Black Man in a White Coat: A Doctor's Reflections on Race and Medicine
Damon Tweedy. Picador, $26 (304p) ISBN 978-1-250-04463-1
In this eye-opening memoir, Tweedy, a black psychiatrist who interned at Duke University Medical School in the mid-1990s, vigorously confronts his profession and its erratic treatment of African-American patients. Tweedy, raised in a segregated working-class neighborhood, gets a full scholarship to the white academic world of Duke, where he's challenged on every level, including by a professor who wrongly assumes he's a janitor. Though Duke, like many elite colleges, tried to recruit minority students, Tweedy notes that the constant subliminal and overt racism at the school%E2%80%94which former professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. termed "the Plantation"%E2%80%94caused many non-white recruits to suffer self-doubt and anxiety. His painful anecdotes, both as an intern and physician, show the critical health crisis within the black community; his patients included a drug-addicted girl pregnant with a dead infant, an older woman suffering from high blood pressure and diabetes, a man struggling with mental illness, and a young woman who contracted AIDS from her boyfriend. Tweedy nicely unravels the essential issues of race, prejudice, class, mortality, treatment, and American medicine without blinking or polite excuses. (Sept.)
Details
Reviewed on: 07/27/2015
Genre: Nonfiction
Other - 320 pages - 978-1-250-04464-8
Paperback - 304 pages - 978-1-250-10504-2