tuesday for a health issue unrelated to COVID19. He was fantastic. He was knowledgeable about my husband’s medical history. Took time to talk with our primary care provider and us, even though it was obvious they were swamped with patients. We never felt any hint about what he was facing with the hospital administration. St. Joes and our community has lost a major asset in our medical care system.