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Thompson v. Dignity Health
Nathan Michael Smith, Ariano & Associates, Phoenix, AZ, for Plaintiff.
Lindsay Jo Fiore, Stephanie J. Quincy, Quarles & Brady LLP, Phoenix, AZ, for Defendant.
Plaintiff Emmitt Thompson ("Dr. Thompson") was a second-year medical resident at Barrow Neurological Institute ("BNI").1 BNI did not renew Dr. Thompson's contract for his third year of residency. Dr. Thompson alleges his residency contract was not renewed due to race discrimination. (Doc. 29.) He also alleges BNI breached its Academic Review Policy and defamed him to the California Medical Board and prospective employers. Before the Court is BNI's Motion for Summary Judgment on Dr. Thompson's claims for race discrimination, defamation, and breach of contract, (Doc. 84), as well as BNI's Motion to Exclude Expert Sandra L. Shefrin (Doc. 86). For the foregoing reasons, BNI's Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 84) is granted.2 BNI's Motion to Exclude Expert Sandra L. Shefrin (Doc. 86) is granted in part and denied in part.
Emmitt Thompson is an African American doctor.3 (Doc. 29.) Dr. Thompson declared that he applied to the Barrow Adult Neurology Program ("Barrow") to begin in the 2014–15 academic year. (Doc. 93-1 at 3.) Barrow admitted Dr. Thompson to begin in July 2015, but required Dr. Thompson to complete his first year of residency elsewhere. (Doc. 93-1 at 3.) Dr. Thompson had asked Barrow to consider allowing him to start his first year at Barrow with other members of his class, because he had a documented learning disability that made assimilating written materials a slower process and was concerned about having to catch up with the other residents. (Doc. 93-1 at 3.) Barrow reassured him that he would have time to "get up to speed." (Doc. 93-1 at 3.) Dr. Thompson was the only Adult Neurology resident of his Barrow residency class that was required to complete his first year at a different institution.4 (Doc. 93-1 at 3.)
Dr. Thompson completed his first year of residency in internal medicine at Meharry Medical College ("Meharry"), a historically African American institution in Nashville, Tennessee. (Docs. 93-1 at 3; 85 at 1.) Dr. Thompson declared he completed his first year at Meharry "with a middle of the class ranking, a strong knowledge base, and the department's blessing to leave the program a few days early." (Doc. 93-1 at 3.) Dr. Richmond Akatuea—Associate Professor of Medicine at Meharry and Program Director of the Internal Medicine Residency—testified that Dr. Thompson "was doing fairly well" at his Meharry residency. (93-1 at 68.) Dr. Akatuea's June 2015 end-of-year evaluation of Dr. Thompson, however, expressed "considerable concern about some aspects of [Dr. Thompson's] professional conduct." (Doc. 93-1 at 71.) It further stated: (Doc. 93-1 at 71.) In addition, Dr. Thompson received more than one disciplinary email from chief residents at Meharry, warning him of a "no call, no show" violation and "a pattern of uncooperative work ethics in this academic year." (Doc. 85-1 at 99–101).
In May 2015, Dr. Thompson signed a Postgraduate Training Agreement with BNI (the "Agreement"). (Docs. 93-1 at 3; 85-1 at 104.) The Agreement appointed Dr. Thompson as a second-year resident in the Barrow Adult Neurology program, from July 1, 2015 until June 30, 2016. (Doc. 85-1 at 105.) The Agreement provided: "Resident's re-appointment to the next postgraduate training year shall be by recommendation from the Program Director and shall be contingent upon the Resident's successful completion of the current postgraduate year of education." (Doc. 85-1 at 105.) In addition, the Agreement stated: (Doc. 85-1 at 114.) If a resident's contract is not renewed, he may appeal the decision in accordance with the Academic Review and Appeals Process Policy ("Academic Review Policy"). (Doc. 85 at 2.) The Academic Review Policy describes the process of appeal: First, the resident must attempt to resolve the issue with his immediate supervisor. If the immediate supervisor is involved in the event or issue, the resident may submit a written statement to his program director about the unresolved issue and the resolution he seeks. If the program director is the immediate supervisor, the resident must submit the statement to the Designated Institutional Official ("DIO") within five days after meeting with the immediate supervisor. (Doc. 85-1 at 117.) At Barrow, Dr. Thompson had various immediate supervisors, depending on his training block or rotation. Dr. Suraj Muley was the program director and Dr. Jeffrey Sugimoto was the DIO. Dr. Thompson was the only African American in his class of seven, although there were African American residents in the classes above and below him. (Doc. 85 at 10.)
Dr. Thompson admitted he encountered difficulties during his first months as a resident at Barrow. Dr. Thompson declared his "early difficulties at Barrow can be explained by the difference in program style between Meharry and Barrow." (Doc. 93-1 at 4.) Unlike everyone else in his class, Dr. Thompson had not spent his first year of residency at Barrow. As a result, Dr. Thompson had to use "mental space" to learn systems and layouts that were specific to Barrow. (Doc. 85-1 at 17.) In addition, Dr. Thompson testified that compared to Meharry, Barrow (Doc. 85-1 at 60.)
The Barrow program "is broken down into 13 training blocks or rotations, during which residents shadow and work with attending physicians." (Doc. 85-1 at 132.) The attending physician evaluates the residents for their performance during each block. Despite some favorable feedback, Dr. Thompson received significant negative evaluations from multiple attending physicians. Below are examples of the negative evaluations of Dr. Thompson's performance from July until December 2015:
On December 17, 2015, Dr. Thompson received written discipline after he failed to report for his on-call shift and was unavailable for three hours. (Doc. 85 at 4.) During deposition, Dr. Thompson admitted this incident occurred but noted his three-hour absence did not endanger patients because there was another resident on call. (Doc. 85-1 at 33– 36.) On December 23, 2015, Dr. Thompson received another written discipline: (Doc. 85-1 at 178.) After that, Dr. Courtney Schusse5 had a conversation with Dr. Thompson and told him that additional performance problems could lead to termination. (Doc. 85-1 at 39.) On January 28, 2016, Dr. Thompson received written discipline once again. This time, three problems were identified: (Doc. 85-1 at 180.)
Following this incident, program director Dr. Muley and Dr. Schusse met with Dr. Thompson to inform him that BNI would not be renewing its contract with him for the next academic year. Dr. Thompson appealed the nonrenewal decision to Dr. Sugimoto, stating: "To my understanding this [nonrenewal] decision was made on the basis of 2 human errors and a mistake coupled with the perception of a general sense of lack of urgency and insufficient knowledge on my part." (Doc. 85-1 at 182.) Dr. Thompson further stated: "I can't dispute that I've made some errors, but I would argue that I've taken steps to prevent similar oversights in the future." (Doc. 85-1 at 182.) According to Dr. Thompson, he had a hard time adjusting to Barrow and "was finding it hard to be motivated and generally had low energy" from October until December 2015. (Doc. 85-1 at 183.)
While his appeal was pending, Dr. Thompson continued to experience issues related to his work performance. During this time, Dr. Muley asked attending physicians for additional feedback on Dr. Thompson, because Dr. Muley ...
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