Description
- When medical diagnoses and trainings are race based, they lead doctors to make different treatment decisions for Black patients, and create a dangerous disadvantage.
- At the same time, medical textbooks and trainings may inappropriately disregard race in cases when it does matter, like failing to include pictures of how rashes may appear differently on light and dark skin--leading to misdiagnosis and death.
- And finally, many medical institutions still deny the extent to which racism is an issue at all, resulting in fewer Black physicians and disastrous outcomes for Black patients.
Calling on her medical colleagues to join her in working against the negligence of American medicine, Dr. Grubbs lays out a pathway to true equity and inclusion in health care: getting to the root of the underlying fears and insecurities that have led to racist medical negligence; recruiting and retaining a diverse physician workforce; and forcing Medicine to commit to the cultural humility necessary to rebuild, not just replaster, a broken institution.
Author: Vanessa Grubbs
Publisher: North Atlantic Books
Published: 09/02/2025
Pages: 192
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.50lbs
Size: 8.90h x 5.90w x 0.50d
ISBN13: 9798889842354
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Ethics
- Social Science | Race & Ethnic Relations
- Health & Fitness | Health Care Issues
About the Author
Dr. Vanessa Grubbs is an internist, nephrologist, kidney donor, physician-scientist, and author of Hundreds of Interlaced Fingers: A Kidney Doctor's Search for the Perfect Match. Dr. Grubbs is from Spring Lake, North Carolina. She is a Duke University undergraduate and medical school alum and completed her nephrology specialty training at UCSF, where she became a faculty member. While maintaining a clinical and research practice, she distinguished herself as a leading voice in nephrology, palliative care, and racial disparities. She left UCSF in 2019 but continues to publish in medical journals and speak at academic institutions. Currently, Dr. Grubbs is a part-time primary care physician, runs "Real Kidney Talk with The People's Nephrologist" on YouTube, and, in 2022, she founded Black Doc Village, a non-profit organization dedicated to actively advocating for Black trainees and physicians. She lives in Oakland, California with her husband, and recipient of her left kidney, Robert Phillips.

