• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Tackling health disparities and stigma | News

Tackling health disparities and stigma | News

May 17, 2022
Senate Education Discusses Financial Literacy, Free Period Products

Senate Education Discusses Financial Literacy, Free Period Products

February 2, 2023
Post-Global War on Terror, different missions for the National Guard

Post-Global War on Terror, different missions for the National Guard

February 2, 2023
USWNT World Cup roster prediction 4.0: How SheBelieves Cup could impact selections

USWNT World Cup roster prediction 4.0: How SheBelieves Cup could impact selections

February 2, 2023
ChildCare Education Institute launches CUR137: Completing

ChildCare Education Institute launches CUR137: Completing

February 2, 2023
Gaps in Mental Health Care for Asian and Pacific Islander People and Other People of Color

Gaps in Mental Health Care for Asian and Pacific Islander People and Other People of Color

February 2, 2023
Jean-Pierre calls Texas border czar a ‘political stunt,’ claims Biden’s actions ‘made a difference’

Jean-Pierre calls Texas border czar a ‘political stunt,’ claims Biden’s actions ‘made a difference’

February 2, 2023
House Ousts Ilhan Omar From Foreign Affairs Panel

House Ousts Ilhan Omar From Foreign Affairs Panel

February 2, 2023
National Wear Red Day declared for Friday, aims to bring awareness and fight heart disease

National Wear Red Day declared for Friday, aims to bring awareness and fight heart disease

February 2, 2023
New Report Looks at Arkansas Policies To Promote Infant, Toddler Health

New Report Looks at Arkansas Policies To Promote Infant, Toddler Health

February 2, 2023
Kyle Rittenhouse: Victim’s father’s wrongful-death lawsuit can proceed

Kyle Rittenhouse: Victim’s father’s wrongful-death lawsuit can proceed

February 2, 2023
Trump Won’t Commit to Backing the G.O.P. Nominee in 2024

Trump Won’t Commit to Backing the G.O.P. Nominee in 2024

February 2, 2023
Riviera Beach classroom gets ‘STEM’ makeover thanks to FPL grant

Riviera Beach classroom gets ‘STEM’ makeover thanks to FPL grant

February 2, 2023
Monday, March 27, 2023
News Today
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Education
  • National
  • News
No Result
View All Result
News Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

Tackling health disparities and stigma | News

by newstoday
May 17, 2022
in Health
0
Tackling health disparities and stigma | News
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Physician and mother of four Tiffani Bell Washington, MPH ’22, was recently honored by the National Minority Quality Forum as one of its “40 Under 40 Leaders in Minority Health.”

May 17, 2022—Tiffani Bell Washington traces her commitment to public health to a devastating time in her life. Just days before her 16th birthday, her father passed away at age 45. Like others in her family who had died at young ages, Washington’s father suffered from chronic and obesity-related health conditions. Living through this experience solidified her childhood fascination with medicine into a goal to help avert similar tragedies, she said. “I didn’t want other people to lose loved ones to preventable diseases.”

Washington went on to become a physician, quadruple board-certified in adult psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, obesity medicine, and lifestyle medicine. Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, she worked at Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston Salem, NC, first as an assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry and then as a psychiatrist in their weight management program. She also began working as a correctional psychiatrist communicating with inmates in Georgia via telemedicine. As health outcomes continued to get worse nationwide, particularly for people of color and low-income communities, Washington decided it was time to return to the classroom. She started an accelerated MPH program (MPH-45) at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health last summer, and will graduate later this month.

“The pandemic reminded me that I want to affect people’s health on a large scale, not just one on one,” she said. “I want to keep doing some clinical medicine, but I think it is the big policies that make the most difference. If we don’t change those, then people will get lost in the shuffle.”

Washington came to the School to build on her research and leadership skills in minority health policy, but as the mother of four young children, she also had another goal for returning to the classroom—to let her kids see that there is no limit to what they can accomplish. “I’m hoping their future will be devoid of limitations based on race or preconceived barriers placed unfairly upon them,” she said.

Emerging leader

When Washington was growing up, her mother, a single parent and nurse, encouraged her and her sister to aim for excellence in everything they do. But when Washington started pursuing her goal to become a physician, she got little encouragement beyond her family and a few mentors.

“I was generally doubted and told that my chances were slim because so few Black people become doctors,” she said. “I encountered opposition on every level, but I continued to stay focused.” She noted that she now takes whatever opportunity she can to encourage young people of color who are interested in careers in science and medicine.

After earning a BS in biology and chemistry from Virginia’s Norfolk State University in 2007, Washington went on to earn a medical degree from Medical College of Virginia, and completed a residency and fellowship in psychiatry at Wake Forest School of Medicine.

In the months before coming to Harvard Chan School, Washington started a private practice focused on culturally centered obesity and mental health care. Earlier this year, the National Minority Quality Forum named her one of its 40 Under 40 Leaders in Minority Health in recognition of her clinical work and her volunteer leadership with organizations including the American Medical Association, Black Psychiatrists of America, and Pierce Bell Institute of Black Psychiatry, an advocacy organization she helped found that is focused on Black people’s unique mental health needs.

Fighting stigma

During the pandemic, Washington said that she was struck by the number of adults who came into her practice struggling with depression and anxiety for the first time in their lives. She’s hopeful that this might lead to greater empathy for others who struggle with mental illness. “I think COVID-19 opened a lot of people’s eyes to the fact that these conditions can happen to anybody,” she said. “It’s not a personal failing, and it’s treatable.”

Washington has been seizing her time at Harvard Chan School to push forward with her work in this and other areas. She did research with Fatima Cody Stanford, an obesity medicine physician and researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and co-authored several papers with her. She also pursued a concentration in the Public Health Leadership Lab, and helped form an affinity group for Harvard Chan School students of color with a focus on mentorship.

Her adviser Alecia McGregor, assistant professor of health policy and politics, called Washington a “one-of-a-kind scholar and physician.” She said, “Through her clinical, academic, and service work, [Washington] demonstrates a clear commitment to improving Black mental health and eliminating health disparities. She is a deeply empathetic person, and I have no doubt that her work will continue to touch the lives of many and leave an imprint on the field of public health.”

As she wraps up her degree program and plans what next, Washington said she valued the opportunity to take time out of her busy life to have conversations with her fellow students. “It’s been good to find a core group of people who I can study with, and talk to about how we’re going to make the most out of our education.”

After graduation, she plans to continue her clinical work and volunteer service, and pursue research. Ultimately, she hopes to form a nonprofit focused on decreasing stigma around obesity and mental health care.

A cheerleader from childhood to college, Washington describes herself as “pretty high energy.” She sometimes has to remind herself that she can’t do everything. “I do the most important thing at the time,” she said. “I allow myself to drop a few balls—just not the glass balls, the ones that really matter.”

Faith and family keep her going, she said. Dancing to Beyoncé also helps. “I try to keep my keep my joy high,” she said. “In public health, we’re tackling pretty tough challenges. If we don’t keep ourselves uplifted, it’s really difficult to get out there and make things better for someone else.”

—Amy Roeder

Photo: Kent Dayton





Source link

Share196Tweet123Share49
newstoday

newstoday

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Stay away from S.F. national parks, police union says. Here’s what’s behind the warning

Stay away from S.F. national parks, police union says. Here’s what’s behind the warning

May 25, 2022
Gallaudet University Track Star Becomes School’s First National Champ – NBC4 Washington

Cornyn likens overrule of Roe v. Wade to Brown v. Board of Education in tweet

June 26, 2022
John Cornyn tweet about Brown v. Board of Education goes viral

John Cornyn tweet about Brown v. Board of Education goes viral

June 25, 2022
African diplomats protest alleged begins racism and inhumane clinical treat

Coronavirus: France deaths at city 14,400 ahead Macron lockdown

0
Police investigating fatal shooting in southeast

Police investigating fatal shooting in southeast

0
African diplomats protest alleged begins racism and inhumane clinical treat

Prince Harry drops royal surname after moving

0
Senate Education Discusses Financial Literacy, Free Period Products

Senate Education Discusses Financial Literacy, Free Period Products

February 2, 2023
Post-Global War on Terror, different missions for the National Guard

Post-Global War on Terror, different missions for the National Guard

February 2, 2023
USWNT World Cup roster prediction 4.0: How SheBelieves Cup could impact selections

USWNT World Cup roster prediction 4.0: How SheBelieves Cup could impact selections

February 2, 2023
News Today

Copyright © 2022 NewsToday.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • World
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2022 NewsToday.