Karen Jo Young wrote a to her local newspaper criticizing executives at the hospital where she worked as an activities coordinator, arguing that their actions led to staffing shortages and other patient safety problems.
Hours after her letter was published in September 2017, officials at Maine Coast Memorial Hospital in Ellsworth, Maine, , citing a policy that no employee may give information to the news media without the direct involvement of the media office.
But a federal appellate court recently said Young鈥檚 firing violated the law and ordered that she be reinstated. The court鈥檚 could mean that hospitals and other employers will need barring workers from talking to the news media and posting on social media.
Those media policies have been a bitter at hospitals over the past year, as , and other health care workers around the country have been fired or disciplined for publicly speaking or posting about what they saw as dangerously inadequate covid-19 safety precautions. These fights also reflect between health care workers, including physicians, and the increasingly large, profit-oriented companies that employ them.
On May 26, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld issued last year that the hospital, now known as Northern Light Maine Coast Hospital, violated federal labor law by firing Young for engaging in protected 鈥.鈥 The NLRB defines it as guaranteeing the right to act with co-workers to address work-related issues, such as circulating petitions for better hours or speaking up about safety issues. It also affirmed the board鈥檚 finding that the hospital鈥檚 media policy barring contact between employees and the media was illegal.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great news because I know all hospitals prefer we don鈥檛 speak with the media,鈥 said Cokie Giles, president of the Maine State Nurses Association, a union. 鈥淲e are careful about what we say and how we say it because we don鈥檛 want to bring the hammer down on us.鈥
The 1st Circuit opinion is noteworthy because it鈥檚 one of only a few such employee speech rulings under the National Labor Relations Act ever issued by a federal appellate court, and the first in nearly 20 years, said , a University of Florida law professor who heads the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information.
The 1st Circuit and NLRB rulings should force hospitals to 鈥減ull out their handbook and make sure it doesn鈥檛 gag employees from speaking,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you are fired for violating a 鈥榙on鈥檛 talk to the media鈥 policy, you should be able to get your job back.鈥
The American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals declined to comment for this article.
While the 1st Circuit鈥檚 opinion is binding only in four Northeastern states plus Puerto Rico, the NLRB decision carries the force of law nationwide. The case applies to both unionized and non-unionized employees, legal experts say.
In March, the to revise its policy barring employees from speaking with the media without written permission.
Hospitals and health care organizations often have policies requiring employees to clear any public comments about the workplace with the organization鈥檚 media office. Many also have policies restricting what employees can say on Facebook and other social media.
Hospitals say requiring employees to go through their media office prevents the spread of inaccurate information that could damage the public鈥檚 confidence. In Young鈥檚 case, the hospital argued that her letter contained false and disparaging statements. But the 1st Circuit panel agreed with the NLRB that her letter was 鈥渘ot abusive鈥 and that its only false statement was not her fault.
Health care organizations have undisputed legal authority to prohibit employees from disclosing confidential patient information or proprietary business information, legal experts say.
But the 1st Circuit panel made clear that an employer cannot bar an employee from engaging in 鈥渃oncerted actions鈥 鈥 such as outreach to the news media 鈥 鈥渋n furtherance of a group concern.鈥 That鈥檚 true even if the employee acted on her own, as Young did in writing her letter. The key in her case was that she 鈥渁cted in support of what had already been established as a group concern,鈥 the court said.
鈥淚 think employers with a blanket ban on talking to the media need to relook at their policies,鈥 said , a partner at FisherBroyles in Philadelphia who often represents companies on employment law matters. 鈥淚f you go to the media and say, 鈥楾here are unsafe working conditions impacting me and my colleagues,鈥 that鈥檚 protected concerted activity.鈥
Chad Hansen, Young鈥檚 attorney in a separate federal lawsuit alleging discrimination based on a disability against the hospital, said she has not yet been reinstated to her job. Young would not comment.
The hospital鈥檚 parent company, Northern Light Health, said only that its news media policy 鈥 which was amended after Young鈥檚 firing 鈥 meets the NLRB and 1st Circuit requirements and will not be further changed. The new policy created an exception allowing employees to speak to the news media related to concerted activities protected by federal law.
Speech rights under the National Labor Relations Act are particularly important for employees of private companies. Although the Constitution protects people who work for public hospitals and other government employers with its guarantee of unrestricted speech, employees at private companies do not have a First Amendment right to speak publicly about workplace issues.
鈥淚 hope this case keeps alive the right of health care workers to speak out about something that鈥檚 dangerous,鈥 said Dr. Ming Lin, an emergency physician who at PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center in Bellingham, Washington, after publicly criticizing the hospital鈥檚 pandemic preparedness.
Lin, who was employed by TeamHealth, which provides emergency physician services at the hospital, lost his assignment at PeaceHealth in March 2020 soon after with news reporters that PeaceHealth was not taking urgent enough steps to protect staff members from covid. He had worked at the hospital for 17 years.
In an , PeaceHealth鈥檚 chief operating officer, Richard DeCarlo, said Lin was removed from the hospital鈥檚 ER schedule because he 鈥渃ontinued to post misinformation, which was resulting in people being afraid and being scared to come to the hospital.鈥 DeCarlo also alleged that Lin, who was out of town for part of the time he was posting, refused to communicate with his supervisors in Bellingham about the situation. PeaceHealth declined to comment for this article.
PeaceHealth鈥檚 social media policy at that time stated that the company does not prohibit employees from engaging in federally protected concerted activity and that they 鈥渁re free to communicate their opinions.鈥 , dated July 15, 2020, states the company reserves the right to take disciplinary action in response to behavior that adversely affects the company.
Lin, who鈥檚 now working for the Indian Health Service in South Dakota, has sued PeaceHealth, TeamHealth and DeCarlo in state court in Washington claiming wrongful termination in violation of public policy, breach of contract and defamation.
Dr. Jennifer Bryan, board chair of the Mississippi State Medical Association, who publicly defended two Mississippi physicians fired for posting about the inadequacy of their hospitals鈥 covid safety policies, said she faced pressure from her hospital for speaking to the news media without approval.
The medical association pushed its members to talk to the media about the science of covid, while employers insisted doctors鈥 messages had to be approved by the media office. That reflected a conflict, she said, between medical professionals primarily concerned about public health and executives of for-profit systems who were seeking to shield their corporate image.
Bryan predicted the court ruling and NLRB decision will be helpful. 鈥淧hysicians have to be able to stand up and speak out for what they believe affects the safety and well-being of patients,鈥 she said. 鈥淥therwise, there are no checks and balances.鈥
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