2/ What we are experiencing right now is a systemic failure of healthcare in real time.
3/ None of how this pandemic is playing out is particularly surprising to me or my colleagues who work in safety net clinics across the US.
We lived the failed US Healthcare system pre-Pandemic.
4/ The US Healthcare system FAILS when my patients not only can’t afford their medication, they also can’t afford to buy food to eat it with.
5/ It FAILS because most specialists refuse to see my patients because they are on Medicaid.
6/ It FAILS because insurers will pay for my patient’s heart surgery after he has a heart attack but won’t pay me—his family doc—to spend time talking to him about exercise or eating healthy.
7/ They won’t pay me to help PREVENT the heart attack but will pay up after it happens.
Think about that.
8/ It FAILS because my patients have an easier time getting seen in the Emergency Department than getting seen by a primary care doctor.
9/ It FAILS because I have to sit on the phone arguing with insurance for 1.5 hours (literally) to beg for approval for a lifesaving medication or test for my patients.
And still get denied.
10/ We lived in a FAILED Healthcare system before this Pandemic.
And do you know who the US Healthcare system FAILS the most?
Black people.
11/ The system FAILED Black people before and it’s FAILING us now.
Now can we please start turning this ship around and doing right by Black folks?
12/ That means questioning how someone like Dr. Susan Moore can die in our system despite being a physician herself.
13/ That means working with Congress and each other to change Healthcare policy on the local, state and federal level to hold Healthcare Institutions accountable for producing inequitable care along racial lines.
14/ It means workplace protections for Black providers, medical students and staff in healthcare to shield them from racism and retaliation from racist patients and employers.
15/ It means coming together and not just TALKING about how racist things are or releasing an empty “company statement of support” and then doing NOTHING to actually change as an institution.
It means rolling up our sleeves and actually creating tangible and lasting change.
16/ We need to address the ubiquitous and devastating ways the US Healthcare system has failed and continues to fail Black people.
But we need more than just talk. We need solutions.
Because we are tired.
• • •
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Many Black person will refuse to take this COVID vaccine bc most of us don’t trust that white people or the government mean us any good.
And when that happens, know that the hesitance is not some baseless paranoia. It is completely rational.
Let me explain.
2/ Black people’s mistrust in Medicine and Public Health is well-deserved and completely rational based on what you all have done to us, and continue to do to us.
Let me say clearly: I will 100% get the vaccine. I believe in it. I trust it.
3/ But when my Black patients balk at the idea, I won’t judge them. Because I intimately I understand their fear.
Listen. Even I’m a physician myself, and even I don’t trust ya’ll.
Being a doctor has made me LESS trusting of the Medical Institution as a whole, not more.
Can we officially do away with the phrase “implicit bias” in 2020? Please? Pretty please?
Can we FINALLY just call it what it is? It’s racism. Can’t we finally just say racism when we actually mean racism?
It’s sad that having this stance in academia makes me “radical” 🙄
Part of institutional racism is white supremacist power demanding that we don’t actually say the word “racism” when it’s what we’re actually talking about.
If hear me say the phrase “implicit bias” in person, know that I’m codeswitching/in performance mode 👀😂 #BlackintheIvory
Join me in telling these institutions NO. I will call this what it is. If you aren’t comfortable with me doing that, let’s sit down and talk about why.
1/ Although I do whatever I can to flatten power hierarchies with my students, this is one place that my Blackness and my woman-ness won’t let me go.
A thread.
I CANT give you license to call me by my first name if you are a learner. Why?
2/ Because my Blackness and woman-ness mean I am not respected by those around me at baseline, despite being Ivy League educated and a physician.
Despite playing your game for over 30 years and relentlessly grinding and hustling and pushing to get your accolades so you see me…
3/ …and think I matter and speaking the way you want me to and straightening my hair and hiding from you my Blackness and the extent of the violence you visit on black bodies like mine to keep YOU comfortable (so I have a prayer of you actually listening to me this time and…