Black doctor dies of coronavirus after alleging racist treatment at Carmel hospital

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Black doctor dies of coronavirus after alleging racist treatment at Carmel hospital

Show Caption Hide Caption How systemic racism led to COVID-19's rapid spread among people of color Racist policies have led to COVID-19 being more dangerous and deadly for Black, Latino, Asian and Indigenous Americans than for white Americans. Patrick Shannahan, USA TODAY

A Black doctor who died of coronavirus after weeks of battling the virus said she was mistreated and delayed proper care at a Carmel hospital because of her race.

Dr. Susan Moore, 52, died Dec. 20 following multiple hospitalizations for complications from COVID-19, first at IU Health North and later at Ascencion-St. Vincent in Carmel.

Her frustrations with the care provided at IU Health were chronicled on Facebook in multiple updates. The first came Dec. 4, when she said delays in her treatment and diagnosis were motivated by the color of her skin.

In a 7 ½-minute video posted to her Facebook page, Moore described frustrating back-and-forths with Dr. Eric Bannec, a white hospitalist with the IU Health system.

She described having her complaints of severe neck pain disregarded, despite drawing from her years of medical expertise to make a self-assessment.

"I was crushed," a tearful Moore said of Bannec's refusal to provide her pain medication. "He made me feel like I was a drug addict. And he knew I was a physician. I don't take narcotics. I was hurting."

She said she had to plead with and convince her physician she was having trouble breathing before receiving a CT scan. When the scan revealed that what she was saying was true, she was given medication to manage her pain. But only after hours of waiting.

“I put forth and I maintain," she said in the video, "if I was white, I wouldn’t have to go through that.”

From her hospital bed, Moore, who is remembered as someone who loved helping others, said she was speaking out so that the treatment she endured would not be overlooked.

“This is how Black people get killed, when you send them home and they don’t know how to fight for themselves,” she said into the camera. “I had to talk to somebody, maybe the media, somebody, to let people know how I’m being treated up in this place.”

After being sent home, Moore was back in a hospital bed within 12 hours, according to her Facebook updates. This time she was being treated at Ascencion-St. Vincent in Carmel, and was experiencing better care.

Shortly after being discharged from IU Health on Dec. 7, Moore said she experienced a spike in temperature and a drop in her blood pressure.

"Those people were trying to kill me. Clearly everyone has to agree they (discharged) me way too soon," she wrote of IU Health before giving an assessment of her care at Ascencion-St. Vincent. "They are now treating me for a bacterial pneumonia as well as Covid pneumonia. I am getting very compassionate care. They are offering me pain medicine."

Citing patient privacy, an IU Health spokesperson declined to speak specifically to the case, but shared a written statement on behalf of IU Health North:

“As an organization committed to equity and reducing racial disparities in healthcare, we take accusations of discrimination very seriously and investigate every allegation," the statement reads. "Treatment options are often agreed upon and reviewed by medical experts from a variety of specialties, and we stand by the commitment and expertise of our caregivers and the quality of care delivered to our patients every day.”

IndyStar has also reached out to Bannec for comment.

Despite the change in care, Moore's condition continued to deteriorate. She died in the hospital three weeks after her Nov. 29 diagnosis.

Moore's experience and tragic death sparked outrage and sadness across social media. Many pointed to it as the latest example of racism and discrimination in health care, and part of the disproportionate toll COVID-19 has has taken on Black patients.

But this doctor was mistreated. Her symptoms were ignored, downplayed and dismissed. She posted a heartbreaking video begging her fellow doctors to help save her...

She called the chief medical officer... — Dr. Carmen Brown (@AutismDrMom) December 22, 2020

Today, I wanted to speak out on behalf of a fellow Black woman physician, Dr. Susan Moore, to not let our stories go unheard

Dr. Moore passed away last night due to COVID-19. Sadly, while so many have fallen victim, her story is marred by systemic racism, even as a doctor. — Dr. Omolara Uwemedimo MD, MPH (@DrOmolara) December 22, 2020

Dr. Susan Moore died today from COVID, but HOW she died is unacceptable. She posted a video to Facebook from an Indiana hospital days before her death about mistreatment. "This is how black people get killed when you send them home and they don't know how to fight for themselves" https://t.co/iSF8rs7qmI pic.twitter.com/3a8qE6DhN3 — Cleavon MD (@Cleavon_MD) December 22, 2020

It also led to an outpouring of support for the loved ones she leaves behind.

Moore is survived by her 19-year-old son and recent Carmel High School graduate, Henry Muhammed. In an interview with the New York Times, Henry said his mother was still thinking of others to the very end.

During their last conversation, Moore said she was going to help her son go to college.

According to a GoFundMe page created in her memory, Moore also leaves behind two elderly parents who suffer from dementia.

The GoFundMe effort is being organized by Alicia Sanders, a local physician who was in contact with Moore during her COVID-19 battle, and Rashad Elby, Henry's football coach at Carmel High School.

As of Thursday afternoon, the page had generated more than $97,000 in support of Moore's family.

"Susan was a phenomenal doctor. She loved practicing medicine, she loved being a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc, she loved helping people, and she was unapologetic about it," Sanders wrote in the page description.

In updates posted Tuesday and Wednesday, Elby said one of the goals is for Henry to continue his education without financial stress, just like his mother would have wanted.

He added that the young man has taken the lead in caring for his grandparents.

"For those of you not familiar with Henry and his struggles, he is a young man whose life to date is best summed as a story of obstacles, perseverance and triumph," Elby wrote. "Upon graduation, Henry enrolled at Indiana University (Bloomington) where he was going to study Biochemistry and minor in Mathematics. Because of his mother taking sick and Henry having to care for his sickly grandparents he was forced to put his schooling on hold."

Elby said the GoFundMe will help Henry and his grandparents relocate to live with family in Denver and "in true Hoosier fashion, for Henry to return to Indiana to resume his academics at Indiana University that he is so eagerly excited to do.

"Your contribution will go to a good place and help a great young man, who has experienced such disappointment, to reset his life and have a chance at a future," Elby wrote.

Moore's family told the New York Times that she was Born in Jamaica but grew up in Michigan. She studied engineering at Kettering University and earned her medical degree from the University of Michigan Medical School, according to her family.

Call IndyStar reporter Justin L. Mack at 317-444-6138. Follow him on Twitter: @justinlmack.

You can reach IndyStar reporter Holly Hays at 317-444-6156 or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter: @hollyvhays.

xxOneFootForwardxx on December 25th, 2020 at 03:34 UTC »

Nurse in indianA, close to Carmel. A lot of patients report severe pain with this Covid. Severe! Some say it’s chest pain when breathing, I had one patient that could barely swallow, another with whole body aches and pain.

Very sad. So many end up in ICU. You think they will make it, they’ll be fine. And some times they seem to get better. Then not. It’s so sad. So freaking sad. I hope it’s not true. But if she posted it then she was feeling it. So sad.

TupperwareConspiracy on December 25th, 2020 at 02:10 UTC »

Few things going on her

*She was diagnosed w/COVID on Nov 29th; she had previously tested negative on Nov 22nd

*Her first hospital - the one she specifically was complaining about in the video - was IU Health North Hospital in Carmel, IN

*She left IU Health North and went home for 12 hrs

*After 12 hrs she goes to St Vincent Hospital in Carmel, IN and gets re-hospitalized

*She said the treatment at St. Vincent was significantly better *She dies on Dec 22nd

Part that's not clear from what I've found is the approximate date/time she enters IU North Hospital | Leaves (for 12 hrs) | enters St Vincent Hospital

Edit: seems like it's around Dec 3-4 she has the issues with IU North

Edit 2: some conflict on when she dies - USA Today says Dec 20th

Goldenwaterfalls on December 24th, 2020 at 23:49 UTC »

I had occipital neuralgia for three years during which I told every doctor that’s what I thought it was. They all denied it. Anxiety and depression anxiety and depression. One day at a gyno visit I mentioned my unending head misery. My doctor asked the symptoms and I told her. She said, that’s occipital neuralgia, you need Botox. I was floored. She said to never ever suggest what you may have to a doctor, they will deny it. Even she had to pretend to be dumb to doctors to get proper treatment. I’m white and this shit is a travesty. I ended up homeless with two kids because of doctors like that.