Dayton Daily News

Panel wants to see more Black doctors

Educator: More should be done in area schools to inspire students.

- By Bonnie Meibers Staff Writer

More should be done in XENIA —

Dayton-area schools to inspire Black students to want to become doctors or other health profession­als, Xenia schools Superinten­dent Gabe Lofton said

About 2% of doctors in America are Black men and Lofton said area schools, health systems, universiti­es can be part of the solution to increasing this percentage.

“I think if there was this collective within the private sector, along with institutio­ns of higher learning in the area, along with K-12 organizati­ons or with nonprofits in the area medical schools, you know, I think we could come up with something that is robust. And again, this would have to be a collective impact that we would want to see,” Lofton said.

Lofton participat­ed in a panel discussion this week put on by the Greene County Library that discussed the new documentar­y, “Black Men in White Coats,” which premiered nationally this month..

Founded in 2013, the Black Men in White Coats organizati­on’s mission is to increase the number of Black men in the field

of medicine by exposure, inspiratio­n and mentoring. The organizati­on was created by Dr. Dale Okorodudu. The documentar­y chronicles the journey of Black men in medicine like Okorodudu and explores the issues facing Black boys in pursuing a career in medicine.

Lofton said he sees the K-12 responsibi­lity to expose kids to a rigorous curriculum. He said school systems should work to inspire Black children early on. Lofton, and the documentar­y, touched on the idea that children can’t be what they can’t see.

“As educators, we have a responsibi­lity to make sure that we’re putting in front of our kids individual­s who look like them. And individual­s who are not basketball players, or other things . ... It’s important to put in front of our kids, doctors, engineers, lawyers, so they can actually see that this is something they can do,” Lofton said.

Giving students an opportunit­y early in their schooling would take some of the added pressure off them when in college, the panelists said. Dr. Christophe­r

Holloway, a family medicine doctor at Soin Medical Center, said he felt an added pressure in medical school to do well because there were so few Black students in his class.

“I need to do well because if I don’t do well, it’s such a small percentage of us, if I don’t do well then they’re going to think that all Black students can’t succeed. I have to show up, I have to show out because I need to do this for all the Black students who ever will come behind me,” Holloway said.

The well-documented health care disparitie­s in the Black community are an important reason for the need for increased numbers of Black doctors, panelists said.

Joshua Madden, a senior at Wright State’s Boonshoft School of Medicine, said he’s witnessed the disparitie­s in his education and doctor shadowing.

“A lot of times, I see how patients are treated differentl­y,” Madden said. “We have patients come in who cannot afford their medication­s, who have to pay for bills, or have to take care of child care expenses and things of that nature. So when it comes down to their health or paying those bills, they’re always going to take care of the bills or survival, they’re not going to take care of their health. But if you don’t come from a community where you understand that people have to make that decision and you will say that this person is not complying. You won’t see the issue that’s in front of you.”

Madden said, for example, if a doctor assumes a patient can get to any pharmacy, but that person doesn’t have a car, then they’re less likely to pick up the medicines and take them.

“So now when this patient doesn’t fill their script and they come back in and their blood sugar is super high and their A1C was super high, you’re like ‘well you’re not taking the medication­s I gave you.’ But that’s not the case. It’s not that they don’t want to, it’s because they have barriers that block them from doing that,” Madden said.

As a Black man, Madden said he thinks of these things, but someone from a different background may not.

“The key concept is trust and comfort,” Mathews said. “The patient has to trust us to feel comfortabl­e around us. And that’s so important, and I’m speaking for my family medicine background; if you are to have the smallest hope of getting someone to do something preventati­vely ... there has to be that element of camaraderi­e, trust and comfort. And having someone who looks like you may be what allows that. It’s not an absolute necessity, but shouldn’t the patient have a choice?”

Dr. Karen Mathews, a family medicine doctor who has worked as the executive director of Health and Psychologi­cal Services at Central State University since 2011, said in her medical school experience, some professors seemed to think she should be an expert in certain topics, like sickle cell, because of the color of her skin.

Black students should be encouraged to enter any field of the health profession, the panelists said.

Mathews said there are also opportunit­ies for Black women to lift up their male counterpar­ts. Madden said being surrounded by Black women in medical school has helped him to be more focused.

 ??  ?? The Greene County Library hosted a discussion on getting more Black men into the field of medicine. The panel was made up of Dr. Christophe­r Holloway, a family medicine doctor at Soin Medical Center;
Dr. Gabe Lofton, superinten­dent of Xenia Schools; Joshua Madden, a senior at Wright State’s Boonshoft School of Medicine; and Dr. Karen Mathews, a family medicine doctor who has worked as the executive director of Health and Psychologi­cal Services at Central State University since 2011. The panel was moderated by John Gudgel, former Yellow Springs High School principal and current school counselor and founder of the 365 Project.
The Greene County Library hosted a discussion on getting more Black men into the field of medicine. The panel was made up of Dr. Christophe­r Holloway, a family medicine doctor at Soin Medical Center; Dr. Gabe Lofton, superinten­dent of Xenia Schools; Joshua Madden, a senior at Wright State’s Boonshoft School of Medicine; and Dr. Karen Mathews, a family medicine doctor who has worked as the executive director of Health and Psychologi­cal Services at Central State University since 2011. The panel was moderated by John Gudgel, former Yellow Springs High School principal and current school counselor and founder of the 365 Project.

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