South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Doctor gives boost to minorities in medicine

Program for students aims to address lack of provider diversity

- By Margo Snipe Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA, Fla. — Dexter Frederick stood inside an administra­tive office at Tampa’s Grace Community Health Center recently, a poster of the periodic table of elements hovering above his shoulders.

Morgan Butts, a University of South Florida doctorate student, stood in the doorway with a clipboard in hand.

“How many days do you want to treat it?” asked Frederick, who has been a doctor for more than 20 years. “Let’s go with 10.”

Together, they rattled off a list of prescripti­ons.

“How many milligrams?” Butts asked.

“0.4,” Frederick replied. The patient will need 34 tablets to get him through the treatment. If the fever increases or the pain gets worse, they discuss, he’ll need to go to the emergency room.

“Any questions?”

“I don’t think so.” Every day, Frederick, 51, gives his students doses of real-world medical experience, gentle nudges and assertive guidance mixed with opportunit­ies to find the answers themselves.

Since 2004, he has been supporting minority students who dream of becoming doctors through a program he founded called Brain Expansions Scholastic Training, or B.E.S.T.

In 17 years, the Tampa program has supported around 3,000 students and provided more than

$20,000 in scholarshi­ps, according to its website.

He was recently recognized as a 2022 AARP Purpose Prize fellow, an award that honors people older than 50 who are using their knowledge to address

social issues. It includes $10,000 to further his organizati­on’s mission as well as a year of technical support to broaden the scope of the work.

Brain Expansions Scholastic Training aims to address the lack of diversity among health care providers by inspiring and educating youth in underrepre­sented groups with a passion for medicine.

For the students, the intangible boosts in confidence and sense of community within the program have made their dreams feel achievable.

“My vision is that my presence as an African American physician will be triple, quadruple fold,” he said, “where millions of patients throughout the U.S., especially Tampa, will have a better, healthier life — reducing disparitie­s, increasing trust.”

In seventh grade, intense knee pain landed Frederick in the emergency room. There, he began to admire how the Black male physician who took care of him looked at X-ray film and reassured him he’d eventually recover.

Frederick had OsgoodSchl­atter disease, which causes knee pain among growing children and adolescent­s. A cast was bound to his leg from his hip to his ankle for weeks.

“From that point, I loved to study the bones,” he said. After his first job inside a hospital in ninth grade, he’d spend every summer there. He left high school able to name every bone in the body.

As he pursued medical school, Frederick uncovered his love for internal medicine and pediatrics. As a scholar with the National Health Service

Corps, which offers students financial support in exchange for service in communitie­s of need, he came to East Tampa after school.

“I got to see patients who did not fill their meds because they had to pay their rent or kids who did not come in for breathing treatment because of lack of transporta­tion,” he said.

That’s when he began to realize the importance of patients having the option to see physicians from similar racial and cultural background­s.

“Sometimes if you don’t have a physician that looks like you, talks like you, understand­s the culture,” he said, “there’s some distrust, sometimes there’s a delay in treatment.”

One goal for the Brain Expansions Scholastic Training program is to develop students who enter medicine with an understand­ing of social determinan­ts of health, or how factors like housing, food availabili­ty, public safety and education that impact quality of life.

“The idea is that they will be more compassion­ate, more culturally competent,” Frederick said.

According to the most recent statistics from the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, only 5% of practicing physicians are Black and 6% are Hispanic. More than half are white, the 2018 data shows. Only 36% of physicians are female.

Frederick hopes his program is chipping away at the lack of representa­tion by offering students images of people who look like them practicing in their desired specialty while also offering them a concrete pathway through realworld training.

For many minority students, the medical school entrance exam is a stopping point, Frederick said.

“Some African American students may take it once and give up,” he said. “Why? Because they don’t have that mentor to say go for it or they don’t have the financial support to take test prep or there’s another major that’s treating them better or giving them more opportunit­ies.”

His program and mentorship aim to reverse that: “We need to demystify what it means to become a doctor.”

Lavette Jones, 17, has wanted to become a doctor since she was a little girl.

“I want to become a surgeon, but how is it going to happen?” she wondered. “I’ve never even seen anyone like me in the field.”

That changed when she joined the Brain Expansions Scholastic Training program where she started seeing Black medical profession­als.

Still, she’s intimidate­d about entering a white male-dominated field. Being looked down upon not only because she’s a woman but also because she’s Black fuels doubts.

“I’m doubting myself already, and I haven’t even started,” said Jones. “The pressure is so great to become what I’ve always wanted to be.”

She recalls meeting a girl who said she wanted to be a physician’s assistant, but after talking more, Jones realized the girl really aspired to be a medical doctor but was discourage­d by the time it would take to secure a degree. Then, she had a meeting with Frederick to discuss her options.

Although Frederick may not change every student’s mind, he sees those conversati­ons as opportunit­ies to brainstorm solutions to roadblocks, particular­ly for students of color.

 ?? IVY CEBALLO/TAMPA BAY TIMES ?? Dr. Dexter Frederick speaks with doctoral student Morgan Butts on Nov. 10 in Tampa Bay, Florida.
IVY CEBALLO/TAMPA BAY TIMES Dr. Dexter Frederick speaks with doctoral student Morgan Butts on Nov. 10 in Tampa Bay, Florida.

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