Literature DB >> 19585918

Creating a segregated medical profession: African American physicians and organized medicine, 1846-1910.

Robert B Baker1, Harriet A Washington, Ololade Olakanmi, Todd L Savitt, Elizabeth A Jacobs, Eddie Hoover, Matthew K Wynia, Janice Blanchard, L Ebony Boulware, Clarence Braddock, Giselle Corbie-Smith, LaVera Crawley, Thomas A LaVeist, Randall Maxey, Charles Mills, Kathryn L Moseley, David R Williams.   

Abstract

An independent panel of experts, convened by the American Medical Association (AMA) Institute for Ethics, analyzed the roots of the racial divide within American medical organizations. In this, the first of a 2-part report, we describe 2 watershed moments that helped institutionalize the racial divide. The first occurred in the 1870s, when 2 medical societies from Washington, DC, sent rival delegations to the AMA's national meetings: an all-white delegation from a medical society that the US courts and Congress had formally censured for discriminating against black physicians; and an integrated delegation from a medical society led by physicians from Howard University. Through parliamentary maneuvers and variable enforcement of credentialing standards, the integrated delegation was twice excluded from the AMA's meetings, while the all-white society's delegations were admitted. AMA leaders then voted to devolve the power to select delegates to state societies, thereby accepting segregation in constituent societies and forcing African American physicians to create their own, separate organizations. A second watershed involved AMA-promoted educational reforms, including the 1910 Flexner report. Straightforwardly applied, the report's population-based criterion for determining the need for phySicians would have recommended increased training of African American physicians to serve the approximately 9 million African Americans in the segregated south. Instead, the report recommended closing all but 2 African American medical schools, helping to cement in place an African American educational system that was separate, unequal, and destined to be insufficient to the needs of African Americans nationwide.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19585918     DOI: 10.1016/s0027-9684(15)30935-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc        ISSN: 0027-9684            Impact factor:   1.798


  2 in total

1.  An Exploratory Study of Stress Coping and Resiliency of Black Men at One Medical School: A Critical Race Theory Perspective.

Authors:  Cassandra Acheampong; Carenado Davis; David Holder; Paige Averett; Todd Savitt; Kendall Campbell
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2018-07-23

2.  Projected Estimates of African American Medical Graduates of Closed Historically Black Medical Schools.

Authors:  Kendall M Campbell; Irma Corral; Jhojana L Infante Linares; Dmitry Tumin
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-08-03
  2 in total

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