I'm A Black Doctor. I Got Death Threats For Speaking About Racism -- And It Gets Worse.
Amanda J. Calhoun, M.D., MPH
Its now been a little more than a year since I received death threats while speaking out as a Black doctor. It happened when I was the keynote speaker for a White Coats for Black Lives demonstration at Yale School of Medicine. I implored my colleagues to understand that socioeconomic status does not protect Black lives from racism. Status does not protect my physician father from being followed by police in his neighborhood. Status did not protect my 8-year-old sister from experiencing a delay in medical care because white nurses did not believe my pharmacist mother when she said my sister was wheezing from anaphylactic shock. Status does not protect college-educated Black women, like me, from being more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women who did not graduate from high school.
Before I was a doctor, I was a Black woman in America, and my white coat will not protect me, I declared.
After the speech was over, a friend told me I had received online death threats laced with racial slurs as my speech was streamed in real time. The police were brought in, and investigations were made. I got calls from supervisors and advice about how to protect myself: Dont walk alone. Let the police know if you receive a call from an unknown number. I was pulled off my call shift. My colleague gladly covered for me, and adamantly refused when I offered to pay him back.
But dealing with anonymous death threats isnt the most difficult part of being a physician activist. Theyre scary, but they are instantly recognized as unacceptable, something to be acted upon. I was supported without question and I had nothing to prove. Unfortunately, standing up against racism in medicine on a daily basis is much harder. Exposing it can make people uncomfortable and even hostile, and as a Black woman in medicine (and as one of the less than 2% of psychiatrists in the United States who are Black), when it comes to speaking out, I usually stand alone ― and I always have something to prove.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/im-black-doctor-got-death-140003439.html
Demovictory9
(37,113 posts)Hekate
(100,133 posts)onecaliberal
(36,594 posts)mountain grammy
(29,038 posts)Solly Mack
(96,945 posts)childfreebychoice
(476 posts)You. When I was a nurse and walked into white patient's rooms, even after identifying myself as their nurse, they still thought I was fr dietary/housekeeping, or the number of times I had to advocate for my black patients to get adequate pain management. It got to the point that whenever I was new to a healthcare provider, I never let them know, at first meeting, that I was nurse/doc, just to see how they treated me. Racism is pervasive/endemic in America, and at 70, hubby, and I will not live to see it get to the point that we will ever return. Enjoying life as expat, and very happy to see more and more young, black, professionals joining us. Stay safe
An aside, hubby was partner in prestigious law firm, and the stories he could tell about the racism he experienced, are equal to mine.