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Legacy

A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
ONE OF TIME’S 100 MOST INFLUENTUAL PEOPLE IN GLOBAL HEALTH
“This book is more than a memoir—it also serves as a call to action to create a more equitable healthcare system for patients of color, particularly Black women.” —Essence
One of NPR’s 11 Books to Look Forward to in 2024
One of Good Morning America’s 15 New Books to Read for the New Year
Legacy is both a compelling memoir and an edifying analysis of the inequities in the way we deliver healthcare in America. Uché Blackstock is a force of nature.” —Abraham Verghese, MD, New York Times bestselling author of The Covenant of Water
“[An] extraordinary family story.” —Dr. Damon Tweedy, The New York Times Book Review
“This book should be required reading for all medical students.” —Gayle King, CBS Mornings
The rousing, captivating story of a Black physician, her career in medicine, and the deep inequities that still exist in the U.S. healthcare system

Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, it never occurred to Uché Blackstock and her twin sister, Oni, that they would be anything but physicians. In the 1980s, their mother headed an organization of Black women physicians, and for years the girls watched these fiercely intelligent women in white coats tend to their patients and neighbors, host community health fairs, cure ills, and save lives.
What Dr. Uché Blackstock did not understand as a child—or learn about at Harvard Medical School, where she and her sister had followed in their mother’s footsteps, making them the first Black mother-daughter legacies from the school—were the profound and long-standing systemic inequities that mean just 2 percent of all U.S. physicians today are Black women; the racist practices and policies that ensure Black Americans have far worse health outcomes than any other group in the country; and the flawed system that endangers the well-being of communities like theirs. As an ER physician, and later as a professor in academic medicine, Dr. Blackstock became profoundly aware of the systemic barriers that Black patients and physicians continue to face.
Legacy is a journey through the critical intersection of racism and healthcare. At once a searing indictment of our healthcare system, a generational family memoir, and a call to action, Legacy is Dr. Blackstock’s odyssey from child to medical student to practicing physician—to finally seizing her own power as a health equity advocate against the backdrop of the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter movement.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 23, 2023
      Physician and healthcare consultant Blackstock skillfully blends biography and advocacy in this passionate debut memoir. Blackstock’s mother, Dale, was a pioneering Black doctor in Brooklyn who headed a coalition of Black women physicians in the 1980s. Her example inspired Blackstock and her twin sister, Oni, to follow in their mother’s footsteps. When the sisters were undergraduates at Harvard, Dale died of leukemia at age 47; the siblings went on to graduate from Harvard Medical School in the 2000s as the school’s first Black mother-daughter legacies. After she was matched with Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, Blackstock, like her mother, persevered in the face of prejudice from patients and colleagues. Dedicating herself to fighting racial healthcare inequities, she formed Advancing Health Equity in 2019 to help improve care for patients of color. Blackstock’s inspiring account—which also covers her own health struggles (a misdiagnosis of her appendicitis nearly kills her) and her devastating divorce—is enhanced by her concrete diagnoses of the healthcare industry’s shortcomings and the firm, actionable steps (including engaging Black children in medical education as early as preschool) she provides to fix them. It’s a sobering and knowledge study of medical discrimination from someone with a lifetime of experience. Agent: Neeti Madan, Sterling Lord Literistic.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2023
      A Black physician reflects on her career in medicine and the many inequities of American health care. During their childhood in Brooklyn, Blackstock and her twin sister often played with their mother's medical bag. The first Dr. Blackstock had grown up on welfare before becoming a respected nephrologist. The author and her sister both followed in their mother's footsteps, attending Harvard Medical School, the "school's first Black mother-daughter legacy graduates." At Harvard, Blackstock first saw how racism manifests in medicine. "A lot of the time," she writes, "it wasn't as much a case of what our professors were teaching us as what they were leaving out"--namely, the "exploitation of Black people for the purposes of medical education." Examples include Henrietta Lacks, a poor Black woman whose cervical tissue was removed without her consent and used for study and profit, or the men of the infamous Tuskegee experiment, where researchers left syphilis untreated among Black sharecroppers to "prove" that Black people had "primitive nervous systems." But Blackstock's true education came later, during her fellowship at NYU, when she became a practicing physician at two emergency centers: Tisch, a private hospital, and Bellevue, a public hospital. The two hospitals were next door to each other but worlds apart. Tisch was "well-oiled" and "highly resourced," and the patients were "wealthy, insured...[and] mostly white." Bellevue was "chaotic" and understaffed, and the patient population largely consisted of Black and brown people who had "slipped through the cracks of a system that was simply not built to serve them." Blackstock eloquently describes her journey from idealistic resident, to burned-out fellow, to disillusioned professor at NYU, where she was asked to take a leadership role in the Office of Diversity Affairs, a position that ultimately felt "empty and performative." Though occasionally dry, this is an important story. A timely and persuasive memoir.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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