Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Are is question in writing ?
No, the questions were not in writing. The first person who speaks with people checking in at the er asks.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Are is question in writing ?
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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 exactly is an “American” name?
Are you embarrassed to share your heritage?
One of my family members was mis-diagnosed because the clinicians did not understand that persons of color have different results to certain diagnostic tests.
Genetic background, like sex, absolutely matters in many medical contexts.
The first question was where were you born. That has absolutely nothing to do with ethnicity. Quite frankly, neither does ancestry.
They didn’t ask if we were Caucasian…because that was abundantly apparent.
It’s new, and it’s inappropriate.
Where you were born could impact your health, like if your family is from a country known to have a lot of TB cases. You could've been exposed as a child.
It’s a brand new question.
And it would be very surprising for Jennifer Smith or John Jones to have been born in a country where TB is a concern.
Regardless, when all you need is an X-ray for a suspected broken bone, there’s no need to know where I was born.
Anonymous wrote: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 exactly is an “American” name?
Are you embarrassed to share your heritage?
One of my family members was mis-diagnosed because the clinicians did not understand that persons of color have different results to certain diagnostic tests.
Genetic background, like sex, absolutely matters in many medical contexts.
The first question was where were you born. That has absolutely nothing to do with ethnicity. Quite frankly, neither does ancestry.
They didn’t ask if we were Caucasian…because that was abundantly apparent.
It’s new, and it’s inappropriate.
Where you were born could impact your health, like if your family is from a country known to have a lot of TB cases. You could've been exposed as a child.
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 exactly is an “American” name?
Are you embarrassed to share your heritage?
One of my family members was mis-diagnosed because the clinicians did not understand that persons of color have different results to certain diagnostic tests.
Genetic background, like sex, absolutely matters in many medical contexts.
The first question was where were you born. That has absolutely nothing to do with ethnicity. Quite frankly, neither does ancestry.
They didn’t ask if we were Caucasian…because that was abundantly apparent.
It’s new, and it’s inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:I was recently at a specialist, and he asked me my ancestry. I thought it might be pertinent to my condition, so I said my sister did a 23 and Me test and it came in overwhelming Irish. He said, "Right, so Caucasian." which he typed into the form.
Ancestry seems to be the new word for race or ethnicity. That said, DH is Arab and that ethnicity is very pertinent to a medical condition one of my kids has. It was overlooked as a possibility because the doctor had no reason to suspect Arab background based on appearance until I later pointed it out.
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?
Anonymous wrote:I was recently at a specialist, and he asked me my ancestry. I thought it might be pertinent to my condition, so I said my sister did a 23 and Me test and it came in overwhelming Irish. He said, "Right, so Caucasian." which he typed into the form.
Ancestry seems to be the new word for race or ethnicity. That said, DH is Arab and that ethnicity is very pertinent to a medical condition one of my kids has. It was overlooked as a possibility because the doctor had no reason to suspect Arab background based on appearance until I later pointed it out.
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?