Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 178
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4422-4835-9 • Hardback • April 2015 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-4422-4836-6 • eBook • April 2015 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
Richard Garcia, MD, a pediatrician, grew up in Stockton, California. His personal essays on race and medicine appear in academic, medical, and policy journals. He is the editor of On Race and Medicine: Insider Perspectives, a collection of interdisciplinary personal essays on health disparities.
Bebop – an Intro
Richard Garcia
PART I: Health Disparities
1: No Accident
Brian D. Smedley
2: Explaining Disparities: Is it Genes or Environment?
Troy Duster
PART II: Personal Essay
3: On Meeting Richard Rodriguez
Richard Garcia
4: Geography of the Dead
A. Perez
5: The Patient in the Room
Enrique D. Rigsby
PART III: Race and Medicine
6: Saying and Doing White Racism
Jennifer L. Pierce
7: Fred Sanford's People are from St. Louis
Richard Garcia
8: To What End, Diversity?
Donna Elliott
9: Noblesse Oblige
Jorge A. Girotti
10: In France, Once
Myrtis Sullivan
PART IV: The Present
11: The Nisei Veteran Played the Ukulele
Sylvia Gates Carlisle
12: The Businessman
Frederick P. Beavers
13: Good Guys
Tim Degner
14: There is no Zeitgeist
Richard Garcia
15: Race and Medicine
Richard Garcia
Dr. Garcia and his colleagues have woven together a series of personal and emotional essays that highlight the inequalities that continue to plague us and significantly contribute to our national disease and economic burden. A good read for all disciplines who are responsible for those fellow citizens we call patients!
— Richard Carmona, MD, MPH, FACS, 17th Surgeon General of the United States; Distinguished Professor of Public Health, University of Arizona
This collection of interdisciplinary first person essays on race and medicine is refreshingly readable, touching, lyrical, and informative, all at the same time! With such keen attention to the details of life experiences and race and health, this work awakened both my mind and heart. It is a wonderful contrast to the usual streams of hopeless data points, in stacks of papers filled with only more questions.
From Detroit, to Stockton, to Vallejo, to Pueblo the messy and beautiful complexities of identity are located in family stories, the absence of high quality hospitals, health services, and grocery stores and recounted with language and cadence that drew me in, and lifted me up despite the still unresolved intellectual and practical solutions for achieving equity for those of us on the margins. I, for one, look forward to the next book!
— Melanie Tervalon, MD, MPH, Consultant