A group of doctors, nurses and other staff of Hennepin Healthcare say the hospital system too often resorts to sedating, secluding and physically restraining patients — especially patients of color — who are deemed uncooperative.
Calling these practices dangerous and overused, the coalition of medical workers published a petition demanding hospital leadership audit how often they use "medical force."
They also asked the hospital to stop training law enforcement on "excited delirium" — a controversial diagnosis used to describe dangerously agitated people — which they say is exploited to justify police force.
"When I admit patients to the ICU at night brought in with the diagnosis of 'excited delirium' I find it problematic, especially when there is a police officer at their bedside," said HCMC Dr. Max Fraden.
"In fact, this whole syndrome is problematic. I think it is fair to question if this should even be taught to police when doctors cannot agree if this is a real thing. ... I think it is fair to question that when we medicalize this entity and give it to police, are we providing cover? I wish our medical leadership would take a stand on this issue."
The petition, which has been signed by more than 1,100 people, comes three years after civil rights investigators for Minneapolis found Hennepin Healthcare paramedics were sedating agitated people at the request of police, sometimes when it didn't appear necessary. These revelations spurred community protests and promises from hospital leadership to reevaluate its research practices and repair fractured trust.
Hennepin Healthcare CEO Jennifer DeCubellis said she fully agrees with the goals of the petition.
"I think we have the same shared sense of urgency around actions, in particular to dismantle institutional racism," she said. "The surprise for me was that the petition even was necessary."