Malicious Intent

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A01=David Barton Smith
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Author_David Barton Smith
Brown v. Board of Education
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Commercial Health Insurance
Disparities
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eq_health-lifestyle
eq_history
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eq_society-politics
health disparities
Health Insurance
Hospitals
Jim Crow
Medicaid
Medical Schools
Medical Societies
Medicare
mortality rates
national health insurance
physician referrals
Plessy v. Ferguson
Race
segregation
Universal healthcare
utilization rates

Product details

  • ISBN 9780826506139
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2023
  • Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Do we want to perpetuate a Jim Crow health system?" A brilliant, idealistic physician asked that question in Alabama in 1966. Her answer was no—it led to her murder. Unearthing the truth of Jean Cowsert's life and death is a central concern of David Barton Smith's Race, Murder, and Medicine. Unearthing the grim history of our healthcare system is another.

Race-related disparities in American death rates, exacerbated once again by the Covid-19 pandemic, have persisted since the birth of the modern U.S. medical system a century ago. A unique but fundamentally racist history has prevented the United States from providing the kind of healthcare assurances that are taken for granted in other industrialized nations. The underlying story is one of political, medical, and bureaucratic machinations, all motivated by a deliberate, racist design. In Race, Murder, and Medicine, David Barton Smith traces the Jean Cowsert story and the cold case of her death as a through line to explain the construction and fulfillment of an unequal healthcare system that would rather sacrifice many than provide for Black Americans.

Cowsert's suspicious death came at a key moment in the struggle for universal healthcare in the wealthiest country on earth. Race, Murder, and Medicine is a history of those failed efforts, and a story of selective amnesia about one doctor's death and the movement she died for.

David Barton Smith, Professor Emeritus in Health Administration at Temple University, is the author of Reinventing Care: Assisted Living in New York City (also published by Vanderbilt University Press) and Health Care Divided: Race and Healing a Nation. He is assisting in the production of a companion documentary supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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