Literature DB >> 19585919

Segregation, civil rights, and health disparities: the legacy of African American physicians and organized medicine, 1910-1968.

Harriet A Washington1, Robert B Baker, 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

Between 1910 and 1968, the National Medical Association (NMA) repeatedly clashed with the American Medical Association (AMA) over the latter organization's racial bars to membership and other health policy issues. The NMA, founded in 1895 as a nonexclusionary medical society to provide a voice for disenfranchised black physicians and patients, struggled in its early years, during which AMA leadership took scant notice of it. But skirmishes ensued over such actions as stigmatizing racial labels in the AMA's American Medical Directory, which, beginning in 1906, listed all U.S. physicians but designated African Americans with the notation col. The NMA also repeatedly asked the AMA to take action against overt racial bars on blacks' membership in its constituent state and county societies. During the civil rights era, African American physicians received no AMA support in seeking legal remedies to hospital segregation. And the NMA and AMA found themselves opposed on other policy issues, including Medicaid and Medicare. These differences eventually catalyzed a series of direct confrontations. The 1965 AMA meeting in New York City, for example, was protested by about 200 NMA-led picketers. The NMA's quest for racial equality in medicine was supported by some other medical organizations, such as the Medical Committee for Human Rights. In 1966, the AMA House voted to amend the AMA Constitution and Bylaws, giving its Judicial Council (now the Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs) the authority to investigate allegations of discrimination. This paved the way for a subsequent era of increasing cooperation and understanding.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19585919     DOI: 10.1016/s0027-9684(15)30936-6

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


  8 in total

1.  A study of national physician organizations' efforts to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities in the United States.

Authors:  Monica E Peek; Shannon C Wilson; Jada Bussey-Jones; Monica Lypson; Kristina Cordasco; Elizabeth A Jacobs; Cedric Bright; Arleen F Brown
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 6.893

2.  Patient trust in physicians and shared decision-making among African-Americans with diabetes.

Authors:  Monica E Peek; Rita Gorawara-Bhat; Michael T Quinn; Angela Odoms-Young; Shannon C Wilson; Marshall H Chin
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2012-10-10

Review 3.  An American Crisis: the Lack of Black Men in Medicine.

Authors:  Cato T Laurencin; Marsha Murray
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2017-05-22

4.  Trends in Health Care Use Among Black and White Persons in the US, 1963-2019.

Authors:  Samuel L Dickman; Adam Gaffney; Alecia McGregor; David U Himmelstein; Danny McCormick; David H Bor; Steffie Woolhandler
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2022-06-01

5.  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

6.  No Easy Talk: A Mixed Methods Study of Doctor Reported Barriers to Conducting Effective End-of-Life Conversations with Diverse Patients.

Authors:  Vyjeyanthi S Periyakoil; Eric Neri; Helena Kraemer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-22       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Assessment of Perceptions of Professionalism Among Faculty, Trainees, Staff, and Students in a Large University-Based Health System.

Authors:  Dominique A Alexis; Matthew D Kearney; J Corey Williams; Chang Xu; Eve J Higginbotham; Jaya Aysola
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-11-02

8.  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
  8 in total

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