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Democracy Now! Video

Dr. Uché Blackstock on "Legacy: A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine"

Democracy Now! Video

Democracy Now!

News, Daily News

4.61.1K Ratings

🗓️ 1 February 2024

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Part 2 of our conversation with Dr. Uché Blackstock about her new book, Legacy: A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the war and peace report. I'm Amy Goodman with Nermann Shech.

0:11.2

This is the first day of Black History Month. We're talking to Dr Uchee Blackstock,

0:16.1

part two of our conversation with the emergency medicine physician, CEO and founder of

0:22.0

advancing health equity, a company that works with health care

0:25.6

organizations to fight racism and bias and services.

0:30.0

Dr. Blackstock has written a new book. It's called Legacy.

0:34.4

A Black physician reckons with racism in medicine.

0:39.2

You know, Dr. Blackstock, I wanted to go back

0:41.6

to really the beginning of our part one conversation but to really

0:45.8

give you time to tease out your life story your mother this pioneering black woman physician who dies at such a young age gives

0:57.7

birth to you and only to Dr. Oney O'Shea Blackstock following in her footsteps and all the issues

1:07.6

that you took on through the years. One of the things you talk about in legacy is the

1:12.2

fact that 2% of America's doctors are African-American women.

1:20.0

Just 2% and yet the mortality rate, for example, just when it comes to black maternal health is so disproportionate.

1:32.0

Yes, so yeah, so I'm happy to talk a little bit about my mother. You know, when I was

1:37.5

younger I thought that all physicians were black or black women. Like that's that's the kind of exposure that I had

1:44.7

with my mother so she she was born in central Brooklyn to a single mom my mother

1:50.3

had five other siblings and you know they were raised on public assistance.

1:54.1

They had a very, very difficult life.

1:56.9

Moving a lot, food insecurity, changing schools.

2:01.9

But my mother, you know, she was very, very determined.

2:05.5

She was very intellectually curious.

...

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