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The college’s Minority Health
Month speaker series continues Thursday, April 7, when
Darrell L. Grace, D.O., lectures at noon in Irvine 199.
Grace’s lecture, “A New Paradigm: Trust and Parity Through
Cultural Competency,” will examine the health status and
conditions of African Americans from their arrival as indentured
servants and slaves in the early history of the settlement of
this country by Europeans, through slavery, and after the
Emancipation Proclamation and Reconstruction to the present.
Grace, a graduate of Michigan
State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, is in private
practice with Forum Health and the medical director of Windsor
Nursing home. She is also a Centers for Osteopathic Research and
Education clinical professor and medical equity teacher. She
established Grace Place Medical Service, a clinic for the
underserved, uninsured and underinsured, in association with the
Greater Youngstown Coalition of Christians.
“I’ll also discuss what
cultural competency is and the importance of it,” says Grace.
Teaching physicians to understand and appreciate the differences
between majority and non-majority patients that can affect
doctor-patient relations and clinical outcomes means teaching
doctors not to be colorblind, she says.
Health disparities experienced
by minorities will also be examined by Grace. “African Americans
can have the same insurance as whites and go for medical
treatment and still not receive the same treatment,” says Grace.
Grace’s presentation will be
the second of the series in April, designated Minority Health
Month. The series is sponsored by the Center of Excellence for
Multicultural Medicine and the Office of Student Affairs.
On April 5, Ronald Myers, M.D.,
opened the month-long observation of Minority Health Month with
the presentation, “The Challenge of Providing Health Care for
the Poor.” On Monday, April 11, Nicholas Espinoza, D.O.
(’90), will present “Pediatric Obesity: A Community
Perspective” followed by Chau Pham, D.O., (’95),
presenting “Ethnogeriatrics: The Southeast Asian Culture”
Friday, April 22. Former OU-COM Dean Barbara Ross-Lee, D.O.,
will conclude the series Thursday, April 28, with her
presentation, “Wrap-Up: Policy and Health Disparities.” Ross-Lee
is currently dean of New York Institute of Technology College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
All presentations are from noon
to 1 p.m. in 199 Irvine Hall. For more information, please
contact De-Anthony King, academic enrichment
administrator,
at (740) 593-2465.
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News for
the week of April 4 – April 9
Ronald V. Myers, M.D., head of
the Myers Foundation, inaugurates OU-COM's celebration of
Minority Health Month
Osteopathic awards ceremony
honors outstanding students and faculty
News for
the week of March 28 – April 2
News for
the week of March 21 – March 26
News for
the week of March 14 – March 19
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