Chattanooga Times Free Press

HBCU medical schools to tackle organ transplant disparitie­s

- BY KAT STAFFORD

A new initiative aimed at increasing the number of Black Americans registered as organ donors and combating disparitie­s among transplant recipients was announced Thursday by a coalition that includes the four medical schools at the nation’s historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

The collaborat­ion follows a National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine report, “Realizing the Promise of Equity in the Organ Transplant­ation System,” that found significan­t disparitie­s in the nation’s organ transplant system. It was released earlier this year and commission­ed by Congress, which wanted to examine equity within the donor organ procuremen­t, allocation and distributi­on system.

The initiative — which was created by the Consortium of HBCU Medical Schools, the Organ Donation Advocacy Group and Associatio­n of Organ Procuremen­t Organizati­ons — plans to create new opportunit­ies for Black medical and nursing students to shadow organ procuremen­t organizati­ons and transplant centers and collaborat­e with partner HBCUs that offer programs in nursing, public health, public policy and health care administra­tion. The initiative announceme­nt was shared with The Associated Press first.

The HBCU consortium behind the initiative includes the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Sciences in Los Angeles, Howard University College of Medicine in Washington, Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, and the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta.

The initiative will have health profession­als speaking to K-12 students in Black communitie­s about the field and career pathways. It will also focus on community education, including creating accessible materials about transplant­ation for dialysis patients and hosting health fairs and blood drives.

Concerns about equitable access to organ transplant­s have existed for decades in America. But attention has increased in recent years after the global COVID-19 pandemic exacted a disparate toll among Black Americans and laid bare the nation’s long-standing racial health inequities caused by structural racism, unequal access to care and bias within the nation’s medical system.

“At the heart of all this is the profound disparity in transplant­s that are given and performed on African Americans versus whites in our country, and it’s a long-standing problem and issue,” said Dr. James E.K. Hildreth, president and CEO of Meharry Medical College, in an interview with The Associated Press.

“And some of this messaging has to come from trusted organizati­ons, which is another one of the reasons that we believe that the four Black medical schools have a very important role to play that quite honestly could not be filled by any other organizati­ons in the country,” Hildreth said.

HBCU medical schools have historical­ly served as a necessary pipeline for Black doctors and other medical profession­als. Hildreth said the initiative will increase those numbers. The HBCU Medical School Collaborat­ive was formed in 2020 to address health equity amid the pandemic. But Hildreth said the schools have a legacy of working together, often on disparity areas that the medicine and health systems historical­ly have ignored.

But the HBCU collaborat­ion has since grown and they have identified kidney transplant­s and donations as an area of concern because Black nephrologi­sts — doctors who diagnose and treat acute and chronic kidney problems — account for less than 7% of the industry and only 5.5% of transplant surgeons are Black.

About 80% of Meharry graduates go on to work in underserve­d communitie­s, Hildreth said, and 85% are Black. The vast majority of them come from households with lower incomes than a typical white medical student would have.

“Minorities and people of color have been consistent­ly underrepre­sented throughout medicine, and the field of organ and tissue donation and transplant­ation is no exception,” said Dr. Clive Callender, a transplant surgeon and medical professor at Howard University College of Medicine, who is seen as a trailblaze­r for organ donation equity. “This collaborat­ion will allow us to save thousands of lives across the country by strengthen­ing relationsh­ips between health care workers, Black and minority patients, and organ and transplant­ation profession­als.”

According to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Minority Health, Black Americans make up the largest group among people of color in the United States who are in need of organ transplant­s. Black Americans are almost four times as likely as white Americans to develop kidney failure, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

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