Heroic Doctors and Nurses Smeared by Accusations of Racism
Left-wing activists and their press allies blame health care professionals for the poorer health outcomes of Black patients.
Doctors and nurses are not racists. Theyâre everyday heroes. But left-wing activists and their press allies, including the New York Times, blame health care professionals for the poorer health outcomes of Black patients. Thatâs a cheap shot and a lie.
On Sunday, the Times published a front-page story based on an analysis of census data showing that Black women die during childbirth or lose their newborns more often than white women.
Even affluent Black women and their babies die at higher rates. Money doesnât insulate them from worse health outcomes.
The actual analysis didnât blame racism for what happens to Black mothers, or include any evidence â not a shred â that doctors and nurses caring for pregnant women and newborns are racist.
Even so, the Times pushed the conclusion that higher death rates are the âeffects of racismâ because minority mothers are âtreated differently and given different access to interventions.â Thatâs false.
What is to blame? Obesity, early teen pregnancy and hypertension (high blood pressure) are major causes of the higher death rates. These problems demand our attention.
Yet many activists would rather exploit the race card for political gain rather than deal with the causes of these deaths. New York State Health Commissioner Mary Bassett is one of them.
Urging support for national reparations, Dr. Bassett argues that reparations âcan bring us closerâ to âend(ing) racial health inequities.â Thatâs ridiculous.
A Zoom presentation sponsored by Planned Parenthood of Central and Western New York and the Rochester Black Nurses Association accused nurses of deliberately not answering the call buttons of Black patients and warned about âKKK in the hospitals.â
Falsehoods like these could scare Black women from getting the prenatal and postpartum care they need and currently fail to seek.
The New York Times article never mentions the actual causes of infant mortality, starting with obesity. A baby born to an obese mother faces a 55 percent higher risk of dying within a year, according to National Vital Statistics. Obesity is most prevalent among the Black population.
Teen pregnancy is the other major infant killer. Black and Hispanic teens are more than twice as likely to give birth as white teens. Unfortunately, teens often donât seek prenatal care. They also lack the pelvic structure to carry babies to term, so their babies tend to be born prematurely.
âReflecting these increased risk factors, infants born to women of color are at higher risk for mortality compared to those born to White women,â reports the Kaiser Family Foundation.
That so many of these prematurely born infants survive is a testament to the expertise and unbiased heroism of doctors and nurses working in the OB-GYN services who do everything in their power to save them, expending enormous resources in the process.
Still, nearly 44,000 infants die in their first year of life. By comparison, the official maternal mortality death figure is 861 per year.
Maternal mortality is being hyped as a âcrisisâ by the Biden administration and liberal press. The White House announced a âwhole-of-government approachâ to combatting it. In fact, itâs a small problem. Of course, even one mother dying is tragic. But compare 861 maternal deaths to the 99,000 patients who die yearly from hospital-acquired infections.
Health care professionals have more urgent tasks than being indoctrinated with anti-racism.
Yet the Biden administration is requiring doctors paid by Medicare to show a âcommitment to anti-racismâ and submit an âanti-racism planâ or be penalized with lower payments.
The Medicare rule, found in the Federal Register, November 19, 2021, at page 65,969, actually parrots Ibram X. Kendiâs concept in his book âHow to Be an Antiracistâ that the only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination and prioritizing certain populations.
Does that mean doctors must give white, Asian and Hispanic patients less time and fewer referrals to specialists? Such ideas have no place in medicine.
This push for anti-racism in medicine will not save the lives of Black infants or their mothers. Doctors and nurses will, doing what they always do, treating each patient with respect, regardless of skin color. They are heroes.
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