Sade E. Swint v. Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 12, 2026
Docket2:23-cv-03869
StatusUnknown

This text of Sade E. Swint v. Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation (Sade E. Swint v. Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sade E. Swint v. Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation, (E.D. Pa. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

SADE E. SWINT : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 23-3869 : VITAS HEALTHCARE ATLANTIC : CORPORATION :

MEMORANDUM

MURPHY, J. May 12, 2026

This is an employment discrimination case. For three years, Sade Swint worked at Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation, a healthcare company that provides hospice and palliative services, including at-home care, to patients. She served in several roles: Registered Nurse with on-call duties, on-call weekend triage manager, daytime visiting nurse, and per diem (i.e., as- needed) Admission Nurse, among others. Ms. Swint suffers from narcolepsy with cataplexy, and she took leave for her condition pursuant to the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). Throughout her time with Vitas, she also requested accommodations for her disability. That resulted in Ms. Swint shifting into different roles at Vitas in an apparent attempt to accommodate her narcolepsy-related needs. Months later, frustrated, Ms. Swint resigned. She now seeks relief for what she views as Vitas’s refusal to provide her with reasonable accommodations and its discrimination against her based on her disability, race, and sex. But Vitas had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its actions: that Ms. Swint was not able to perform the essential functions of the various roles she held or sought. Ms. Swint did not adduce evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to disagree. Nor is there sufficient evidence to support a finding of race or sex-based discrimination against Ms. Swint. Thus, we grant Vitas’s summary judgment motion in full. I. BACKGROUND

Ms. Swint brings claims of disability, race, and sex discrimination against Vitas under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (Title VII), Equal Pay Act (EPA), and Pennsylvania Human Relations Act (PHRA). DI 26 at 9-13. On January 11, 2021, Ms. Swint began working for Vitas as an RN with on-call duties. DI 80 at ¶ 3. As part of her application to Vitas, which Vitas asserts is for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) purposes and is not viewed by Vitas management,1 Ms. Swint disclosed that she had a disability (though the disclosure did not specify the particular disability). Id. at ¶ 4. Before her hiring, Ms. Swint told Melissa Noel, a Vitas employee, that she did not require accommodations for her irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Id. Ms. Swint was promoted to Team Manager Triage (otherwise referred to as Manager On Call) as of May 7, 2021. Id. at ¶ 5. The parties dispute the specific duties formally required of the Team Manager Triage role,2 but they

1 DI 80-1 at 111. Though Ms. Swint contends that she effectively disclosed her disabilities to Vitas by designating that she had a disability in her employment application, she does not dispute that this sheet is used for EEOC purposes but rather asserts that a member of Vitas’s human resources department either knew or should have known of her disclosure, or identified this disclosure when she requested reasonable accommodations. DI 80 at ¶ 4; DI 85-1 at 10 n.2.

2 The parties’ joint exhibits submission includes an exhibit titled “Policy Manual” which includes the job description and duties for “Team Manager” and is dated August 23, 2023. DI 80-1 at 26-32. Ms. Swint disputes that this is the correct policy manual and claims that the operative manual, instead, was dated February 3, 2022. DI 80 at ¶ 7. However, she did not include the February 3 policy manual in the joint exhibits, in her exhibits attached to her response in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, or even in her previously filed exhibits before the summary judgment stage. Thus, the only policy manual we have before us is the 2023 manual. Also included in the joint exhibits is a May 12, 2021 email from Vitas employee Gina Lewis to Ms. Swint, in which she provided a narrowed list of tasks performed by the Team Manager Triage on the weekends, which are administrative in nature. DI 80-1 at 82.

2 do not dispute that Ms. Swint was assigned to cover in-person shifts in that position. Id. at ¶¶ 7- 8. On March 20, 2022, Ms. Swint emailed her supervisor, Ms. Noel, stating — under the subject line “Voluntary Demotion” — that the Team Manager Triage role was “overly stressful” and “unbearable” due to the “manipulating and calculating” conduct of her coworkers on her team

and the “very ineffective” process for handling coverage needs. DI 80-1 at 38. She closed by asking to discuss “other possibilities or a mixed schedule” and the possibility of working “every other weekend or hav[ing] every 3rd weekend off” and/or having “a counterpart” because she “really need[ed] a reprieve” and her “kids need[ed] at least one weekend” with her. Id. She did not mention any disability or discrimination against her in this email. On April 5, 2022, Ms. Swint again emailed Ms. Noel, describing communications issues with the nurses on her team and requesting a change in position, such as becoming the Team Manager – 652 or a per diem nurse (PRN). Id. at 41. She mentioned that her position “is not good for [her] mental health” but did not mention any disability or discrimination against her. Id. at 42. Ms. Noel replied that day, stating that she was sorry to hear that Ms. Swint was

unsatisfied in her position and that she and the General Manager for Vitas’s Philadelphia Program, Tom Mignone, would discuss her concerns and devise a plan. DI 80 at ¶ 14. Around May 3, 2022, Ms. Swint provided Vitas with a note from her doctor, in which her doctor requested that she refrain from shift work due to her narcolepsy and cataplexy and that she be allowed to work remotely. Id. at ¶ 15. Vitas insists that this was the first time that Ms. Swint disclosed her narcolepsy and cataplexy to any member of Vitas management, while Ms. Swint asserts that she disclosed her disability to a supervisor, James Austin (otherwise known as “Sam” in the record), prior to October 2021 — though she provides no citation for this

3 assertion.3 Id. From our review of the record, other than Ms. Swint’s statements in her deposition, her statement in her resignation letter to Vitas employee Ava Padmore-Lewis, and her email to Vitas employee Diane Psaras on October 13, 2022, no evidence indicates that Ms. Swint informed management that she had narcolepsy with cataplexy prior to May 3, 2022. DI

80-1 at 71, 111; DI 85-1 at 60. Ms. Swint then moved into a daytime, non-management, RN position, in which she worked four days per week and would be responsible for covering visits and admissions. DI 85- 1 at 175-76. On July 29, 2022, Ms. Swint emailed Mr. Mignone, informing him that she had narcolepsy with cataplexy and requesting a workplace accommodation for those conditions. DI 80-1 at ¶ 18. At that point, Ms. Swint (according to her email) had been working 12 hours, 3 times per week, with 7 patient visits per shift. DI 80-1 at 51. In her email, she stated that she “really need[ed] a hybrid style role” where she received visits earlier in the day, due to the “excessive daytime sleepiness” and other symptoms she experiences when she is unable to maintain good sleep hygiene and is having negative interactions with others. Id. at 51-52. Mr.

3 Ms. Swint asserts that in her October 28, 2021 email to Mr. Austin, she provided a copy of a doctor’s note discussing the need for a disability-based accommodation request. DI 80 at ¶ 15 (citing DI 85-1 at 53-57). However, this email — which is dated December 28, 2021 — does not include, nor even mention, a doctor’s note regarding a disability-based accommodation request. It includes no reference to a disability and instead consists of Ms. Swint’s concerns regarding her responsibilities, after-hours staffing, and Vitas’s culture. Id. at 54. Ms.

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Sade E. Swint v. Vitas Healthcare Atlantic Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sade-e-swint-v-vitas-healthcare-atlantic-corporation-paed-2026.