New in @AnnalsofEM.
"Among 35K patients transferred by 🚑 with long 🦴 fractures, Black patients were 35% less likely to receive out-of-hospital pain 💊 compared to White patients...those in low SES, 50% less likely."
https://t.co/Mi6S358dka
h/t @RealCedricDark#Pharmacoequity
New in @JAMA_current.
“From 1999-2020, Black Americans experienced 1.63 million excess deaths & 80 million excess years of life lost vs. White Americans.
After progress in reducing Black-White disparities, improvements stalled and worsened in 2020.”
https://t.co/yItwLs8IK7
This man was truly one of my role models…. Intelligence, class, grace, activist - Hero! I just want to say that I’m humbled by how you used your light to help brighten a path for us all. Your soul has returned to the creator but what you’ve left on earth will live with us forever. Thank you and thank you again.
Harry Belafonte
When we invest in leaders working in teams, we multiply the impacts AND the returns.
With a 7 year investment from @RWJF, ripples from 44 teams are now unstoppable currents for better health for all and stronger local economies.
Celebrating Leadership with @OfficialStedman@KevinGuskiewicz@UNCSPHdean at Clinical Scholars @CSPfellows Spring 2023 Leadership Retreat.
Principle #7: Build your dream team.
These dream teams are tackling complex health issues and improving health in their communities.
As we build the content for season, 6 and future seasons, we’re really interested in hearing what YOU want to hear about!
this podcast has always been intended to be a resource for all of us
Hello, listeners! As we get ready for season six, we want to take the time to take you all back to the very beginning. Make sure you check out all these incredible episodes from season one!
Harriet Jacobs was an American author and abolitionist born into slavery in Edenton, North Carolina. After escaping to the North in 1842, Jacobs worked in an anti-slavery reading room. In 1861, Jacobs published "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl."
Today's #BlackHistoryMonth feature is James H. Young. Born into slavery near Henderson, North Carolina, Young went on to become a prominent voice in Black politics as editor and owner of the Raleigh Gazette. In 1894, he was elected into the state legislature.