| Alena Ariel Wells |
Both my boys were born in Evanston. Which at the time seemed wrong, since we lived in the city.
"Why Evanston?" I asked my wife. I worried it would dog them, a nagging footnote. They wouldn't be "born in Chicago" but "born in Evanston." Not quite the same ring to it, right?
Plus: Evanston Hospital was half an hour away. Northwestern Memorial, less than 10 minutes down DuSable Lake Shore Drive from our place at Pine Grove and Oakdale.
"My OB/GYN is at Evanston Hospital," she said, with finality.
End of conversation. Go where the best care is. Evanston gave us the red carpet treatment — when we showed up at the emergency room, nurses came running. Then again, my wife made her entrance in an unusual fashion. Or as I explained afterward: "If you want to get immediate help at an emergency room, crawl in on your hands and knees. It focuses their attention wonderfully."
Unless it doesn't. Such as with Mercedes Wells, the Dolton woman who was met with "blank stares" and turned away from Franciscan Health Crown Point even though she was in active labor.
"I felt like they were treating me like an animal," Wells later said.
She gave birth eight minutes after Franciscan put her on the curb. In the cab of a pickup truck. On the side of the road.
As awful as that story is, it's only the tip of the iceberg of the racial disparity in health care in this country. It isn't a few bad apples in Crown Point, but, in the words of one study backed by two federal agencies: "Systematic discrimination is not the aberrant behavior of a few but is often supported by institutional policies and unconscious bias based on negative stereotype."
This translates into years of life lost — WBEZ and the Sun-Times are running a series about it. The girl that Mercedes Wells gave birth to can expect to live, on average, three fewer years than had she been white. If the baby were a boy, the gap would be five years.
There are numerous economic and social factors at work, but plain racism is a major aspect.
The bottom-line truth — and this doesn't get said enough, so I'm going to just say it — cuts across medicine, law enforcement, employment, the whole of American society: Too many whites, encountering a Black person, see the "Black" part immediately, but the "person" part, poorly if at all.
Everyone suffers. The only explanation that makes sense as to why the United States, alone among industrial countries, doesn't have a system of national health care, is because white citizens are in horror at the idea of Black people receiving benefits, even if it means they are also uninsured — a reminder that racism is self-destructive and blows back, the way that Southern towns, ordered to integrate their swimming pools in the 1960s, filled them in with dirt instead, so nobody could swim in the hot summer.
Good manages to come out of the bad. There is a classic Chicago story also involving a woman being turned away from a hospital, one I hope you'll forgive me for relating.
The woman was Nettie Dorsey, who had already paid for delivery services at Provident Hospital, the "Black medical mecca" near her home on the South Side. But the day in 1932 she arrived, in labor, there was no room for her. Provident had 75 beds for 200,000 Black Chicagoans. (That number seemed low, until I checked. Today, Provident has 45 staffed in-patient beds.)
Dorsey went home to deliver her baby. Both died. Her husband, Thomas Dorsey, a noted composer of blues and gospel songs, was devastated and first thought he'd give up music. "God had been unfair; I felt that God had dealt me an injustice," he said. "I didn't want to serve Him anymore or write gospel songs."
That bleak mood lasted a few days, until Dorsey sat down at a piano, put his hands on the keys and poured out his anguish in a new type of gospel blues song, "Take My Hand, Precious Lord." The song was an instant classic —it was Martin Luther King's favorite song. Mahalia Jackson sang it at his funeral. Beyonce recorded it.
Good has come out of Mercedes Wells' experience, too, and I don't mean the doctor and nurse who turned her away have been fired. Think hard — what is the wonderful thing that came from this whole episode? Many news stories didn't mention it at all. Any idea?
The arrival of Alena Ariel Wells, weighing exactly 6 pounds, on Nov. 16 at 6:28 a.m., delivered without medical expertise but into the loving hands of her father, Leon. The baby is "doing well" according to her mother. The world she was born into, alas, not doing so good. But maybe Alena Wells will be one of the people who try to fix it.

My opinion. 100% accurate.
ReplyDeleteThat family deserves FREE health care for the rest of their lives, at the very least. It is hard to fathom anyone being this heart less.
ReplyDeleteI believe everyone does.
DeleteThat Indiana hospital’s lawyers would probably jump at such a settlement offer instead of the seven-figure judgment they might otherwise have to pay.
DeleteThank you for emphasizing this story and how racism permeates everything.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful baby girl!
ReplyDeleteIt looks like in this case racism backfired.
Congratulations to the Wells family!
Beautiful baby, beautiful couple with their newborn.
ReplyDeleteYes, the tip of the iceberg and you have summarized it perfectly. I have never understood the large block of US citizens who vote against their own interests to sink their own boats in order to prevent other humans the benefits that would raise all boats. But here we are, operating in full force with current leaders for whom systematic discrimination and dehumanization is a feature not a flaw.
Best wishes for baby Alena, for her future and ours.
From Kate in Chicago: Thank you Neil for using your space to highlight a beautiful family and a horrible injustice at the same time!
ReplyDeleteOne more bit of evidence that the war on women .. most especially women of color .. is alive and thriving. But the arrival and survival of beautiful baby Alena is cause for hope. May she grow up to be a powerful leader of women.
ReplyDeleteIndiana has given us the KKK and John Roberts, who gutted voter protection for people of color by ruling that racism in America was a thing of the past. Roberts now makes rulings that give cover to MAGAs racist underpinning.
ReplyDeleteLet’s be clear about what happened here which is different but in many ways worse than what I would assumed from reading this. It wasn’t that she was greeted by “blank stares” and “turned away”… which is what I would have assume from what you wrote. She was at that hospital for hours. But the care she got was terrible. Her water broke while she was there according to what she’s said and still the nurse insisted she wasn’t in active labor and sent her packing. She never was seen by a doctor. Black women get subpar care and aren’t taken seriously by medical professionals. Thank goodness the mother and child are doing ok. True tragedy averted and if things change even slightly because of this that will be another good thing to emerge
ReplyDeleteWhen I read about her being "turned away" by both a doctor and a nurse, my immediate thought was "Did this happen TWICE?" It sounded like a different incident. This horrible story was national news. The TV networks covered it, as did print media. And it was all over my computer screen.
DeleteAnd they all said the same thing...the mother was in labor for hours, was never seen by a doctor, and was kicked out by a nurse. Glad to hear that the medical professionals responsible were booted from their jobs.
My house is five minutes from one of the biggest veterinary hospitals in town...it's the Cleveland Clinic for the local four-foots. Has a staff of 200. That is not a typo. An injured dog or cat, found on the street, gets better treatment than this Indiana hospital gave to Mercedes Wells. That is what it means...or rather, what it STILL means...to be a person of color in these Untied Snakes, where racism hisses at them 24/7/365.
But once again, our proprietor has knocked it out of the park with: "Too many whites, encountering a Black person, see the "Black" part immediately." Guilty as charged. Ashamed to admit it, but there it is.
Have done that, automatically and unconsciously, since childhood.
Have repeatedly asked myself why. Yes, I know it's not right, but...
Maybe it came from spending most of my life in two of this country's most racist and most segregated Northern cities. Maybe it was my supposedly liberal and left-leaning Jewish parents dissing the "colored" and the "schwartses" (Yiddish for a black person). Do people of color do the same thing among whites? How could they not?
Thank you for today's thought-provoking...and chilling... piece, Mister S.
Outstanding. You are still the heavyweight champion of the word.
They would tear up the Constitution and destroy America rather than admit that "all men are created equal" means men of color, too - and women.
ReplyDeleteGood column, but what’s next for this hospital staff? Business as usual!? A comprehensive program for all employees to emphasize expectations? Why isn’t the media naming those medicos involved which I find abetting the racism you describe by journalists.
ReplyDeleteA doctor and a nurse got fired. Hopefully we'll be hearing about a lawsuit soon. I'd imagine it would be settled long before Alena makes her college plans.
DeleteI'm betting that the doctor & nurse were both foreign born & trained.
DeleteSeems like a discriminatory statement itself, Clark. But if you're just talking numbers, Google says 20 to 25 percent of doctors are foreigners; my count would be more like 50 percent, based on my own health care history -- no complaints so far though. Surprisingly, still alive at 83, uncharted territory for males in my family.
Deletetate
How do you support this supposition, in the utter absence of evidence?
DeleteWhy, because home-grown racism is so rare? Hang on, I think I've spotted some.
DeleteI'm betting that Clark St. is correct. The Black people that I have discussed this story with since it broke last week have said as much. They all told me that, while they are generally treated respectfully by Caucasian doctors and nurses, their treatment by Indian and Arabic ones is quite another story.
DeleteByron, I'll give your anecdata the weight it merits.
DeleteThanks for publicizing this horrifying story.
ReplyDeleteAn anti-abortion, anti-birth control Roman Catholic run hospital in Indiana sends a Black woman whose water has broken to give birth in a truck. I am shocked but not surprised.
ReplyDeleteThis seems to be the tip if the iceberg. The administration's stand seems to be that undocumented people are stealing healthcare. If you extend this to someone with a broken leg after being neing hit by a speeding car or a victim of a robbery who's been shot or stabbed then do we send the injured back to their car in the parking lot and hope they can tough it out?
ReplyDeleteRead they fired the main doc and nurse. I smell a lawsuit and rightfully so. Franciscans you didn't live up to your name.
ReplyDeleteThank you for bringing this story to the forefront.
ReplyDeleteHowever . . .
"If you want to get immediate help at an emergency room, crawl in on your hands and knees."
What's the story there?
She had a strong contraction as we walked in the door and fell to her knees. My older son was born 75 minutes later.
DeleteDid you make it over to Tony Fitzpatrick's send off last night?
ReplyDeleteHe touched a lot of people
He certainly touched me. But I told him, when I visited him a few days before he died, that I'd already been to too many funerals over the past few months —four —and had no intention of going to his too. He said he didn't want me to, and I took him at his word. If I thought attendance was going to be sparse, I'd have gone. But he seemed to have a good turnout without me.
DeleteGreat column
ReplyDeleteRegarding the comments about "foreign" medical professionals: so what? My pulmonologist is South Asian, as is my endocrinologist, and my dentist. My nephrologist is eastern European. My PCP is some variety of Arabic. My cardiologists are garden- variety white guys, and my podiatrist is African American. They're all terrific and their ethnicity is irrelevant.
ReplyDeleteMay God bless them. And, may God have no mercy on those who wronged them.
ReplyDelete