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Tupac Amaru Shakur, " I'm Loosing It...We MUST Unite!"

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Medical Mavericks: African American Innovators in Health Care

They say innovation is the child of necessity. But let's not forget its other parent: audacity. Today we're walking the corridors of history—sterile, glaringly white, filled with the smell of antiseptic—to meet the mavericks who donned their white coats and stethoscopes against the odds.

Let's talk about "Medical Mavericks" but before you yawn out of professional courtesy, think of it not as a sci-fi Netflix series you swipe left on, but as a visceral journey into unsung brilliance. Imagine the OR as a jazz lounge—scalpels and sutures as instruments, each incision a soulful note. Here, the unsung jazz musicians of the operating room are African American innovators in health care. Yes, the medical mavericks who jive to the bluesy rhythms of innovation.

Ah, daily habits! You sip that morning coffee, skim through emails, and maybe, just maybe, take that multivitamin you've been forgetting for weeks. Make it a habit to recognize the innovators who make those vitamins effective or that MRI scan possible. Celebrate a Medical Maverick each day, whether it's Dr. Charles Drew, who revolutionized blood transfusions, or Dr. Patricia Bath, the inventor of laser cataract surgery. Trust me, it's more refreshing than your kale smoothie and energizing as a double espresso. Make it a hashtag. Make it a movement. Make it a habit.

I know, you're not easily impressed. You've seen it all. But even you can't help but be gripped by a sense of awe when you consider Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, who performed one of the world's first successful open-heart surgeries. And he did it without a Google search or a YouTube tutorial. It's not just innovation; it's a lyrical composition in an era of static noise. If you can’t get excited about that, you might want to check your own pulse.

So let's wrap this narrative in a way that pays homage to our medical mavericks. Imagine if Dr. Alexa Canady, the first African American woman neurosurgeon, had shied away from her destiny because society had pre-written her script? What if Dr. Jane Cooke Wright, a pioneer in chemotherapy, had let systemic barriers turn her away? Each of them has inscribed their legacy, not as footnotes but as headlines, redefining what it means to be a Medical Maverick. They didn't just save lives; they changed the game.

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