Wednesday, December 11, 2013



Must not comment on the skin colour of a baby

A midwife told a black mother she should be in the Guinness Book of Records because she had given birth to ‘such a white baby,’ a tribunal heard today.

Bernadette McDaid is alleged to have made the comments after a complaint was made against her by the patient.

The 52-year-old appeared in front of a Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) disciplinary hearing today accused of a number of offences, including blowing the whistle on a case in which foster parents were not told that their baby was HIV-positive.

McDaid was struck off in 2012 for going public with the story, but after a successful appeal at the High Court she now faces fresh proceedings against her.

Althea Daley, team leader at Deanery Road Midwifery Group Practice, told the hearing in Aldwych, London that a new mother, known only as Patient A, had complained about McDaid and asked to be removed from her care.

‘She said she didn’t want you to come back to her home, to provide her with any further care. She didn’t want you back in her house and the reason being, you made a derogatory remark about her child, her family.

‘She gave me examples of three things, and you said, “oh my God, the baby is very white”. Secondly you said, “have you had an egg donation?” and “have you been mistaken for the nanny?”.’

McDaid denied this, saying she had asked to be taken off the case in January 2009 because she was offended by the patient’s [white] husband who kept going on about ‘his Aryan genes being superior’ to hers.

Source



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's the UK, who cares what they do.

Anonymous said...

"3:41" has vented his boringly frequent Anglophobic spleen on the next thread, and it is indeed getting very boring and questions his actual motives.

stinky said...


JJR,

Per 4:26's comment on 3:41, it would be helpful to identify commenters. Perhaps a hash key, which would keep their real-world id's secret, could be used, seeing as this site gets so many anon commenters.

http://patterico.com uses this technique. Cuts down on sock puppetry and impersonation, too, which has been a problem here in the past.