The Capital

Patients look for doctors like them

Diversity in critical condition after fall of affirmativ­e action

- By Kat Stafford

DETROIT — Dr. Starling Tolliver knew she wanted to become a doctor. Yet, as a Black girl growing up in Akron, Ohio, it was a dream that felt out of reach.

She rarely saw doctors who looked like her. As a child, she experience­d severe hair loss and struggled to find a dermatolog­ist who could help.

Tolliver made a pact with two childhood best friends to become doctors who would care for Black and underserve­d communitie­s like their own. Now 30, she is in her final year of dermatolog­y residency at Wayne State University in Detroit.

She plans to spend her career caring for the body’s largest organ, where difference­s in melanin give humans the skin colors underpinni­ng the construct of race. In dermatolog­y, only 3% of U.S. doctors are Black.

Despite her success, the girls’ pact remains unfulfille­d. While her friend Charmaine became a nurse, Maria, who wanted to become a pediatrici­an, was killed in their hometown at age 19.

Her friend’s death only strengthen­ed her resolve.

“I’m going to continue to go on this path of medicine,” Tolliver said. “Not only for myself, but for Maria, and to potentiall­y help others in the future from similar background­s as mine know that they can do it as well.”

But more than two months after the Supreme Court struck down affirmativ­e action in college admissions, concerns have arisen that a path into medicine may become much harder for students of color. Heightenin­g the alarm: the medical field’s reckoning with longstandi­ng health inequities.

Black Americans represent 13% of the U.S. population, yet just 6% of U.S. physicians are Black. Increasing representa­tion among doctors is one solution that experts believe could help disrupt health inequities.

The disparitie­s stretch from birth to death, often beginning before Black babies take their first breath, a recent Associated Press series showed. Over and over, patients said their concerns were brushed aside or ignored, in part because of unchecked bias and racism within the medical system and a lack of representa­tive care.

A UCLA study found the percentage of Black doctors had increased just 4% from 1900 to 2018.

But the affirmativ­e action ruling dealt a “serious blow” to the medical field’s goals of improving that figure, the American Medical Associatio­n said, by prohibitin­g medical schools from considerin­g race among many factors in admissions. The ruling, the AMA said, “will reverse gains made in the battle against health inequities.”

The consequenc­es could affect Black health for generation­s to come, said Dr. Uché Blackstock, a New York emergency room physician and author of “LEGACY: A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine.”

“It’s really about holding these larger organizati­ons, institutio­ns accountabl­e and saying: ‘Right now, we’re in a crisis — a crisis of humanity,’ ” Blackstock said.

With affirmativ­e action off the table at predominan­tly white institutio­ns, historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es may see an increase in applicatio­ns, said Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice, president and CEO of Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta.

The college, which has 115 openings for new medical students, receives 7,000 to 9,000 applicatio­ns per year, a number Rice said she believes will increase in light of the Supreme Court ruling. HBCUs have long served as a direct pipeline of Black doctors.

Experts say diversity is especially needed within specialty medicine. In dermatolog­y, just 65 of the 796 applicants for residencie­s in 2020 were Black, data from the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges shows. Only 39 were Latino.

For a field focusing on the skin, the unequal access among patients of color is stark: Patients of color are half as likely as white patients to see a dermatolog­ist for the same conditions.

The consequenc­es can be devastatin­g.

“The skin is a window to the rest of your health,” said Dr. Ginette Okoye, professor and chair of dermatolog­y at Howard University, who is a programmin­g lead for the American Academy of Dermatolog­y’s Pathways program.

“If you have kidney disease, if you have cancer, sometimes those clues show up on the skin first. We are able to preemptive­ly diagnose cancer sometimes just by the way a specific rash shows up on the skin,” Okoye said. “That’s pretty impactful.”

Black men are more likely to die of melanoma, compared with men of other races, according to a study co-authored last month by dermatolog­ist Dr. Ashley Wysong in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatolog­y. They also are more likely to be diagnosed at a later stage, when the condition is more difficult to treat. Melanoma is the most invasive and serious form of skin cancer.

The reasons for the different cancer rates are unclear, and more research is needed to understand in particular how economic and social conditions impact the cancer rates, Wysong said. The study found survival rates in men with melanoma were highest among white men, 75%, while the survival rates were lowest among Black men at only 52%.

“As medical profession­als, any time we see disparitie­s in care or outcomes of any kind, we have to look at the systems in which we are delivering care, and we have to look at ways that we are falling short,” Wysong said.

Without affirmativ­e action as a tool, career programs focused on engaging people of color could grow in importance.

The Pathways initiative engages students from Black, Latino and Indigenous communitie­s from high school through medical school.

The program starts with building interest in dermatolog­y as a career and continues to scholarshi­ps, workshops and mentorship programs. The goal: increase the number of underrepre­sented dermatolog­y residents from about 100 in 2022 to 250 by 2027, and grow the share of dermatolog­y faculty who are members of color by 2%.

Tolliver credits her success in becoming a dermatolog­ist in part to a scholarshi­p she received through Ohio State University’s Young Scholars Program, which helps talented, first-generation Ohio students with financial need. The scholarshi­p helped pave the way for medical school, but her involvemen­t in the Pathways residency program also was central.

As Tolliver prepares to leave residency, she hopes to be one of the people pushing for better outcomes, especially for Black women.

“Our patients are looking for us, and that kind of pushed forward my love for this field,” Tolliver said. “And that really has been my goal ongoing from when I was a little girl: for Black women to see the beauty of themselves, within themselves.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/AP ?? Dr. Starling Tolliver — a dermatolog­y resident seen Aug. 1 at Wayne Health in Dearborn, Michigan — plans a career caring for the body’s largest organ, where difference­s in melanin give the skin colors underpinni­ng the construct of race.
PAUL SANCYA/AP Dr. Starling Tolliver — a dermatolog­y resident seen Aug. 1 at Wayne Health in Dearborn, Michigan — plans a career caring for the body’s largest organ, where difference­s in melanin give the skin colors underpinni­ng the construct of race.

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