Meharry Proposes Consortium of HBCU Med Schools to Address Covid-19

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Meharry Proposes Consortium of HBCU Med Schools to Tackle COVID-19’s Uneven Toll
May 27, 2020
The president of the historically Black Meharry Medical College said on Wednesday that a consortium of the nation’s four Black medical schools would be the group best prepared to tackle the disproportionate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Black people and communities of color.


Dr. James E.K. Hildreth

In testimony on Wednesday, before a virtual convening of the House Ways and Means Committee, Meharry’s president and CEO, Dr. James E.K. Hildreth, said the consortium, led by Meharry, is uniquely qualified to address the healthcare needs of people of color during the current pandemic, which has claimed at least 20,399 Black lives in the country to date of.

On Wednesday, the total number of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. crossed 100,000. And as of May 20, nearly 23% of reported COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. are African American even though Black people make up 13% of the population, reported CNBC.

Hildreth said the proposed consortium would include, other than Nashville, Tennessee-based Meharry, Howard University College of Medicine in Washington, D.C.; Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia; and Charles R. Drew Medical School in Los Angeles, California. These colleges, he said, are not only well qualified but can provide a culturally sensitive response and begin to address the pandemic’s long-term impact.

“We can deploy quickly, we know where to go, and we will be welcomed,” said Hildreth. The consortium’s work, he said, would include expanding COVID-19 testing and testing sites, conducting contact tracing and providing health care services in neighborhoods where mistrust of healthcare systems and government officials is high.

Hildreth also called on Congress to invest $5 billion over five years to help this higher education consortium combat the virus’s uneven impact on communities and people of color.

“Crucially, Meharry and Meharrians are trusted in the communities we serve, which have a history of abuse at the hands of America’s medical establishment,” said Hildreth. “We understand the subtle, yet critical cultural differences that have long been overlooked by mainstream providers, creating deep fear and distrust. The same is true for our sister HBCU medical schools.”

Committee chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) wanted to use the hearing to focus on longstanding issues of inequality that he says have exacerbated the nation’s public health emergency.

“While the factors driving these inequities are complex and multifaceted, their impact on health outcomes has been clearly documented,” said Neal. “That is why we convened this hearing — to unpack these circumstances and begin to unravel the roots of our own history that have brought us to this point.”

For more than three decades, Hildreth, an infectious disease expert, has held top posts at the elite Harvard and Johns Hopkins universities and the University of California, Davis, institutions that he said received federal funding because they were “believed to be well-suited” to tackle critical national need. But on Wednesday, Hildreth, the first president of a historically Black college or university (HBCU) to testify before the House of Representatives, said he wants the federal government to put the same trust in HBCU medical schools.

In his testimony, Hildreth didn’t invoke the familiar and disastrous Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis to make the case for why deploying trusted Black doctors and healthcare works in Black communities during this pandemic makes sense. Instead, he cited an example of COVID-19 testing that failed this month when the state government sent uniformed members of the Tennessee National Guard into public housing to conduct door-to-door testing. On paper, what seemed like a “logical and practical” public health approach left residents apprehensive and sheltering behind closed doors. Hildreth said the result was predictable to those who understand the community.

During the testimony, Hildreth’s and others’ comments touched off a discussion on the need to diversify the healthcare workforce. The number of African American, Hispanic and Native American physicians is much lower than it should be, Hildreth pointed out.

When asked, “what Congress can do” to help recruit and increase the number of African Americans and other people of color in the healthcare pipeline and workforce, Hildreth talked about finances and the often tough choices students of color have to make.

While the average medical school student graduates with more than $100,000 in debt, the figure is often double that for students of color who also carry staggering undergraduate student loans. Scholarships, Hildreth said, are one way the government can help.

But for now, Hildreth said the nation’s four Black medical schools need to be funded so that they can “join the fight.”

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full transcript of testimony in spoiler


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Morehouse School of Medicine gets $40 million grant to fight COVID-19



CatMax_Photography_Dr._Valerie_Montgomery_Rice_Morehouse-5266.jpg

Morehouse School of Medicine President and Dean Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice

June 24, 2020


The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Tuesday it is providing a $40 million grant to Atlanta’s Morehouse School of Medicine to fight COVID-19 in racially-diverse, rural and socially vulnerable communities.


The medical school will work with the HHS Office of Minority Health on a three-year project with community-based organizations across the nation to deliver education and information on resources to help fight the pandemic, such as testing and vaccinations once one is developed and federally-approved.

The partnership starts next month.

The grant is the second partnership in a week between the school and an organization with ties to the federal government. The CDC Foundation, an independent nonprofit created by Congress to mobilize philanthropic and private-sector support for federal health protection work, last week announced a joint effort with the medical school to provide real time data that addresses the health equity implications of the pandemic.

The HHS grant is believed to be the largest, single federal contribution to the medical school, founded in 1975, in its history.

Widespread research has shown Black and Latinos have disproportionately contracted and died from the disease. About 60% of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Georgia were people who are Black or Latino, state data shows. Blacks and Latinos make up about 42% of Georgia’s population, U.S. Census Bureau data shows.


“This work will create the opportunity to measure the effectiveness of interventions being deployed to mitigate the impact of COVID-19. The results of which should lead to a new found knowledge base to better prepare for and respond to future pandemics, especially in vulnerable communities,” MSM President and Dean Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice said in a statement.

MSM is already conducting research on COVID-19 and its impact on Black and socially vulnerable communities. It released a study last month that found coronavirus cases are higher in Georgia counties where more Blacks live, even after removing factors such as poverty, health insurance and population density.


COVID-19 is increasingly impacting Georgia’s rural and exurban communities as well, data shows. A team of Georgia Southern University graduate students reported this month that rural counties in South Georgia such as Early, Hancock and Terrell have some of the highest COVID-19 mortality rates in the nation. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution explored the rising cases in rural Georgia earlier this week.

Federal officials hope the partnership will determine whether there are factors that are leading to some of the reported cases.

“We know the power of partnerships to help us solve our most pressing public health challenges,” U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams said in a statement. “This initiative has at its core the community-based organizations who know their people best and who are committed to working collaboratively to reduce health-inequities and make them healthy and safe.”

Dr. Dominic Mack, director of the National Center for Primary Care and professor of Family Medicine at MSM, and Daniel E. Dawes, director of the Satcher Health Leadership Institute will co-lead the effort.

“By working collaboratively at the community level to advance health equity, we can make a meaningful difference in health outcomes,” Mack said.
 

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Of course I haven't seen this in the news :francis: under-served communities lives aren't even worth 1% of 1% of the stimulus
 

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The wild thimg is lots of white people do not understand WHY we don't trust the medical community



Thats what's getting me


You really don't know why?:francis:
 

kdslittlebro

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That's why the Black owned press and Black journalists embedded in mainstream media are so important. Otherwise the stories won't get out there.

Breh it is truly insane how white media operates when the story doesn't target helping whites. You can barely get a hit on this even when you specifically search for it
 

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Breh it is truly insane how white media operates when the story doesn't target helping whites. You can barely get a hit on this even when you specifically search for it
When the story isn't about helping whites, or about whites helping Blacks........it's covered differently.

Black people being in position to help each other is not the wave for "hot topic" for media to cover in this climate. White heroes, white saviours, or "good white people" helping Blacks will always be a more popular story.
The Netflix CEO donated $120 million to HBCUs and it was a big story (as it should have been )

African American billionaire Robert F. Smith just launched an initiative to combat student debt for HBCU students. and nobody gives a fukk.

https://www.thecoli.com/threads/rob...tiative-to-ease-student-debt-at-hbcus.788548/

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Also, to keep it a buck....there's a tendency to downplay any positive story coming from the White House because of Trump. fukk all that, if Black institutions are getting funding to help treat and save the lives of Black people, then the story should be reported. IDGAF if it's election season, it's an important story
 
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