- Associated Press - Friday, May 31, 2019

Pennsylvania’s Lehigh University suspended the interim director of the student health center Friday in response to a lawsuit that says he sexually harassed co-workers and performed inappropriate breast exams on students.

Former medical assistant Christine Feit claims she was fired by Lehigh in retaliation for reporting misconduct by the interim director, Dr. Thomas Novak. Her federal lawsuit said that Novak routinely made inappropriate sexual remarks about students and staff members, tried to perform pelvic exams without gloves, and once agreed with a nursing supervisor’s characterization that he was “copping a feel” with students.

Lehigh did nothing to address Novak’s behavior and instead fired Feit, the suit said.

Messages were left for Novak seeking comment Friday. Novak, 51, has been licensed to practice medicine in Pennsylvania since 2000. Records do not show any state disciplinary actions against him.

Lehigh said in a message to the campus community Friday that a “senior member” of the health center - Novak - has been barred from campus while the school investigates the accusations in the suit.

“We take seriously any allegations of harassment, and are committed to creating an environment that is safe and welcoming,” the statement said.

Feit said Lehigh failed to hold Novak accountable after she and at least two other health workers lodged multiple complaints about him to health center supervisors and the human resources department.

Her co-workers, she said, had warned her about Novak when she joined Lehigh in 2008, saying he would often become sexually inappropriate toward new female staff members.

“Feit’s co-workers told her that if she complained about Novak, nothing would be done by Lehigh, and Novak would alienate the complainer, so there was nothing to be accomplished by complaining,” the suit said.

Feit did eventually speak up about Novak, the suit said, and the doctor tearfully apologized during a 2012 meeting with human resources. But he wasn’t disciplined, and Novak continued to sexually harass his colleagues and mistreat students, the suit said. A 2016 meeting with human resources went nowhere, the suit said.

Feit was fired in May 2017 after university officials claimed she made a medication dosing error in one case and treated a student’s scraped toe without following protocols in another. The suit denied wrongdoing by Feit, calling her termination “pretextual and done in response to Feit’s complaint of sexual harassment and sexual misconduct against Novak.”

The suit seeks unspecified monetary damages. A Lehigh spokeswoman said the university will “vigorously defend” itself.

Lehigh, a highly selective university about 60 miles (100 kilometers) north of Philadelphia, has an undergraduate enrollment of about 5,000.

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