Friday, November 20, 2020

Affirmative Action, black supremacist Medical Students Replace Hippocratic Oath with Oath to Racism

 

By Merlin
Sent: Fri, Nov 20, 2020 10:13 a.m.

The Hippocratic Oath May Now Go Racist...

Merlin: Would you ever have thought that after [White] racism was largely squelched in this country and that major institutions would go back to racism as a mean to achieve political ends?  Thanks, Obama; you are shameless. With a Biden win, anti-Caucasian racism will ramp up again.

Med Students Create New Hippocratic Oath to Address Racial Injustice in Health Care

The oath was inspired by COVID-19 and police-involved deaths of Black Americans.

By Mariya Moseley via GMA

November 20, 2020, 4:04 A.M.

A group of medical students are hoping to spark change by tackling deeply-rooted racial disparities in the health industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Incoming first-year medical students at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine have teamed up to put their spin on the Hippocratic oath.With their new oath, they hope to destroy biases, combat disinformation and address systemic racism.

"As the entering class of 2020 [sic], we start our medical journey amidst the COVID-19 pandemic and a national civil rights movement reinvigorated by the killings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery," the oath reads.

It goes on to address other concerns of the American health care system in serving vulnerable communities, including people of color, who have been disproportionately impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.

 


[Merlin: Note the token white man.]

Twelve first-year medical students at The University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine cr...

Sean Sweat, a 26-year-old student from Hopkins, South Carolina, who is set to become the first doctor in her family, was among the students involved in presenting the material to the Class of 2024.

"In what's already a very exciting journey ... being able to play a role in writing our class oath just made the experience all the more special," Sweat told "Good Morning America."

Courtesy Sean Sweat

First-year medical student Sean Sweat, of Hopkins, South Carolina, is among the Unive...

The 12-person oath-writing committee recited the new pledge in addition to the traditional version during their orientation at the start of the fall semester.

The oath, which is the first of its kind in the school's 134-year history, came about by committee members working alongside advisors and student affairs leaders. In addition to dedicating dozens of hours to the project, the committee also presented information to the entire class of about 150 students where they each had an opportunity to offer feedback.

The move comes as medical schools across the country still fall behind in diversity [lie!] as black, Hispanic and American Indian students remain underrepresented [lie!] in medical schools, despite increasing initiatives, according to a study published last year that was conducted by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

[blacks are wildly overrepresented in medical and other professional schools.]

"It really addresses what's going on right now ... and the racial injustices that have been brought to the forefront. Overall, our oath really addresses what it means to be a physician and how it is so much more complicated," Sweat said.

MORE: College students urged not to travel home for Thanksgiving amid COVID-19

Since the oath was created by the group this fall, it has gained nationwide attention, including recognition from the American Medical Association. It has also sparked a new tradition as all future incoming students of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine will be invited to put their own spin on the oath during orientation week each year.

MORE: Former security guard now a medical student at the hospital where he worked

Nia Buckner, of Charlotte, North Carolina, a first-generation medical student, said she is proud she got to contribute to such an impactful project.

She said that she, along with her colleagues, have personal copies of the oath that they carry to serve as a daily reminder of their purpose as they embark on their medical journey.

"It's something that we hold near and dear to our hearts as med students," Buckner told "GMA."

Courtesy Nia Buckner

First-year medical student Nia Buckner, of Charlotte, North Carolina, is among the Uni...

The 23-year-old believes that although her class isn't the first to create their own promises -- as schools have been permitted to do so now for 20 years, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges -- she believes their oath is special due to its relevance.

[N.S.: "Relevance" to what?]

"Not only does it embody what we believe ... but you can visualize the time that we are stepping into medicine and I think that was one of the things that had our personalized oath stand out," Buckner said.

[She still didn't answer my question.]

 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

As Archie Bunker explained,why there wasn't a lot of demand for black surgeons:"No one wants to be in a room,with a black guy coming at you with a knife."
--GRA

Anonymous said...

Ask them to play allegiance to the USA flag. Archie was right too. About dentists also I think. Or was that Red Foxxx?