Inequities Endured by Patients
In addition to Dr. Tweedy’s lived experiences of prejudice and microaggression, his memoir also touches on social determinants of health and amplifies how socioeconomic disparities are often a racial issue.
This was highlighted in various settings throughout his third year of medical school into his residency. The first we see is at a community clinic in a local town, about an hour away from Duke’s campus. The small building wasn’t designed to be a medical center, so the clinic space was makeshift; the “rooms” were separated by curtains instead of walls, and the waiting area was outside on a front porch.
The town had limited access to healthcare services, and patients came to the clinic without health insurance. For many, this free clinic was their only opportunity to meet with a doctor and Tweedy could not ignore the fact that all the townspeople who came to this clinic were Black.
Since it was a volunteer-based clinic, the medical staff changed from week to week, so patients rarely, if ever, could build a rapport with their care provider. Medical supplies were limited, which meant patients served at the end of the day sometimes had to go without the medication they needed. Despite the best efforts of the medical students and residents who ran the clinic every other week, the lack of quality care resulted in patients’ medical conditions rarely ever improving.
Inequities Observed as a Physician
At Duke University Hospital, racial disparities came to light in another way. Dr. Tweedy recalls a staggering example of racial discrimination and prejudice during his internship.
A Black man named Gary came to the emergency department with chest pain. After taking tests and evaluating the results, Tweedy accompanied two white doctors to the examination room to discuss Gary’s next steps. In addition to quitting smoking and taking a daily aspirin – both things Gary agreed to do – the doctors wanted to prescribe him a daily medication for his high blood pressure. Gary was hesitant to start the medication and explained to the doctors that he would like to first try managing his blood pressure by improving his diet and exercise regimens. He understood that his blood pressure numbers meant he had mild hypertension, and he knew that these lifestyle changes had been proven effective in managing mild cases.
Tweedy witnessed the doctors respond to Gary with condescension and irritation – a manner in which he had not seen them treat a white patient. After minutes of lecturing Gary on why he should take the medication, they finally seceded and agreed to discharge him without the blood pressure medication. However, upon leaving the room, the doctors joked about Gary having some psychiatric disorder as if that were the only explanation as to why he would disagree with their recommendation to medicate. However, the comment did not end as a joke; one of the doctors included it in Gary’s discharge summary. Now, whenever a doctor reviewed his medical history, they would make assumptions about him not only as a Black man but as a Black man with a psychiatric disorder.
How Shared Reading and Discussion Can Promote Inclusivity
Before our book club, many of us understood socioeconomic status being a social determinant of health and were equally aware of the deep roots of racial discrimination in our country and healthcare systems. But what many of us were not aware of is how these health and racial disparities have nuanced implications for Black medical professionals.