Anonymous wrote:That's funny. My family is clearly multi-ethnic, and my husband and I speak with an accent (not the same one). We have numerous serious diseases in the family.
None of us have ever been asked about our ancestry!
Also, my husband is a doctor and I'm a geneticist. As medical or assimilated professionals, we know that there are some situations in which genetic predispositions are affected by ethnicity, but none for a sport X-ray in the ER.
This is something else, but what?
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some diseases have well known genetic/ ancestry links. I don't click Hispanic on DEI type forms but do on medical ones since I am half Spanish and there are some linkages to cardiovascular diseases.
Right. But we are here for a sports injury/x-ray.
And I’ve been here as recently as last month for myself and they didn’t ask me these questions.
Sickle cell causes joint pain and inflammation, as an example.
People can go in for an assumed sports injury and they find it's something else altogether. I've known a few people with back and shoulder injuries, where it was actually cancer.
+1 Some bone cancers are also heavily linked to geographic ancestry/ethnicity, and frequent fractures can be one sign of those diseases.
Fine, as a doctor, if you believe this information would be necessary, explain the differential diagnosis, options/treatments and let me make an informed decision about what whether to disclose or allow me to opt for a particular treatment option. You, doctor, do not actually need to have your patient disclose all this information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ASK. Since you're posting from the ER. Also tell them you were not asked previously, see what they say. There will be a reasonable explanation.
And then update the thread.
The response was, “It’s required by the intake system.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just asked about my kid’s ancestry after they inquired about where he was born.
Kid was born in the US (so was I snd so was my husband).
All of us have very American names, do not speak with an accent, and do not appear to be anything other than American.
I know why your obgyn asks about ethnicity, but I have no idea why they would specifically inquire about ethnicity at the ER when you are there for a sports injury requiring an X-ray.
Any thoughts?
What's a very American name?
Jennifer Smith
John Jones
Traditional American first name and surname as opposed to anything that sounds remotely ethnic.
If my name was Maria Rodriguez, I would not be as surprised if asked where I was born and what my ancestry was…at an ER during Trump’s reign.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just asked about my kid’s ancestry after they inquired about where he was born.
Kid was born in the US (so was I snd so was my husband).
All of us have very American names, do not speak with an accent, and do not appear to be anything other than American.
I know why your obgyn asks about ethnicity, but I have no idea why they would specifically inquire about ethnicity at the ER when you are there for a sports injury requiring an X-ray.
Any thoughts?
What's a very American name?
Anonymous wrote:Trying to verify info listed in insurance file.
Did they also ask for address, policy #, employer, and other identifiable factors? I assume yes.
Anonymous wrote:ASK. Since you're posting from the ER. Also tell them you were not asked previously, see what they say. There will be a reasonable explanation.
And then update the thread.
Anonymous wrote:We are white, so sickle cell isn’t relevant.
We are here for a very obvious sports injury requiring a simple X-ray, so ancestry is irrelevant.
While I’ve seen questions regarding ethnicity on medical forms at a doctor’s office, those questions are more directly tied to race and language.
They asked where my kid was born and what our ancestry is. We have never been asked these questions before in this ER.
And yes, it’s a medstar ER.