Meanwhile, the Wisconsin Supreme Court is considering challenges to laws that allow public health authorities to close schools to prevent the spread of contagious disease. In September, the court blocked a Public Health Madison & Dane County order requiring schools to delay in-person classes and has more recently blocked a similar health department order in Racine.
Both agencies were sued by the right-wing Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty (WILL), which has also challenged repeated emergency declarations due to the pandemic and the statewide mask order.
Lawmakers and others who are pushing to require in-person schooling claim that the danger is minimal. “The scientific evidence has become increasingly clear that it is safe to reopen schools, yet many districts still don’t offer in-person instruction,” WILL states in a December blog post that endorsed Republican proposals to punish school districts that teach virtually.
Hospital CEO s response to Black doctor s COVID-19 death prompts backlash
• 11 min read
Black doctor dies of COVID-19 after alleging mistreatment at Indiana hospital
Susan Moore, who died on Sunday from complications from the coronavirus, claimed that a white doctor treating her repeatedly ignored her complaints that she was in excruciating pain.Courtesy Henry Muhammed
The president and CEO of an Indiana hospital has prompted backlash for releasing what medical professionals and health care advocates described as a blame the victim statement about a Black physician who died of COVID-19 after alleging she was mistreated by a doctor and nurses at his medical facility because of the color of her skin.
Hospital CEO’s response to Black doctor’s COVID-19 death prompts backlash
Susan Moore/Facebook
By BILL HUTCHINSON, ABC News
(CARMEL, Ind.) The president and CEO of an Indiana hospital has prompted backlash for releasing what medical professionals and health care advocates described as a “blame the victim” statement about a Black physician who died of COVID-19 after alleging she was mistreated by a doctor and nurses at his medical facility because of the color of her skin.
In a press release, Indiana University Hospital president and CEO Dennis M. Murphy described Dr. Susan Moore as a “complex patient” and said that during her stay at the IU Health North facility in Carmel, Indiana, the nursing staff treating her for coronavirus “may have been intimidated by a knowledgeable patient who was using social media to voice her concerns and critique the care they were delivering.”