Why
focus on black middle-class women?
Being
a racial minority is usually equated
with being poor, and so its
assumed that black middle-class
women should be fine because theyre
not poor. But theyre not fine.
They face substantial health challenges
and differences in health outcomes.
My work points to the persistence
of racial discrimination across
class, resulting in lower life expectancy
and higher rates of infant mortality,
and also highlights the unique challenges
women in general and black women
in particular face trying to be
taken seriously and get their needs
met by their doctors.
Before
coming to UC Berkeley, you worked
for the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
How did your experiences there shape
the book?
Working
alongside other professional black
women who were stressed out by the
health system became part of the
impetus that led to the book.
My
colleagues and I would prominently
wear our CDC employee badges
when we visited the doctors
office to signal that we were
educated and had health insurance.
We felt we had to guard against
what might be discrimination
based on being both female
and black.
What
are some of the stereotypes
about black women that lead
to critical outcomes?
One
is the tendency to blame black
womens health problems
on weight. A case that stands
out to me was a woman who
was 35 at the time I met her,
who had suffered from severe
knee pain since she was 19
or 20. As the pain worsened,
she kept going to the doctor,
who told her she just needed
to lose weight. She would
get X-rays, but not more sophisticated
diagnostic workups. Finally,
she found a doctor who ordered
an MRI. Once the results were
in, she was called immediately
to the hospital and told she
had two tumors in her knee.
They had been there all this
time. They were able to remove
the tumors and save her leg,
but if they had waited any
longer, they would have had
to amputate her leg.
How
about racial biases in pain
management?
This
is a real problem. You even
see it in pediatrics. A whole
section of my book addresses
how physicians and other medical
staff are trained to treat
pain based on racial profiling.
One medical textbook, Nursing:
A Concept-Based Approach to
Learning, first published
in 2010, talks about how different
racial and ethnic groups react
differently to acute and chronic
pain and uses racist, anti-Semitic
and Islamophobic stereotypes.
Anecdotally, one of the members
of my Ph.D. dissertation committee
was a black female physician.
She delivered her twins at
the same hospital where she
was an internist, but she
wasnt allowed pain medication
during labor until she told
them she was an attending
physician at the hospital.
Only then would they give
her an epidural.
Youve
blogged about tennis icon
Serena Williams, who had a
life-threatening health scare
after giving birth in 2017.
As a celebrity, does her experience
also fit with the thesis of
your book?
Absolutely.
Black womens perceptions
of whats going on with
their own bodies are often
discounted, even if theyre
Serena Williams. According
to an interview she did with
Vogue, Williams was at risk
for a pulmonary embolism and
was experiencing shortness
of breath after an emergency
C-section. She recognized
the symptoms and asked for
a CT scan and blood thinner,
but the medical staff didnt
take her seriously. Blood
started pooling inside her,
which eventually led to another
emergency surgery. The delay
could have cost her her life.