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Mirrored here for historical purposes from:  http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20070113-1229-ca-brf-homelessdumping.html and

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/01/14/news/state/16_33_051_13_07.txt

Suit filed against Kaiser in patient dumping case

By: Associated Press -

LOS ANGELES -- A former employee has sued Kaiser Permanente, claiming it "blackballed" her for participating in a criminal invest­i­ga­tion into the alleged dumping of a homeless woman on skid row.

Irene Hernandez, 50, of Downey said Kaiser's hospital in Bellflower stopped employing her as a registry nursing assistant after she cooperated with the Los Angeles city attorney's office invest­i­ga­tion into alleged patient-dumping by the HMO.

Hernandez said in the suit filed Thursday in Superior Court that she discharged a homeless woman March 20 from Kaiser Bellflower, placing her in a taxi. She said she later learned that the cab dropped the woman off on skid row, leaving her to wander aimlessly.

She also said she told Kaiser lawyers and later the city attorney's office that hospital policy was to discharge patients in their street clothes by wheelchair to a taxi. But when neither the patient's pants nor a wheelchair could be found, she was told to walk the patient out dressed in two hospital gowns, the lawsuit said.

Since her interview with the city attorney, she has not been placed at Kaiser Bellflower or any other location despite calling in weekly to report for work, the suit said.

"When she put the woman in the taxi, she didn't know she was going to be dumped at skid row," said Hernandez's attorney, Gloria Allred. "And since she told the truth to the city attorney's office she doesn't have a job."

Kaiser Permanente spokesman Jim Anderson said his employer learned of the complaint late Friday and had not yet had the opportunity to examine it.

"We will need time to review it before we have anything to say," Anderson said.

 

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