Porterville Recorder

HBCU gives CARES Act money to students

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Just before students at Meharry Medical College went home for Thanksgivi­ng, Dr. James Hildreth, the school’s president, emailed them a video message he acknowledg­ed seemed hard to believe. Or at least they had to give it a second listen.

“We’ll gift each of you $10,000 in cash,” he said, looking at the camera. “You heard me right.”

They were told to expect a direct deposit the next day or pick up a check in person. Hildreth, an expert in infectious diseases who helped lead Nashville’s pandemic response, explained this gift with no strings attached was money from the CARES Act, a major COVID-19 relief law passed by Congress in 2020. He asked only they be “good stewards” of the windfall.

After deep considerat­ion, Meharry’s administra­tion decided to give roughly a third of its CARES Act funding — $10 million — directly to its future doctors, dentists and public health researcher­s. All told, 956 students received payments.

Meharry’s students had already been heavily involved in the pandemic response, staffing Nashville’s mass COVID testing and vaccinatio­n sites. But the money isn’t so much surprise compensati­on for volunteer efforts as it is an investment in a future career — and an assist in overcoming financial hurdles Black students especially face to become medical profession­als.

While Black Americans make up roughly 13 population of the population, the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges finds Black doctors account for just 5 percent of the nation’s working physicians — a figure that has grown slowly over more than a century. And studies have found Black patients often want to be cared for by someone whom they consider culturally competent in acknowledg­ing their heritage, beliefs and values during treatment.

Meharry graduates more Black physicians than almost any other U.S. school. And half of its M.D.S enter the high-demand but lowerpayin­g specialty of primary care.

“We felt that there was no better way to begin distributi­ng these funds than by giving to our students who will soon give so much to our world,” Hildreth said.

Cheers erupted in the library as students clicked the video link.

Andreas Nelson fell silent, he recalled later. He went to his banking app and stared in disbelief. “$10,000 was sitting just in my bank account. It was astonishin­g,” he said. “I was literally lost for words.”

The Chicago native is finishing a master’s degree in health and science at Meharry with hopes of entering its dental school. The average student loan debt in the program totals more than $280,000. So, undoubtedl­y, 10 grand won’t make much of a dent in the debt.

But the money in his pocket eases his top concern of making rent each month. Nelson said it feels as though he’s being treated like an adult, allowing him to decide what his greatest needs are in getting through school.

“It’s motivating,” Nelson said. “Because that means they have trust in us to do with this money whatever the cause may be — whether it be student debt, investing or just personal enjoyment.”

Across the board, students at HBCUS rely more on student loans than students at historical­ly white institutio­ns. Roughly 80 percent take out student loans, according to an analysis by UNCF, formerly known as the United Negro College Fund, and they borrow considerab­ly more.

Meharry was founded a decade after the Civil War to help those who had been enslaved. But the 145-year-old institutio­n has always struggled financiall­y, and so have its students.

The reasons are rooted in the country’s racist past, which has left the institutio­ns with less money potentiall­y available for scholarshi­ps than other universiti­es. And students’ families generally have less wealth to tap into since Black households across the country have averaged around $17,000 in net worth — about a tenth of the average for white families.

Meharry’s average student debt is far higher than other area schools of medicine at Vanderbilt University and the University of Tennessee, representi­ng both private and public institutio­ns.

Virtually all colleges and universiti­es received allotments under the CARES Act, but HBCUS have been much more aggressive about funneling substantia­l amounts directly to students, who tend to have greater need. More than 20 HBCUS have erased outstandin­g tuition balances. Some have canceled student fees.

But Meharry, one of the few stand-alone HBCU graduate schools, is a rare case in cutting checks for students.

“These young people are rising to medical school against all odds,” said Lodriguez Murray, who leads public policy and government affairs at UNCF. “Of course, they have to borrow more because people who look like them have less.”

During the pandemic, major philanthro­pists have taken new interest in supporting the few HBCU medical schools. Michael Bloomberg committed $100 million to four institutio­ns, including Meharry, to help educate more Black doctors.

Students at Meharry can now apply for $100,000 scholarshi­ps. The $34 million from Bloomberg Philanthro­pies is also going toward other kinds of financial support.

The school is now offering, for no additional fee, expensive test-prep services through a Boston-based company, Medschoolc­oach. The service, which entails paying a doctor by the hour to help with studying, can cost thousands of dollars.

While the price is often out of reach for students tight on cash, acing the benchmark exams toward board licensure is key to landing coveted fellowship­s, qualifying for lucrative specialtie­s or just finishing on time.

And Meharry’s four-year completion rate of roughly 70 percent is below most schools. The most up-to-date national average is around 82 percent.

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