I III Vf I - Aiiirmuuve cuun The Survival Of lack Health Care Providers What Price Black Unity Gerald C. Home, Esquire By FrankS. Royal, M.D. President, National Medical Association Black health care providers and the communities that they serve face wh timf ahead. The minority percentage of enrollment in medical schools is declining; predominately black medical schools and hospitals ; the highest circles and is also are struggling to keep their doors or. All of this cmcs at a time w militant black poet iNikki Giovanni. Now laid back in her home town of Cincinnati, : this daughter of middle class parents was a blazing firebrand during the 1960's, writing fiery poems about Angela Davis and the like. Presently she is cheering for the murderous program of Reagan -omics. "The Pre is the only guy we've got," she says. '1 like what' I see in the Reagan Ad ministration. 44e's not nearly as mean as I Nixon was. And I perceive him to be the type . The so-called black "neo-conservatives" are riding high nowadays. Walter .Williams appears regularly on national television and writes a column for the "Moral Majority Report;'; Thomas Sowell is feted regularly in also seen periodical-1 It is clear that these the need for healtn care nas never oeen su great, poiuvuiauj m mc, ;much influence in the black community at black community. ... large yet it remains important to take them The prediction of the SJJS VtSltJt Onson is that certain "comfortable", visory Committee (GMENAC) reports that America will have an biacks might decide to hop on what appears ovrrahiindance of physicians in 1990 is inaccurate as it relates to the to be a bandwagon and throw their weight to minority community. The trtift i, that those who m?t teperat i: i M iec liVoiv tn opt it now r nan ever nerore . ' In April 1980, there were 375,81 1 doctors in this country and approx-f imately two per cent (6.516) of them were black. Additional statistics; released last .year by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), showed that there are 136 doctors to every 100,000 American citizens. However, according to that report, there are only 26 black physicians tq every l.OOOjOOO black citizens in this country. These;; statistics become more significant when coupled with the fact that a large; percentage of.the black populus is treated exclusively by black v 0f person who wouldn't ignore the agony of physicians. In short, black doctors continue to be the primary source of f the poor; He's a man you can talk to." health care for the nnoy;popula,(nre specifically ISSgSSSSia Americans) and there will be no abundance of black doctors at the end black journalist who is sponsored by Pepsi of this decade. Quite the contrary; if the recent trend continues we will ; Cola has provided an easy outlet for the neo ' ha a shortage, no. a Despite relative increases m numbers over the past decade, the? sponsored by Greyhound, can be found in Association of American Medical Colleges recently reported that new the pages of the, black press, "blaming the black enrollment in the nation's 126 medical schools dropped another half of a point last year from 6.6 per cent to 6.2 per cent.- 5 jow vividly I recall in 1970 when the Sloan Foundation task force and a number of prestigious medical schools set as their national goal to increase minority enrollment to twelve per cent as reflective of the nation's total minority population. Unfortunately, that goal was never reached, and the statistical trends ) indicate t : that the nation's major medical schools have relaxed their conimitment. Due to the reliance upon conclusions n the GMENAC report, the nation's larger medical schools may begin reducing the size of their entering classes. As a , result; qualified black students may be denied access to a medical education.'-' '4MfS?BK Not only have the nation's large medical schools begun to reduce their commitment to black enrollment, but public and private sources have considerably diminished their funding for graduate education. Since 1977, the federal government has stripped the $83.7 million fund victim ' and "lashing blacks repeatedly for happening to be poor and discriminated against. The time has come to take off the gloves and go at it with bare knuckles with these characters; because like a virus that will spread if it is not treated, the fact that powerful forces support these characters views means that their words will get a wide hearing. Black unity must be valued but the question is: at what price? Does unity mean that if your black neighbor is setting fire to your house, you don't try to stop him? Taking on the black neo-conservatives Is critical at this stage also because they have made a fetish out of assailing black leader ship the NAACP, Urban League, the black mayors, and others Their machine gun .like attacks have caused a certain backsliding on. the part of , some leaders, which not only calls for assailing the neo- for capitalization to $7.4 million for universities in financial distress, 'conservatives but for better or worse it Special Manpower Initiatives, which contain grants, for programs to j v. .; -i v'.,. . j us j tut-f..j;.t .r-n:: criticisms about certain black 'leaders . train physicians and allied health professionals for emergency training crcism shouW comc not from the right and preventive medicine, have been cut from $19.3 miUionih fiscal year' but from the other side of the barricades. 1980 to $9.6 million in fiscal year 1981 ; and then allowed to rise Slightly - This by necessity is a delicate process. In (due omflation)te $13,5 With M tir&pin thdfnfdllment-percentage, and the reductions in y - - - - - funding, qualified black students striving to become physicians will the "broadest front possible in 'opposition. Sniping at potential allies is not necessarily the wisest path. : ' , But the question is: are we talking about allies? Reagan campaigned in 1980 in the , black community, not so much because he was -interested In getting our ballots but ' because he knew that it would soften his im , age amongst the all-important white liberal ?wvotCTs;';;.v.;ir:v , , Similarly, when phony elections were held . in . Zimbabwe that :. propelled.: the puppet x Bishop Abel Muzorewa into ' prominence ;., against NRobert ? Mugabe and Joshua , Nkomo's.. Patriotic Front, it was Bayard Rustin old line .black "leader" who was trotted out to testify as to how a "free and fair", vote took place. ? Today headlines are blaring about a new study on South Africa commissioned by the Rockefeller Foundation to the tune of $2,063 million assisted by business leaders from Xerox and Cummins Engine and advis ed by the likes of Henry Kissinger and Cyrus Vance. Their massive ; study entitled . ominously Time Is Running Out does take a position contrary to that of the primary South African liberation movement, the fabled African; National Congress (ANC); i.e., they do not call for- an immediate withdrawal of the U.S. corporate vultures who set up shop in. South Africa and profit handsomely because of low wages paid, after shutting down shop right here. :' The black masses' of South Africa have spoken and they demand disinvestment of U.S. corporate wealth. Yet, it was inevitable . that there would be a number of blacks on the Rockefeller Foundation Commission who back their dastardly proposals down the line. Chairing the group were the blacks, e.g. Prof. Charles V; Hamilton and Dr. Con stance Hilliard, also affixed their signatures to this document drenched in blood. In other words, the U.S. Establishment is saying in effect, "How can you say our plans for South Africa are racist, when Afro Americans support it?" But we need to strip away this convenient shield and if it involves pulling the coat or rapping the knuckles of black leaders here; then so be It t . For Detroit shows what happens when critical voices from this side of the bar ricades are not raised insistently. With the avid backing of Mayor Coleman Young, recently awarded : the NAACP's highest honor the Spingarn Medal a measure was passed that hikes the city income tax and will worsen the standard of living of all poor . and working people, including blacks. A wage freeze for city workers is in store. For these reasons and others, the Metropolitan Detroit AFL-CIO, the local American Federation of State County and Municipal black trade unionists came .out adamantly against Mayor Young's proposals. : ; . ; Many recognized that the Mayor's reluc? . tance to take on the banks, the utilities and .1 w: l .. .1 i . , r c uic uig uuura witu nave wic muiicjr iu mnu city services but are hoarding it. Instead, the mavnr nas cieciueu if) nm m" wrioni iin in , uaCKs pi me poor, inis curious approacn . frnm t nno.timo Ipftict loarlor has allniihil tm racists io stake out progressive grouna w defense of the interests of the ppor! Jhe , same thing happened in Cleveland with, black City Council President George Forbes, , iThis is why it is so important to run the . risk of angering ' certain black , leaders. Members of the AFSCME local, many of whom are blacks are staring in the face of a two-year wage freeze, and with food prices coins ud. housine costs eoine iin.' clothins costs going up, etc., this is no joking matter, These realizations have dawned on "others' For example, Dr. Carlton Goodlctt, noted -black publisher, physician and Renaissance " . Man, has sent a scorching letter to 45 black corporate directors, denouncing those who serve on corporation boards but "betray the black masses and the black press" by pro viding "no direct assistance overt or covert to the cities or to the black struggle for black survival. . , He pointed out that "many black ambassadors to Corporate .America mistakenly believe that their 'merit! and not , the struggle got them where they are today; Marching feet of the Civil Rights struggle of tne ws ana tne oiacx press literally lorcea corporate America to respond appropriately with black appointments." t As he so often is, Dr. Goodlett is right on this one. During the 1960's the idea- of a multi-class front, i.e., blacks united irrespect tive of class to fight Jim Crow and its .outgrowths, was the primary resonance in the black community. The baby should not be thrown out with the bath water; that is, just because certain black elements are off the beam from time to time, does not mean at all that a declaration of war should be issued against them. Yet, the fact is that perhaps the time has come to begin thinking not ) only about the quantity of black representation but also the quality. If we are not ; concerned about the latter, then the former will inevitably suffer. If we do not subject certain of our black leaders to sear ching scrutiny, then we leave them prey to the cruel clutches and influence of the notorious "black neo-conservatives" and -their mentors. If we don't fire up some of our black leaders behind clnsed iinnM and in the black press, then we shouldn't be surpris ed when they begin drifting inexorably to the . right. At the same time, our primary focus should always be on those big boys who run Washington, and Wall Street and who pull Employees (AESCME) and a number of top v the strings, even thoush thev can't be seen. again have to turn to the historically black medical schools. But this A Vifw From Pnnitnl Will time,isome may find the doors of the black-medical schools closed to 1CVV k lULn WUUA 11111 them because of financial constraints. , v The historically black medical schools have always provided quality education. Seventy-five per cent of all practicing black physicians went to predominately black medical schools. According to the National Ad visory Committee on Black Higher Education and Black Colleges and Universities, two of the nation's four historically black medical schools, Meharry Medical College and, Howard University, together produced 22 per cent of all black doctors and forty per cent of all black dentists that graduate in 1977; Growing Disregard of Needs and Rights Of Blacks . By Gus Savage Member of Congress 'v"The U.S. House of Representatives last week adopted 238 to 195 the tax cuts propos ed by President Reagan. ., In the next three years this will 1 a navt ihraA iraori hi mill ct ' mm . i ' i ' 1 lli f ' ' t V Ill J MS WWAfc ! Mti VV , JVI 9 W Wit V lliese tacts illustrate tne unique service renoerea oy me nanaiui 01 America's wealthiest individuals $223 bilUon and biggest business $65 billion. What is ? wrong with this is that only last month Con? " gress approved the Administration's pro- Eosal to reduce the Federal budget by $35 illion mainly in social service programs. . .. Because the Reagan tax proposal could never, meet the standards of equity and fairness that a tax reform package should, the Democrats ought to have assumed the responsibility of proposing one that would. Instead, the Democratic leadership proposed : a tax plan that also represented a dramatic shift in the tax burden from capital to labor. I 1 Thi plan ;, made " it ? seem that 1 while Republicans are the party t of , the multi- millionaires, the Democrats are merely the , party of the millionaires and that neither truly represents the masses! . . ' . For instance, under the Democrat's plan, large corporations would have been able to write-off the entire cost of a Mercedes-Benz in one year, while millions of old and poor people cannot even afford bus fare. Also this , proposal would have reduced estate taxes to . the extent that more than half of all estates . would pay no tax at all. - Even worse, under the Republican tax cut plan, a family of four with $20,000 a year in come would save only $180 less income tax . next year and a total of $1,100 during the next three years, while a family with v, $100,000 annual income would save $1,700 in income tax next year and $18,000 during r the next three years. . If we are asking the needy to do without by specifically asking our senior citizens to give up the $122 a month minimum they de pend on to live and asking the hungry to go without food stamps and asking the untrained to go without CETA and ask ; ing the unemployed to forget , about sup plemental unemployment compensation : ' and asking students to make it without col lege tuition loans and grants and asking 'children to attend public schools without : lunch how can . we rationalize using the savings to fund a welfare, plan for the m greedy? - , t I maintain that the Government should not be more concerned about profits than historically black medical schools which are now desperately fighting for their financial viability and Indeed survival. Take Meharry Medical ; College for example. In 1977, Meharry Medical School opened the George Russell Tower, a new wing of Hubbard Hospital. The multi million dollar; 400-becl facility was to become the nerve center for the entire medical school, however fewer than 150 of the beds are present ly occupied and the new wing has never used more than half of its facilities. It is estimated that the Russell Tower is losing approximately one thousand dollars a day because of a paucity of patients. "Our pa tient population must increase, The financial implications are enor mous and an active patient program is essential to a medical school cur-, riculum,' said Richard Lester, M.D., president, Meharry Medical School., - Community hospitals throughout the country may also have to adopt creative plans to increase their patient populations in order to continue ? operation. Over the last ten years, a vast number of inner city hospitals have ' 'closed Philadelphia General Hospital in Philadelphia, and Horner p. Piillips Hospital in St. Louis have both been closed, and the services provided at D,C General Hospital in Washington, D.C., have been'substantially reduced because of severe financial trouble. - In sum, the new age of medical services has placed black health care institutions in a precarious position They must upgrade their level of out patient cafe in order to survive. Private practitioners must become morexompetitive, hot because of art 'overabundance of physicians,' but because of a need to ensure equal participation in both private enterprise and new health care systems. Finally, as America attempts to reorganize the systems of health care delivery, members of the NMA in sist that they have the opportunity to participate fully in those evolving health delivery systems and all efforts to provide quality health care to the American people. , . ' 1852- Scott Bond :; Born in slavery in Mississippi, lie went to Madison, Ark. at 21, rented a farm for $51 His tiny savings from working this farm went to buy a tract of ruined land-his friends ' laughed, but, laterthe Rock Island R.R. made a deal for the gravel there,, .as a result his lot improv ed, and by 1920 he owned dver 4,000 acres! His total holdings valued at $280,000. , . - Continental Features about people. If the Republicans are as hard as uncook ed beans in pushing for the wishes of the ' , greedy, too many I of my Democratic col leagues are as sof as jelly in defense of the needy! , The 238 votes for Reagan's tax cuts included 48 Democrats. ;? ; ; ; - . I personally pleaded with the House Rules Committee to bring to the floor for debate a substitute tax proposal in the true interest of the middle-class and working poor, propos ed ' by Congressman John Conyers (D.-Mich.) and backed by the majority of the Congressional Black Caucus. - We were denied by the vote of whites on' that powerful Committee, Democrats and Republicans alike. : Its only black member, -Shirley Chisholm (D.-N.Y.), of course, was vocally on bur side. ' . , ;' v. 1 Then, I asked the Democratic leadership to permit one of us, during the Democrat's time in general debate of the tax issue on the floor last Wednesday, to state the majority view of the 18 black Members of Congress, all Democrats, on this issue. I was turned down as naturally we were alsb refused by the leadership of the jily white Republican Members of Congress, , " Incidentally,- the so-called white liberal leadership of the Democratic Study Group was no more considerate of us. . ' In other words, blacks as a group were not allowed to amend, or even discuss on the... . floor either the Democrat or Republican tax ; ' cut proposal. We should be enraged that blacks are still t ignored by the Republicans and taken for granted by the liberals and the Democrats, even though we are the most liberal of Americans and the most loyal of Democrats. Still, it woutd not have mattered whether the Democrat or Republican tax proposal passed, because there was not a dime's (due to inflation, 1 mean a dollar's) worth of dif ference between the two. In fact, during last Wednesday's i House debate ! the f Speaker ; boasted of the number of Republicans who participated in writing the Democratic tax proposal. ''"!'', I,.' -i ' ", ! . We Democrats keep. losing to Reagan precisely because the Republicans .have pro-ams, proposals, and somewhat of, a philosophy, while the Democratic leadership merely seeks to modify Republicans' tenets of reaction and racism and thereby sanctions , If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who propose to favor freedom and yet depreciate agitation aremenwho want era; without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the oceans majestic waves ' without, the awful roar of, its waters. ) Frederick Douglass : thiem; ,: ' ' .. . That is why the Republicans are more united and that is why Carter lost. The American people will always prefer the, real thing to any facsimile. S Finally, I may as well admit that the leadership of my Black Caucus was derelict :.' and divided or deceived on these tax-cut pro posals, and must accept some of the blame : for our frustration in this matter and the general impotence of blacks as a group itt this Congress. i;: ; But I assure you that we Congressmen John Conyers, Ron Dellums, and I wi!J continue with renewed; determination to secure for blacks in Congress the respect of the House's leadership at least equal to thai accorded the Women's Caucus,1 and the VBoIl Weevils", and "Gypsy Moths". ' , ' We rededicate ourselves to this because " our plight in this House reflects the growing disregard of the needs and rights of all black Americans by the increasingly reactionary ruler$ of America. . . ; i ' L.E. AliSTlK ' Editor-Publisher 1927-1971 : . 'PublishMI every Thursday (dated Saturoayfat .Durhrrr N.C. by : United publishers Incort : nnratnrl . ' Mailinn . AHHracc D n . 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