Health Equity

Considerable Number of Abortion Seekers Accessed Services After Dobbs

Increase in provision of medications for self-managed abortions seen in the six months following the Dobbs decision Despite implementation of state-level bans and restrictions on abortion after the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned the right to choose abortion in the United States, a considerable number of abortion seekers accessed...

Dr. Roger A Mitchell Jr.: Death in Custody

I wrote a book along with my co author. His name is Jay Aronson . He is a professor of human rights at Carnegie Mellon. I’m a professor of pathology at Howard University. And I’ve been studying death in custody since my first year of medical school, young man by the name of Amadou Diallo,...

Dr. Greg Williams: Collaboration Across Healthcare Disciplines

As a physician, what we need to do as our physicians have different discipline areas such as endocrinology, such as vascular general surgery, orthopedics, and internal medicine, we have to find a way to come together in these hospitals, I feel a lot of times we lose patients, especially the patients that may get a...

MD Newsline Podcast: Now Streaming

Episode 1: Promoting Breast Health Equity   With guest Laura Crandon, Founder and President of Touch4Life   Transcript: [00:00] LC: “So really to take what some would call a tragedy given my metastatic condition and take that and turn it into a triumph so other people can learn from what I’ve been through.” LW: Hello,...

Dr. Greg Williams: Diabetes Podiatry

I can remember when I was in training, which was pretty much like, from ‘93, to pretty much 2001. And diabetes at that time, was at the point where we started just to get to know the effects of diabetes, not only on other organs of the body, but especially the feet, the two components...

Dr. Greg Williams: Health Disparities in African American Diabetes Care

My name is Greg Williams, born and raised in New Orleans. So it’s great to be the hosts of this wonderful meeting and organization thats the National Medical Association. I’m actually the co chair for the podiatry section. I’ve been in practicing for 24 years in the specialty of foot and ankle, and a unique...

Dr. Isaretta Riley : Changes in Medicine since the Civil Rights Movement

One thing I will say is that the fact that I’m here as a physician, the fact that our work at Duke, right there was a time when Black people could not go to Duke for school and could not be faculty there. So that by itself, the fact that I’m here, and I went to...

Dr. Isaretta Riley: Health Literacy

Transcript: I often do what I say, is double talk where I will use the technical medical language, but then I’ll follow it up with more of a layman’s talk. So therefore, I don’t assume whether you know it or not. And so I just make sure that I’m talking in a manner that everyone...

Dr. Isaretta Riley: Health Disparities in the Pulmonary Arena

Transcript: Hi, everyone. I’m Isaretta Riley. I am an assistant professor in the division of pulmonary allergy and critical care at Duke University School of Medicine. I am the Vice Chief of diversity, equity and inclusion. And I’m also the co director for the community engagement and dissemination Corps, which is part of our Health...
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Stay informed on the latest health disparities research, cultural sensitivity education, and how you can help improve patient outcomes.
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Stay informed on the latest health disparities research, cultural sensitivity education, and how you can help improve patient outcomes.
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.