首页> 外文期刊>The American Journal of Medicine >A white dean and black physicians at the epicenter of the civil rights movement
【24h】

A white dean and black physicians at the epicenter of the civil rights movement

机译:民权运动中心的一位白人院长和黑人医师

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Robert Q. Marston, MD, a gregarious Rhodes and Markel Scholar, native Virginian, and well-connected National Institutes of Health-trained medical scientist found himself the new dean and hospital director of a promising academic medical center at age 38. It was 1961 and the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC) in Jackson was, unknown to him, about to be at the geographic center of the struggle for African American civil rights. That struggle would entangle UMMC in a national search for social justice and change the course of American history and American medicine. Shortly after his arrival, the new dean received and refused a written request from the Secretary of the Mississippi Chapter of the National Medical Association (NMA) to make educational venues at the segregated medical center available to black physicians. The same year, UMMC became the primary medical provider for sick and injured Freedom Riders, sit-in and demonstration participants, and others who breached the racial divide defined by the state's feared Sovereignty Commission. That divide was violently enforced by collaboration among law enforcement, Citizens' Councils, and the Ku Klux Klan. The crescendo of the civil rights struggle that attended Marston's arrival included a deadly riot following James Meredith's integration of the Ole Miss campus in Oxford in 1962, the death of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Field Secretary Medgar Evers at UMMC in 1963, a national controversy over UMMC's role in the autopsies of 3 civil rights workers murdered in Neshoba County, an attempt at limited compliance to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and a federal civil rights complaint against UMMC by the NAACP Legal and Educational Fund in 1965. That complaint noted that UMMC was out of compliance with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and seriously threatened its federal funding and academic operations. Marston developed a compliance strategy that included the hiring of the first black faculty member, a request for an immediate federal civil rights inspection, and secretive overnight integration of the hospitals and clinics. A key to his strategy was engagement of support from the black community, with whom he had previously developed no relationship. Marston asked NAACP Field Director Charles Evers for support, and met with 5 black Mississippi physicians. Among the 5 was Robert Smith, MD, a founding member of the Medical Committee for Human Rights, the NMA officer whose request for NMA membership-access to the medical center was ignored. He was unaware of their local and national civil rights roles and active dialogue with the federal government on implementation of Title VI. The desire of the black physicians to see UMMC become an equal opportunity health resource resulted in their quiet assistance that aided UMMC compliance initiatives and played a major role in the successful outcome of the 1965 investigation of the charges of Title VI violations. This success established Marston as a national figure in academic medicine and contributed to his selection for positions as Director of The National Institutes of Health and President of the University of Florida. As commemorations of the 50th anniversary of Freedom Summer of 1964 proceed, UMMC has become arguably the most racially integrated academic health center in the United States.
机译:罗伯特·Q·马斯顿(Robert Q. Marston)医学博士,一群罗德岛人和马克尔学者,原住民弗吉尼亚州,与美国国立卫生研究院(National Institutes of Health)训练有素的医学科学家联系密切,享年38岁。杰克逊(Jackson)的密西西比大学医学中心(UMMC)即将成为非裔美国民权斗争的地理中心。这场斗争将使UMMC陷入全国寻求社会正义的局面,并改变美国历史和美国医学的进程。新任院长抵达后不久,就收到并拒绝了美国国家医学会(NMA)密西西比分会秘书的书面要求,要求黑人医生在隔离的医学中心提供教育场所。同年,UMMC成为主要的医疗提供者,为病残和受伤的自由骑士,静坐示威参与者以及其他违反了该州令人担忧的主权委员会所定义的种族鸿沟的人。这种分歧是由执法机构,公民委员会和古克卢克家族之间的合作猛烈实施的。马斯顿到来时发生的民权斗争加剧,包括詹姆斯·梅雷迪斯(James Meredith)于1962年整合牛津Ole Miss校区后发生的致命暴动,全国有色人种协进会(NAACP)死于UMMC。 1963年,一场全国争议,涉及UMMC在Neshoba县被谋杀的3名民权工作者的尸体解剖中的作用,试图有限地遵守1964年《民权法案》第六章的行为,以及NAACP法律和法规针对UMMC提出的联邦民权申诉。 1965年的教育基金。该投诉指出,UMMC违反了1964年的《民权法案》,并严重威胁了其联邦资助和学术运作。马斯顿制定了一项合规战略,其中包括雇用第一位黑人教职员工,要求立即进行联邦民权检查,以及秘密整合医院和诊所的隔夜服务。他的策略的关键是参与黑人社区的支持,而黑人社区与他以前没有任何关系。 Marston向NAACP现场主任Charles Evers寻求支持,并与5位密西西比黑人医生会面。在这5名成员中,医学人权医学委员会的创始成员罗伯特·史密斯(MD Smith)是NMA官员,他要求NMA成为医疗中心会员的请求被忽略了。他没有意识到他们在地方和国家公民权利中的作用,也没有与联邦政府就第六章的实施进行积极对话。黑人医生希望将UMMC变成机会均等的健康资源,因此他们提供了安静的帮助,帮助UMMC遵守了法规,并在1965年成功调查了第六章侵权指控中发挥了重要作用。这项成功使马斯顿成为学术医学界的全国人物,并有助于他被选为美国国立卫生研究院所长和佛罗里达大学校长。随着1964年“自由之夏”成立50周年纪念日的到来,UMMC可以说已成为美国种族最融合的学术保健中心。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号