Do No Harm submitted this request for comment by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Do No Harm, a national association of medical professionals united in protecting medicine from harmful and divisive political ideologies, shares CMS’ goal to advance “the attainment of the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, preferred language, or other factors that affect access to care and health outcomes.” We appreciate the opportunity to comment on CMS’ request for information regarding this goal in the context of Medicare Advantage.
However, we are concerned that this request for information is rooted in a growing and deeply troubling political ideology which seeks to disembody the medical profession’s most powerful means to that end: our strong tradition, beginning with the Hippocratic Oath, of treating all individuals, regardless of race, background, or circumstances, with dignity and our utmost care.
The expansion of this practiced principle from medicine—rather than its modification or replacement—to other institutions and endeavors, is our government’s most realistic and effective tool toward advancing “health equity.” Whatever other problems persist in the provision of health care in the United States, on the issue of equity, the medical profession largely solved the problem long ago.
Put simply, the best way to advance “the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, [or] preferred language” is to advance “the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, [or] preferred language.”
Once, this could be fairly criticized as circular pablum. However, as anti-racism and DEI have soaked our politics, they have inevitably seeped into debates about health care and public health programs. The prompt for this comment suggests that these theories have reached the highest levels of government. Putting aside the merits of those theories in political and historical debates, they have no place in medicine, especially in publicly supported programs like Medicare Advantage.
Almost 30 million Americans rely on coverage provided through Medicare Advantage. Enrollment and support for the program continue to grow because of the program’s unique advantages: more choices for patients have, unsurprisingly, led to more patient-centered coverage and care.
These Americans—the very source of the program’s funding—expect and deserve a program guided by the best ethics of the medical profession and not political ideology of any stripe, let alone ideologies such as anti-racism which promote future discrimination as a solution to past discrimination. No American should ever be subject to racial discrimination in a hospital bed, nursing home, doctor’s office, on the phone with a health insurance company, or any other context.
Reforms in Medicare Advantage should focus on how we can raise standards of care for all patients everywhere—not simply how to twist some knobs up and some knobs down so that eventual outcomes are even, however poor those outcomes may be.
After all, the issues raised in decisions regarding Medicare Advantage, like all coverage programs and health care more broadly—our shared pursuit of minimal pain, our shared desire of maximum dignity, and our shared mortality—transcend race in a way few other issues do.
In the medical context, it hardly needs to be said, efforts to single out certain races for special or different treatment can have perverse consequences whether the intent is pure or not. Even noble and successful efforts along these lines inevitably raise the question: if a certain course of treatment or care benefits racial minorities, why not increase the use of or access to that treatment or care among other groups?
For example, SCAN Health Plan, a not-for-profit Medicare Advantage plan with members in California, Arizona, and Nevada, noticed racial disparities in how often members took cholesterol and diabetes medications. The gaps were modest. For example, 86 percent of white members took their medications as prescribed, compared to 84 percent of Hispanics and 81 percent of Blacks. Nevertheless, over the course of eighteen months, SCAN Health Plan initiated incentives to close that gap, which it did by 35 percent.
The company tied senior executives’ bonuses to closing that gap, hired “more than 15 Black and Hispanic care navigators and pharmacists,” held cultural bias training, and prioritized vendor contracts which would increase targeted “outreach to members,” among other things. In all, SCAN Health Plan estimates that it spent “close to $1 million” on the effort.
Even if we stipulate that SCAN Health Plan’s efforts directly caused the change, it raises questions that go to the heart of this request for information. If the health and care of the 14 percent of white members who do not take their medications as prescribed is not less important than the lives of racial minorities, why did this effort only target minorities, instead of targeting all individuals who did not take medications as prescribed? Surely, there are efforts SCAN Health Plan could have taken, including the efforts they did take, which would have closed that gap too.
And, because all choices involve trade-offs, was $1 million worth spending on a program which modestly closed an already modest racial gap as compared to other health initiatives the Plan could have taken which did not target some racial groups over others?
This road leads to a dark place—one in which some Americans receive more care and attention than others. That is acceptable in a triage situation, in which some patients have conditions of different urgencies. It is unacceptable when the level of care and attention is only being determined by the color of the patient’s skin. It is racial discrimination and it has no place in medicine.
Instead, Do No Harm adheres to a succinct, now fifteen-year old formulation of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts’: the “way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”
To the extent racial discrimination persists in medicine, Do No Harm condemns it as a grotesque and inexcusable violation of the professional standards to which we hold ourselves. The solution, in the provision of coverage through Medicare Advantage or any other context in health care, is to enforce those standards. That is a core principle of our organization and the genesis of our founding.
Again, we appreciate the opportunity to provide this comment.
Sincerely,
Stanley Goldfarb, MD
Chairman, Board of Directors
Do No Harm
SLU is the Latest Missouri Medical School to Violate Students’ Civil Rights
Uncategorized Missouri DEI St. Louis University School of Medicine Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm has filed a federal civil rights complaint against St. Louis University School of Medicine for its discriminatory Scholarship Program for Visiting Medical Students Underrepresented in Medicine. To be eligible to apply, students “must identify as a member of a group underrepresented in medicine.” SLUSOM refers to the American Association of Medical College’s definition of “underrepresented in medicine,” which states, “This lens currently includes students who identify as African Americans and/or Black, Hispanic/Latino, Native American (American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians), Pacific Islander, and mainland Puerto Rican.”
By advertising and administering this discriminatory scholarship, the SLUCOM Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences is violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. We are requesting prompt investigation and resolution from the Office of Civil Rights for these unlawful eligibility standards, as applications are being accepted until September 30. 2022.
Does your medical school offer a discriminatory scholarship? Please let us know – anonymously and securely.
We’re Suing Pfizer For Its Racially Discriminatory Fellowship
Uncategorized Commentary Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm sued pharmaceutical giant Pfizer on September 15th. Why? It runs a fellowship program that explicitly discriminates by race. This is illegal, immoral, and insulting – so we’re fighting to hold Pfizer accountable.
Pfizer’s “Breakthrough Fellowship Program” is a highly prestigious and competitive program that includes a summer internship, full-time employment, and a scholarship for an advanced degree – nine years of substantial benefits, all told. Yet not everyone can apply. One of its requirements is that applicants “meet the program’s goals of increasing the pipeline for Black/African American, Latino/Hispanic and Native Americans.”
In other words, White and Asian applicants aren’t welcome.
This is the exact kind of racial discrimination that so-called “anti-racism” requires. Similarly offensive fellowships and scholarships can be found across healthcare, from the journal Health Affairs to leading medical schools. It’s part of the woke push to ensure “diversity,” even if it means engaging in discrimination.
Do No Harm is suing on behalf of two of our members. Pfizer’s racial discrimination is illegal under the Civil Rights Act, the Affordable Care Act, the New York State Human Rights Law, and the New York City Human Rights Law. We’re asking the federal courts to stop the company from picking winners and losers based on their skin color.
The Wall Street Journal broke the news of our lawsuit. Now it’s up to the courts to say this injustice cannot stand. Pfizer should know better than to racially discriminate – a backwards practice that has no place in healthcare or anywhere else in America.
Image credit: Montgomery County Planning Commission via CC BY-SA 2.0
We Forced A Change at The University of Florida
Uncategorized Florida DEI University of Florida College of Medicine Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffA discriminatory woke scholarship is no more.
Thanks to Do No Harm, the University of Florida College of Medicine has eliminated its requirement that only members of certain races can apply for a visiting student scholarship. This about-face comes after Do No Harm filed a complaint with the federal Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights. It’s a win for fairness and equality, which is what more medical schools across America urgently need.
Here’s what we wrote when filing our initial complaint:
Fortunately, these racially discriminatory requirements are no more. The University has informed us that it has made the necessary changes and notified students.
We’re grateful to the University of Florida’s leadership for taking our complaint seriously and then taking action to right this wrong. Other medical schools should learn from its example, especially the 30-plus institutions which we’ve brought to the attention of the Office of Civil Rights. Racial discrimination is unacceptable – in scholarships and every other facet of medical education.
Does your medical school offer a discriminatory scholarship? Please let us know – anonymously and securely.
What You Need To Know About “Social Determinants of Health”
Uncategorized Commentary Do No Harm StaffIt’s not just DEI. Woke activists are increasingly relying on another acronym – SDOH – to advance their divisive agenda within healthcare. It stands for the “Social Determinants of Health,” and when you unpack it, it’s clearly part of the campaign to move healthcare in a divisive and discriminatory direction.
To understand what “Social Determinants of Health” are, consider the definition used by the federal Department of Health and Human Services under the Biden administration:
HHS groups these determinants into 5 key areas:
Do these topics bear on the care provided by physicians to individual patients? Of course not, with the exception of “health care access and quality.” But they are inherently politicized. “Social determinants of health” are squarely in the domain of elected officials and social workers, not physicians.
Physicians, nurses, and medical professionals can’t solve these kinds of problems, no matter how much activists want them to. Even if they could, there’s no causal link between social conditions and negative health outcomes. It’s much more likely that poor social conditions simply result in patients seeking healthcare late in the course of their medical problems. They may also adhere less to difficult treatment programs once a disease is diagnosed. Forcing healthcare to focus on education and economics won’t do anything to change these underlying issues.
Focusing on the “social determinants of health” will not lead to the desired outcome of improving health. But it will be costly, especially as healthcare devotes precious resources to issues in which it has no expertise. Medical professionals should focus on providing the best care to individual patients, not economic factors, community housing, or the quality of K-12 education.
Duke University School of Nursing Gives In to Wokeness
Uncategorized North Carolina DEI Duke University Medical School Commentary Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm received a tip that the Duke University School of Nursing is creating a Racial Justice Task Force (archived link). Its mission? Address “racial injustices and/or inequities” within the school. You can bet the prestigious school is going down the road of woke divisiveness and racial discrimination.
The task force will focus on three strategic areas:
Equity accountability. Faculty and staff will be held responsible “for racial injustices in all programs and settings.” In fact, a formal reporting system is under development that tracks and holds faculty and staff members accountable for “micro-/macro-aggressive, biased, and racist” behavior.
Performance measures. Faculty and staff will be judged on their “racial justice behavior” when it comes to promotion and retention. Their level of participation in racial justice activities will factor into annual or semester evaluations.
Training recommendations. The task force will ensure that every program within the curriculum “intentionally” includes content on microaggressions, bias, and anti-racism. Training is mandatory, and engagement with learning activities is monitored for compliance.
By pushing such blatant ideology, the Duke University School of Nursing is readying students to adopt racial and identity politics when providing care. Spending time on these issues detracts from the objective of becoming competent, compassionate clinicians who advocate for their patients. The Racial Justice Task Force has no place at Duke University School of Nursing or anywhere else.
If you are aware of a discriminatory policy or divisive initiative at your medical or nursing school, Do No Harm wants to hear from you – anonymously and securely.
Editor’s note: This post has been updated with an archived link to the Racial Justice Task Force. The original link was removed after March 27, 2025.
Do No Harm Is A Peterson Prize Finalist
Uncategorized Commentary Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm is a finalist for a prestigious award – the Gregor G. Peterson Prize in Venture Philanthropy. As we enter the final stages of this competition, we’re grateful to the Peterson family for their interest in our fight to keep healthcare principled and patient focused.
The Peterson Prize is one of the biggest in the non-profit space. It offers $250,000 to a “trailblazing start-up in the non-profit sector.” Moreover, its “mission is to identify founders with bold ideas; to help bring these ideas to fruition, and to partner in building sustainable, life-changing organizations.” It’s an honor to be described in such a way.
The final Peterson Prize will be announced soon, and we’re glad we’re in the running as a finalist. Now is the time to stop wokeism in healthcare. This prize is key to realizing that vision.
We’re Suing Health Affairs For Racial Discrimination
Uncategorized Medical Journal Commentary Do No Harm StaffHealth Affairs is discriminating on the basis of race. That’s why Do No Harm is suing the prestigious medical journal and Project Hope, which publishes Health Affairs, in federal court. In our lawsuit, filed on Tuesday, September 6, we’re asking the court to hold Health Affairs and Project Hope accountable for violating federal law and D.C. law.
Health Affairs’ discrimination comes via its Health Equity Fellowship for Trainees, which provides mentorship and publication opportunities for health policy scholars. It may be hard to believe, but the journal explicitly excludes white applicants from applying:
Our plaintiff is an anonymous individual who is ready and willing to apply to the fellowship but cannot apply solely on the basis of race.
Since Health Affairs’ publishing organization Project Hope accepts federal funding, Health Affairs is subject to the race discrimination ban under the federal Civil Rights Act, which states: “no person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” Health Affairs and Project Hope are also violating the Affordable Care Act which applies specifically to health programs and activities. Furthermore, Health Affairs is violating D.C. law, which bans racial discrimination in training programs like the Health Equity Fellowship for Trainees.
Health Affairs plays a prominent role in pushing discriminatory woke concepts like “anti-racism” and “diversity, equity, and inclusion” in healthcare. And despite its claims of wanting to achieve inclusion, the journal engages in racial discrimination. Its actions are illegal and immoral—and Do No Harm’s lawsuit will hopefully help end this injustice.
Medical Students Shouldn’t Swear Woke Oaths
Uncategorized Minnesota DEI University of Minnesota Medical School Medical School Commentary Do No Harm StaffWith a new academic year set to start, the University of Minnesota is pushing medical students to swear an oath to divisive woke ideas (archived link). It’s the latest example of the woke conquest of medicine and a sign of what’s coming to every medical school.
The oath at the Twin Cities campus starts off on an explicitly ideological note. It states, “We, the students of the University of Minnesota Medical School, a state funded institution located on Anishinaabe and Dakota land…” This language reflects the woke obsession with grievance politics, with an implicit apology for the expansion of the United States across the continent. Never mind that today’s medical students weren’t alive and are studying medicine, not history.
It gets worse. The Twin Cities campus oath includes even more divisive language:
The oath for Duluth students is similar, though less on the nose: “We will embrace our roles as advocates for patients by engaging in systemic change to ensure equity in medicine.”
What do privilege, police brutality, climate change, and other politicized topics have to do with medical school? Nothing, and that’s the point. The school is deliberately turning future medical professionals into political activists. And by making students pledge to be “anti-racist,” it’s pushing tomorrow’s physicians to engage in racially discriminatory practices, such as preferential care.
The University of Minnesota Medical School is doing a profound disservice to students and the patients they will eventually serve. This new oath should never be uttered or adapted at any medical school, period.
Does your medical school want you to swear a woke oath or be “anti-racist”? Please let us know, securely and anonymously.
UAB Heersink School of Medicine Offers Discriminatory Scholarships
Uncategorized Alabama DEI University of Alabama Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm has asked the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights to investigate the University of Alabama – Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine for offering medical school scholarships that discriminate on the basis of race.
Three endowed scholarships to attend the Heersink School of Medicine listed in UAB’s institutional database (archived link) are “restricted to African-American medical students.” By advertising and administering these discriminatory scholarships, UAB appears to be in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. We filed complaints for these discriminatory eligibility standards and are requesting prompt resolution from the OCR.
Do No Harm works to protect the healthcare industry and individual practitioners against divisive ideologies and practices. If you are aware of a discriminatory scholarship or policy at your medical or nursing school, or if you didn’t apply because you thought a discriminatory policy worked against you, please let us know.
Do No Harm Comment on Medicare Advantage
Uncategorized United States DEI Testimony and CommentsDo No Harm submitted this request for comment by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Do No Harm, a national association of medical professionals united in protecting medicine from harmful and divisive political ideologies, shares CMS’ goal to advance “the attainment of the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, preferred language, or other factors that affect access to care and health outcomes.” We appreciate the opportunity to comment on CMS’ request for information regarding this goal in the context of Medicare Advantage.
However, we are concerned that this request for information is rooted in a growing and deeply troubling political ideology which seeks to disembody the medical profession’s most powerful means to that end: our strong tradition, beginning with the Hippocratic Oath, of treating all individuals, regardless of race, background, or circumstances, with dignity and our utmost care.
The expansion of this practiced principle from medicine—rather than its modification or replacement—to other institutions and endeavors, is our government’s most realistic and effective tool toward advancing “health equity.” Whatever other problems persist in the provision of health care in the United States, on the issue of equity, the medical profession largely solved the problem long ago.
Put simply, the best way to advance “the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, [or] preferred language” is to advance “the highest level of health for all people…regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, [or] preferred language.”
Once, this could be fairly criticized as circular pablum. However, as anti-racism and DEI have soaked our politics, they have inevitably seeped into debates about health care and public health programs. The prompt for this comment suggests that these theories have reached the highest levels of government. Putting aside the merits of those theories in political and historical debates, they have no place in medicine, especially in publicly supported programs like Medicare Advantage.
Almost 30 million Americans rely on coverage provided through Medicare Advantage. Enrollment and support for the program continue to grow because of the program’s unique advantages: more choices for patients have, unsurprisingly, led to more patient-centered coverage and care.
These Americans—the very source of the program’s funding—expect and deserve a program guided by the best ethics of the medical profession and not political ideology of any stripe, let alone ideologies such as anti-racism which promote future discrimination as a solution to past discrimination. No American should ever be subject to racial discrimination in a hospital bed, nursing home, doctor’s office, on the phone with a health insurance company, or any other context.
Reforms in Medicare Advantage should focus on how we can raise standards of care for all patients everywhere—not simply how to twist some knobs up and some knobs down so that eventual outcomes are even, however poor those outcomes may be.
After all, the issues raised in decisions regarding Medicare Advantage, like all coverage programs and health care more broadly—our shared pursuit of minimal pain, our shared desire of maximum dignity, and our shared mortality—transcend race in a way few other issues do.
In the medical context, it hardly needs to be said, efforts to single out certain races for special or different treatment can have perverse consequences whether the intent is pure or not. Even noble and successful efforts along these lines inevitably raise the question: if a certain course of treatment or care benefits racial minorities, why not increase the use of or access to that treatment or care among other groups?
For example, SCAN Health Plan, a not-for-profit Medicare Advantage plan with members in California, Arizona, and Nevada, noticed racial disparities in how often members took cholesterol and diabetes medications. The gaps were modest. For example, 86 percent of white members took their medications as prescribed, compared to 84 percent of Hispanics and 81 percent of Blacks. Nevertheless, over the course of eighteen months, SCAN Health Plan initiated incentives to close that gap, which it did by 35 percent.
The company tied senior executives’ bonuses to closing that gap, hired “more than 15 Black and Hispanic care navigators and pharmacists,” held cultural bias training, and prioritized vendor contracts which would increase targeted “outreach to members,” among other things. In all, SCAN Health Plan estimates that it spent “close to $1 million” on the effort.
Even if we stipulate that SCAN Health Plan’s efforts directly caused the change, it raises questions that go to the heart of this request for information. If the health and care of the 14 percent of white members who do not take their medications as prescribed is not less important than the lives of racial minorities, why did this effort only target minorities, instead of targeting all individuals who did not take medications as prescribed? Surely, there are efforts SCAN Health Plan could have taken, including the efforts they did take, which would have closed that gap too.
And, because all choices involve trade-offs, was $1 million worth spending on a program which modestly closed an already modest racial gap as compared to other health initiatives the Plan could have taken which did not target some racial groups over others?
This road leads to a dark place—one in which some Americans receive more care and attention than others. That is acceptable in a triage situation, in which some patients have conditions of different urgencies. It is unacceptable when the level of care and attention is only being determined by the color of the patient’s skin. It is racial discrimination and it has no place in medicine.
Instead, Do No Harm adheres to a succinct, now fifteen-year old formulation of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts’: the “way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”
To the extent racial discrimination persists in medicine, Do No Harm condemns it as a grotesque and inexcusable violation of the professional standards to which we hold ourselves. The solution, in the provision of coverage through Medicare Advantage or any other context in health care, is to enforce those standards. That is a core principle of our organization and the genesis of our founding.
Again, we appreciate the opportunity to provide this comment.
Sincerely,
Stanley Goldfarb, MD
Chairman, Board of Directors
Do No Harm
This North Carolina Health System Is Now Woke
Uncategorized North Carolina DEI Hospital System Commentary Do No Harm StaffA major North Carolina health system has gone woke. An anonymous stakeholder at Cone Health showed us how the large network of hospitals and medical centers in the Greensboro area is pushing doctors, nurses, and staff to make radical ideology a core part of their work.
The concerned individual sent us several examples showing Cone Health’s descent into identity politics. It has set the tone that everyone it employs must get on board with divisive concepts. A recent email sent to all staff members states: “Creating a Cone Health where diversity, equity and inclusion are our way of being requires all of us to commit to this marathon together… we all own this vision, and we must walk the walk and take action.”
Beyond the rhetoric, Cone Health is pushing employees to participate in specific activities, including:
By forcing these principles onto doctors, nurses, and staff members, Cone Health is injecting dangerous and divisive ideas into its hospitals and clinics, which undermines patient trust. Cone Health should be empowering doctors and nurses to do their jobs at the highest level, not lowering itself by focusing on identity politics.
Have you seen wokeness at your health system or provider? Please let us know – securely and anonymously.
This Pennsylvania Medical School is Violating Civil Rights
Uncategorized Pennsylvania DEI University of Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm has filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights and is requesting an investigation of the University Of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine for its discriminatory Visiting Clerkship for Underrepresented Minority Students in Medicine (URiM) program.
Eligibility criteria for the funded program state that applicants must come from backgrounds underrepresented in medicine; specifically, “Black/African-American, Hispanic/Latino, or Native American (American Indian, Native Hawaiian, Alaskan Native, mainland Puerto Rican).” This is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and illegally discriminates on the basis of race, color, and national origin.
Do No Harm works to protect the healthcare industry and individual practitioners against divisive ideologies and practices. If you are aware of a discriminatory scholarship or policy at your medical or nursing school, or if you didn’t apply because you thought a discriminatory policy worked against you, please let us know.
Do No Harm’s Supreme Court Shout-Out
Uncategorized Washington DC Commentary Judicial Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm just made an appearance at the Supreme Court. In a brief filed yesterday in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina, we were highlighted for showing the rise of woke racial discrimination in healthcare. We’re grateful to Students for Fair Admissions for giving us a shout-out.
This case involves racial discrimination in university admissions, which the Supreme Court currently allows under the guise of “affirmative action.” Students for Fair Admissions points out that by allowing such discrimination in higher education, the Supreme Court has encouraged the spread of this dangerous practice across virtually all of society – including healthcare.
Which leads to our shout-out. The brief mentions our criticism of the American Medical Association, which support race-based decision-making with COVID treatments. As we wrote earlier this year, the AMA supports policies that “force… doctors to change their standard of care based on a patient’s skin color. The name for that is discrimination, and it has no place in the doctor’s office.”
Of course, this is far from the only example of racial discrimination in healthcare. We’ve also highlighted how many medical schools are offering race-based scholarships and how one of Harvard Medical School’s teaching hospitals is providing preferential access to care for specific races. Driving by woke activists, discrimination is becoming more prevalent in healthcare by the day.
We hope the Supreme Court puts fairness and equality over racial discrimination. The upcoming case may not deal with healthcare explicitly, but the right ruling would still send a message that the medical establishment can’t ignore. It’s about time the federal courts helped stop discrimination in healthcare.
This Oregon Medical School is Violating Civil Rights
Uncategorized Oregon DEI Oregon Health and Science University Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffDo No Harm is asking the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights to investigate the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) School of Medicine for violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. OHSU operates the GME-to-Faculty Diversity Advancement Pathway (FDAP) program, which restricts applicants to junior medical faculty who are underrepresented in medicine. This population is defined by OHSU as “(a) Black or African American, (b) Hispanic or Latino/a (individual of any gender identity originating from Mexico, Central or South America, or Caribbean cultures), (c) American Indian or Alaska Native, and (d) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.” The requirement is restated on the application, and preference is given for applicants who have contributed to diversity, equity, and inclusion in the field of medical education.
Junior faculty members who participate in the FDAP receive an individualized advancement plan and are promoted within 7 years of starting the program.
Do No Harm works to protect the healthcare industry and individual practitioners against divisive ideologies and practices. If you are aware of a discriminatory scholarship or policy at your medical or nursing school, or if you didn’t apply because you thought a discriminatory policy worked against you, please let us know.
Yale Sees Racism Where It Doesn’t Exist
Uncategorized Connecticut DEI Yale University Medical School Commentary Do No Harm StaffA tipster at the Yale School of Medicine just let us know about a telling development at the prestigious institution. The short version: Yale is ditching a clinically proven kidney diagnostic tool on the grounds that it’s racist, but it’s not. The woke crowd sees racism at every level of healthcare even when the evidence says they’re wrong.
Here’s the long version. Yale is abandoning a test that physicians have used for decades to diagnose and manage chronic kidney disease, which afflicts millions of Americans. The test was designed according to the highest ethical and evidence-based standards. Crucially, the test automatically changes its findings for African American patients by 15%. That reflects real-world clinical experience, which has decisively proven that African Americans have a consistently higher level of the chemical compound the test measures.
How does science constitute racism? It doesn’t, but woke activists have claimed it anyway. They argue that simply accounting for racial differences is itself racist. Unsurprisingly, a small group of vocal activists have spent years demanding this kidney test be changed.
Yale has now given in. When announcing this decision, Yale’s Chief Clinical Officer, Thomas J. Balcezak, declared that “race-based assessments have been used for decades in American healthcare to influence medical decisions, and more recently, they have been found to reduce the quality of care received by patients of color.”
But there’s no evidence this long-standing kidney test has hurt anyone. To the contrary: The test enables physicians to provide better care to minority patients, because it accurately accounts for medical reality. While Yale is replacing this test, the new one will add costs to care without changing that care one iota.
Sadly, the facts don’t matter to the activist crowd. They will find racism regardless of whether it’s there, because that’s the whole point of woke ideology. But surely we can find new and better ways to diagnose and treat patients without falsely claiming that proven methods are racist.
This Kansas Medical School and Medical Center Are Violating Civil Rights
Uncategorized Kansas DEI University of Kansas School of Medicine Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffYet another academic medical center is engaging in discriminatory practices that violate the civil rights of students who are seeking admission to its Doctor of Medicine program.
Do No Harm Medicine is asking the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights to investigate the University of Kansas School of Medicine and KU Medical Center for the Urban Scholars Program for Students Underrepresented in Medicine, as the university discriminates on the basis of race, color, and national origin. As stated by the KU School of Medicine Office of Diversity and Inclusion, “Applicants must be a member of a population that is underrepresented in medicine (as defined by the Admissions Committee, including Native American, Black or African American, Hispanic/Latinx, Cambodian, Laotian, or Vietnamese).” These restrictions on who may participate in a publicly funded program are in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
Students who enroll and then complete the Urban Scholars Program receive “assured admission” to the University of Kansas School of Medicine, according to the program’s official webpage.
Do No Harm works to protect the healthcare industry and individual practitioners against divisive ideologies and practices. If you are aware of a discriminatory scholarship or policy at your medical or nursing school, or if you didn’t apply because you thought a discriminatory policy worked against you, please let us know.
Physician Feature: Dr. Michael Ready
Uncategorized Texas DEI Commentary Do No Harm StaffPhysicians often ask us: How can I fight woke ideology? Dr. Michael Ready, a physician out of Temple, Texas, shows the answer.
Dr. Ready is a long-time member of the Texas Medical Association (TMA), serving for many years on its Council of Medical Education. He’s seen firsthand how divisive ideas like “systemic racism” and “implicit bias” have crept into medicine in service of diversity and equity. This runs the risk of many unintended consequences such as lowering of academic standards. But more importantly this ideology divides us, focusing on our differences and not our humanity and what unites us.
Faced with these threats, Dr. Ready is using his voice to help the Texas Medical Association steer clear of identity politics. Here’s how he puts it:
“I’m a proud member of the TMA and I want it to continue advocating for patients and physicians. Medical associations are important for keeping medicine principled and patient focused. Identity politics will corrupt our mission as it focuses on immutable characteristics – which is an unfalsifiable premise that is ultimately divisive.”
Most notably, he’s introduced a resolution that would ensure the TMA remains a forum where free speech is welcome. This matters because activists want to stifle physicians and medical associations from speaking out. They don’t want anyone to push back on their claim that physicians are racist and healthcare is broken beyond repair.
But Dr. Ready knows that pushback is essential. Under his resolution, the TMA would always allow free and unfettered debate on these issues, so that false woke claims can be challenged with medical facts.
Dr. Ready is also criticizing the “Implicit Association Test,” which is creeping into medical education to show future physicians their supposed “bias.” He knows the test lacks any grounding in medical science, while sowing distrust between physicians and patients of different colors. He’s urging the TMA to keep it from influencing medical care.
Dr. Ready is committed to this cause for the long haul:
“Someone has to speak out, because what’s happening in healthcare isn’t right. I know many of my peers share my concerns and we owe it to patients and society to protect medicine for future generations. When we don’t speak up the public believes that the activists are speaking for all of us.
With activists and ideologues targeting healthcare from every angle, physicians are key to pushing back and protecting the practice of medicine. People listen when physicians talk, and their voices are heard far and wide. Dr. Michael Ready is a model, and we hope his example inspires even more physicians to stand up for their convictions and to speak out against what we know is not true.
The Office for Civil Rights is Investigating NYU and Pitt for Discrimination
Uncategorized New York, Pennsylvania DEI New York University, University of Pittsburgh Medical School Commentary Executive Do No Harm StaffIn response to complaints filed by Do No Harm Senior Fellow Mark Perry, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has opened investigations of two elite medical schools for advertising and awarding scholarships that discriminate based on race or ethnicity: New York University and University of Pittsburgh.
The NYU Grossman School of Medicine partners with its Office of Diversity Affairs to sponsor the Visiting Elective for Underrepresented in Medicine Program, which provides a stipend of up to $2,000 for visiting students whose backgrounds are underrepresented in medicine. “We define these backgrounds,” it says, “to include the following races/ethnicities: Black or African American, Latinx, Native American, Native Pacific Islander, or Native Alaskan.”
Similarly, the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine offers the Carey Andrew-Jaja, MD Visiting Elective Scholarship Program for 4th Year Students Underrepresented in Medicine, with the same requirements and stipend amount. “Eligible candidates,” according to the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, are “from the following backgrounds/heritage: African Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders, and Native Alaskans.”
Title VI prohibits educational institutions that receive federal funding from discriminating “on the basis of race, color, or national origin.”
Do No Harm works to protect healthcare against divisive ideologies and practices and calls on others to do. If you are aware of a discriminatory scholarship or policy at your medical or nursing school, or if you didn’t apply because you thought you were not eligible, please let us know.