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Clerk Tells Disabled Patient “Not My Problem,” Faces Consequences

by Charles Butler
November 5, 2025
in Social Issues

It’s one thing to be rude, but it’s another to be actively cruel.

A medical clerk, enjoying a tiny bit of power, forced a disabled woman to stand in 104-degree heat instead of using an empty, air-conditioned waiting room.

The clerk’s one mistake? Telling the woman she was free to complain to management. So she did.

Now, read the full story:

Clerk Tells Disabled Patient "Not My Problem," Faces Consequences
Not the actual photo

Medical clerk made me stand outside in 104 degree heat so I staged a mini revolution?

This took place during the first summer of lockdown where I live.

Some context for you- My town is basically on the edge of nowhere. We have a medical centre for basic stuff but a full hospital is 30 - 40 minutes...

With that in mind, we get people from a huge surrounding area that go to our town centre for tests , simple medical exams , etc.

Maybe as many as 50 small communities use our centre on a daily basis so it is constantly busy.

The centre itself is quite small compared to hospitals in the city. The various clinics and a basic ER take up most of the space with an area by the...

It is that waiting area that is the cause for my story today.

One day during the first summer of lockdown here, I had to go to the medical centre for tests. Some things to know about me. I am challenged with multiple...

I am legally blind, have significant mobility and balance issues and a rather severe heart condition. As such I use a walking frame and travel using the cities provided disabled...

That particular day, I had finished my tests early and had 45 minutes to wait until my transport was scheduled to return to pick me up.

I figured - no problem, i will just sit in the waiting area and - well - wait! haha.

I shuffled over to the seats with my walker plainly evident and was confronted by a new sign. STAFF ONLY. Say what now?

I looked around at all the empty seats and vacant tables and turned to the clerks at the entrance..

Me- Can I please have a seat in the waiting area until my transport come back?.

Clerk- (coldly) NO its staff only. YOU need to wait outside!

Me- uh I cant stand for 45minutes waiting for my transport (gesturing to my plainly apparent walking frame that i was clearly leaning heavily on).

Clerk- Not my problem! There are benches to sit on outside .

Me- The benches are full and we are supposed to be social distancing not cuddling up to random strangers on a park bench!.

Clerk- If you want i suppose I could let you take a wheelchair out and sit in that..

Me - And how am I to manage a wheelchair AND my walking frame at the same time?

Clerk - again , not my problem. If you want you can call centre management when you get home. Are we done here?.

Me - I guess we are done huh. And went outside to find a spot to wait.

Well I stood outside for the 45 minutes while the sun beat down on what turned out to be 104 F day.

As I stood there , I noticed that there was a line of patients growing steadily longer also standing outside in the heat waiting to be let into the building.

Some looked fit but lets face it- nobody comes to a medical centre because they feel 100%!

Most of them looked quite ill and some were looking pretty faint by the time they got through the doors.

By the time my transport arrived, I was badly sunburned , thirsty as hell, exhausted and feeling more than a bit faint myself!

My driver was shocked and insisted on walking me to my front door when he got me home to make sure I was ok. (shout out to all transport drivers...

The rest of the day was a complete loss. I spent it drinking water, sleeping and nursing the burns on my shoulders and face lol. I was a right mess!

The next day, however, I was pissed. I had plenty of time to recover and to think and I kept coming back to that line of patients standing in the...

The more I thought about it, the angrier i got!. Malicious compliance.

The words the clerk so smugly said- you can call centre management when you get home if you want- danced through my sunbaked brain like a mantra.

I called centre management. What followed was a half hour conversation with the SWEETEST lady .

She was SO nice and so upset when I told her all that went on the day before.

She was especially concerned when she found out about the line of people waiting outside one what turned out to be the the hottest day we had that summer.

After our talk, the manager promised to look into it and get back to me. Now normally that's sort of a brush off, right? Not so with this lady.

Two days later, she called me back. Turned out, she had spent the day before sitting at the clerks desk observing things that went on. Things like.

Patients being forced to stand in the rain waiting to get into the centre.

Patients being poorly spoken to by the same clerk.

And the cherry on top? At one point a tiny, elderly lady tried to sit down in the waiting area and the SAME clerk ran over and rudely shoved her...

The Manager went over , tore down the signs, apologized to the lady and helped her to a seat then took the clerk into her office for a - chat..

The Results

The centre was immediately restructured. Staff were moved into an unused gift shop , the waiting room as returned to the public and best of all?

The registry desks were moved so patients no longer had to stand outside waiting to get into the building!.

I never saw that clerk there again.

I know this isn't as exciting as most stories on here but knowing I was part of making things so much better for so many still makes me happy !.

Dangit I am proud of my mini- coup Hahaha Vive La resistance and all that crap!

EDIT to add- THANK YOU all for all the positive feedback and awards! You really make this human feel loved. 😊

My blood pressure shot up just reading this. It’s that feeling of complete helplessness, magnified by a medical condition and extreme weather.

It’s the sheer injustice of seeing an empty, air-conditioned room while being forced to bake on the pavement.

This isn't just bad customer service. It's a dangerous lack of basic human decency. You can almost feel the sun beating down and the smug, dismissive "not my problem" from...

This situation is the perfect storm of bureaucracy and a stunning lack of compassion.

The core of this story is the breakdown of empathy in a place that should be defined by it. The clerk wasn’t just “enforcing a rule.” She was enforcing it with a chilling lack of awareness, ignoring the walker, the heat, and the patient’s obvious distress.

This wasn’t just uncomfortable for the Original Poster (OP), it was life-threatening. She mentioned a severe heart condition. According to the American Heart Association, people with heart conditions are at a significantly higher risk for heat-related illnesses.

High temperatures force the heart to pump harder and faster, putting immense strain on the cardiovascular system. Forcing any patient to stand in 104°F heat is negligent, but for a heart patient, it’s a terrifying gamble. This clerk was the “face” of the clinic, and that first impression matters.

A report from The Beryl Institute on patient experience found that negative interactions with non-clinical staff, like front-desk personnel, can have a disproportionately large impact on a patient’s overall perception of their care.

These interactions often rate as more stressful than the medical procedure itself. This is where a little training goes a long way. Empathy isn’t just about being “nice.”

Dr. Helen Riess, a leading psychiatrist and researcher on the topic, has noted that empathy is a vital clinical tool. When patients feel heard and respected, their stress levels drop, which directly impacts their healing and trust in the medical system.

The clerk’s “Not my problem” attitude did the exact opposite, adding profound stress to an already vulnerable person. The manager, thankfully, understood this. She didn’t just “handle” a complaint. She used it as a diagnostic tool for her own clinic, saw the system was broken, and fixed it completely.

Check out how the community responded:

Most of the community was just thrilled to see such a positive, widespread change come from one person’s courage to speak up.

tulip27 - Great job! People get a little bit of power and their true colors come out! I'm so glad you feel better and followed up!

Dungeons-and-Dabbin - Meh, it may not be as "exciting" or "interesting" as some of the stories here, but I bet you'd be hard pressed to find many stories that end...

It sounds like your actions have greatly benefitted many people who were in need, you should be very proud of yourself.

ICanQuoteTheOffice2 - Sounds like you're a regular at the center, and with the insane costs of medical bills (assuming your in America) in conjunction with your efforts to ensure patient...

It seems like they should put a little plaque up naming that seating section after you!

A few users played devil’s advocate, suggesting the clerk was just enforcing a bad rule from management. But others pointed out that the way she enforced it was the real problem.

Knogood - Devils advocate, that clerk did not make the rules, and would be in trouble if they broke them, its [bad] management, but atleast they saw what their actions...

PowerCord64 - Woah. Wait a minute. .. I'm sure the clerk did not make the call to make that room STAFF ONLY. There has to be mitigating circumstances.

will592 - My guess is that this began at a high level because of recommendations (or restrictions) coming down from federal health entities which stipulated patients may not congregate in...

It was common throughout Arizona (even during the 110+ degree summer) for staff to apologetically let us know that federal guidelines mandated we must wait outside the office for our...

This story hit home for many, who shared their own awful experiences with callous healthcare staff and baffling rules.

Nearby-Elevator-3825 - I'm always amazed at how many people with a lack of even a minimal amount of empathy and compassion end up working healthcare jobs.

RebootDataChips - I had this not to long ago. Was pushed about from waiting area to waiting area since I wasn’t complaining about pain and just watching Netflix on my...

One ER person told me that if I wasn’t serious I should just go home. I shrugged my shoulders and just stayed there.

Around 2am I was seen by a overly exhausted ER doc who took one look at the gaping would I had in my side and loudly demanded to know why...

That same ER worker got a bit green looking at the red/black/yellow/green fluids that stained the insides of my uniform and just replied, “she wasn’t complaining”

The doc asked how much pain I was in and i again shrugged. I had had that pain for two weeks, I didn’t know how bad it was anymore. Then...

Got me some morphine, a room, and surgery at 8am.

One user shared a tangentially related story about a delivery driver whose own attempt to complain backfired beautifully.

BakedWizerd - A delivery driver was giving me a hard time at work the other day, yet I just make the orders in the order they show up on my...

then I bring it outside, call out the order number, and hope the driver pays attention to their app notifications (I press “done” on a tablet and it’s supposed to...

So this one guy is just constantly ringing our doorbell. He’s not new, he knows how we do things. I ignore him and eventually bring out my next order.

He’s in my face. He’s telling me this and that, asking why it’s taking so long, when he can see how [freaking] packed my drive thru is, plus the other...

So I just said, “I’m making them in the order they show up. ” Then he pulls out a second phone, and tells me “I have another order, get that...

Now, the app/delivery service he works for does not allow their drivers to take more than one delivery on at a time, and he’s gotten a second phone to work...

I don’t use DoorDash a lot because they have the multi-order feature for drivers, and I’d like to get my food delivered directly from the restaurant, so this place caters...

So after I go get his second order, something that I’m normally too busy to deal with (reporting him to the app means

I have to spend a bunch of time on the phone/at the computer when I’m needed elsewhere), the phone rings.

It’s the delivery service support. They seem flustered.

They’re asking “where is order # 123? The driver says they’ve been waiting for a while.”

I quickly recall, hey, that impatient guy with the two phones had order # 123.

“So I just sent that order out, but the reason he was waiting so long is because he’s using two phones to take more than one order at a time,

I know that’s against your policy, and he would’ve been able to leave for his delivery on the first order pretty quickly had he not stuck around for the 2nd...

She immediately changed her tone from flustered to concerned and she assured me that they would address it.

So buddy decided to call support and talk [crap], and got himself reported when I wouldn’t have had time otherwise. Way to go buddy.

Your post just reminded me of that whole ordeal last night, where someone tries some [bullcrap] when they’re clearly in the wrong and it backfires on them.

Finally, one user had a respectful question about the OP’s disability, leading to a moment of clarification.

CrepuscularNemophile - OP, are there different degrees of blindness that are called 'legally blind'? You said were able to look around the waiting room and watch the people queuing.

Is that partial blindness / blind in one eye / other? (I hope I am not prying too much. ) I realise I know no-one who is blind and I've...

How to Navigate a Situation Like This

It can feel impossible to advocate for yourself when you’re already sick, in pain, and exhausted.

If you’re facing a “brick wall” of bureaucracy in a moment of need, the first priority is always your own safety.

If the situation is dangerous, like being forced into extreme heat, try to find an immediate, safe alternative. This could mean waiting in a nearby store’s air conditioning, calling a friend for help, or simply leaving if possible.

The most important step is what the OP did next: she waited until she was safe, recovered, and had the energy to make the complaint.

When you do, be clear and calm. Document everything: the date, the time, the weather, the name of the employee if you have it, and the exact words used.

Quoting the clerk’s “Not my problem” was incredibly powerful.

Frame your complaint not just around your own bad experience, but as a safety concern for all patients.

The OP’s focus on the long line of other sick people in the heat is likely what made the manager take such immediate, sweeping action. You’re not just complaining, you’re helping them fix a dangerous flaw in their system.

Conclusion

This story is just so satisfying. It’s a perfect example of how one person, armed with a righteous and well-communicated complaint, can topple a ridiculous system and make life better for everyone.

The clerk was clearly in the wrong, but what about the original policy? Was the clinic’s initial “staff only” rule an understandable (but poorly executed) pandemic precaution, or was it just a bad idea from the start?

Let us know your thoughts.

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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