Anonymous wrote:Or Ashkenazi Jewish for pregnant women...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a loaded word, but that is political.
I sometimes write where people grew up for exposures and genetics that might be relevant. (GI)
Would you think it better to make it a verb instead of a noun? 64 you male who emigrated from …?
I also write BMI instead of obesity because that is also a loaded word.
I don’t think it’s discriminatory. It can be perceived as problematic. It is important information as described by many above.
To avoid being inappropriate you could say something like Northern European or South Asian decent. Best to be specific why you are including that information (vaccination, exposure, …). It is ignorant to say that there is no bias or assumption when it comes to certain regions of the world. As most immigrants will tell you, discrimination is sadly part of their reality. When you write specific information, such as city within a country, you are drawing attention to this info with every visit to any other medical professional who might ask additional questions or make assumptions that have nothing to do with a relevant medical history. So, this would be best to avoid. Just write down what to look out for from the medical perspective.
Anonymous wrote:A colleague of mine in the same medical system labeled a patient as “immigrant” from a X city in X country. I think he’s crossed the line. Would you say something?
Anonymous wrote:A colleague of mine in the same medical system labeled a patient as “immigrant” from a X city in X country. I think he’s crossed the line. Would you say something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s valid info on a patient’s history
No, it is not.
Calling a patient an immigrant and writing place and country of birth is private information.
Unless you record place of birth and citizenship status of all of your patients, this is not a valid patient’s history.
There is also difference between stating “lived in country XYZ”, vs “immigrant”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigration is a highly stressful experience that is a potentially reasonable mention in a trauma-informed social history.
You have no clue what you are talking about. I am calling out xenophobia on your end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s valid info on a patient’s history
No, it is not.
Calling a patient an immigrant and writing place and country of birth is private information.
Unless you record place of birth and citizenship status of all of your patients, this is not a valid patient’s history.
There is also difference between stating “lived in country XYZ”, vs “immigrant”.
You’re just completely wrong and absurd. I really doubt you are in the medical field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s valid info on a patient’s history
No, it is not.
Calling a patient an immigrant and writing place and country of birth is private information.
Unless you record place of birth and citizenship status of all of your patients, this is not a valid patient’s history.
There is also difference between stating “lived in country XYZ”, vs “immigrant”.