FloridaNews

Trying to Avoid Racist Health Care, Black Women Seek Out Black Obstetricians

In South Florida, when people want to find a Black physician, they often contact Adrienne Hibbert through her website, Black Doctors of South Florida.

This story is part of a partnership that includes NPR, WLRN and KHN. It can be republished for free.

“There are a lot of Black networks that are behind the scenes,” said Hibbert, who runs her own marketing firm. “I don’t want them to be behind the scenes, so I’m bringing it to the forefront.”

Hibbert said she got the idea for the website after she gave birth to her son 15 years ago.

Her obstetrician was white, and the suburban hospital outside Miami didn’t feel welcoming to Hibbert as a Black woman pregnant with her first child.

“They had no singular photos of a Black woman and her Black child,” Hibbert said. “I want someone who understands my background. I want someone who understands the foods that I eat. I want someone who understands my upbringing and things that my grandma used to tell me.”

In addition to shared culture and values, a Black physician can offer Black patients a sense of safety, validation and trust. Research has shown that racism, discrimination and unconscious bias continue to plague the U.S. health care system and can cause unequal treatment of racial and ethnic minorities.

Black patients have had their complaints and symptoms dismissed and their pain undertreated, and they are referred less frequently for specialty care. Older Black Americans can still remember when some areas of the country had segregated hospitals and clinics, not to mention profoundly unethical medical failures and abuses, such as the 40-year-long Tuskegee syphilis study.

But even today, Black patients say, too many clinicians can be dismissive, condescending or impatient — which does little to repair trust. Some Black patients would prefer to work with Black doctors for their care, if they could find any.

Hibbert is working on turning her website into a more comprehensive, searchable directory. She said the most sought-after specialist is the obstetrician-gynecologist: “Oh, my gosh, the No. 1 call that I get is [for] a Black OB-GYN.”

For Black women, the impact of systemic racism can show up starkly in childbirth. They are three times as likely to die after giving birth as white women in the United States.

Nelson Adams is a Black OB-GYN at Jackson North Medical Center in North Miami Beach, Florida. He said he understands some women’s preference for a Black OB-GYN but said that can’t be the only answer: “If every Black woman wanted to have a Black physician, it would be virtually impossible. The numbers are not there.”

And it’s also not simply a matter of recruiting more Black students to the fields of medicine and nursing, he said, though that would help. He wants systemic change, which means medical schools need to teach all students — no matter their race, culture or background — to treat patients with respect and dignity. In other words, as they themselves want to be treated.

“The golden rule says, ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,’ so that the heart of a doctor needs to be that kind of heart where you are taking care of folks the way you would want to be treated or want your family treated,” he said.

George Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis in May 2020, and the subsequent wave of protests and activism, prompted corporations, universities, nonprofits and other American institutions to reassess their own history and policies regarding race. Medical schools were no exception. In September, the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine revamped its four-year curriculum to incorporate anti-racism training.

New training also became part of the curriculum at Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine in Boca Raton, where students are being taught to ask patients about their history and experiences in addition to their bodily health. The new questions might include: “Have you ever felt discriminated against?” or “Do you feel safe communicating your needs?”

“Different things that were questions that we maybe never historically asked, but we need to start asking,” said Dr. Sarah Wood, senior associate dean for medical education at Florida Atlantic.

The medical students start learning about racism in health care during their first year, and as they go, they also learn how to communicate with patients from various cultures and backgrounds, Wood added.

These changes come after decades of racist teaching in medical schools across the United States. Adams, the OB-GYN, completed his residency in Atlanta in the early 1980s. He recalls being taught that if a Black woman came to the doctor or hospital with pain in her pelvis, “the assumption was that it was likely to be a sexually transmitted disease, something we refer to as PID, pelvic inflammatory disease. The typical causes there are gonorrhea and/or chlamydia.”

This initial assumption was in line with a racist view about Black women’s sexual activity — a presumption that white women were spared. “If the same symptoms were presented by a Caucasian, a white young woman, the assumption would be not an STD, but endometriosis,” Adams said. Endometriosis is not sexually transmitted and is therefore less stigmatizing, less tied to the patient’s behavior.

That diagnostic rule of thumb is no longer taught, but doctors can still bring unconscious racial bias to their patient encounters, Adams said.

While they revamp their curricula, medical schools are also trying to increase diversity within their student ranks. Florida Atlantic’s Schmidt College of Medicine set up, in 2012, a partnership with Florida A&M University, the state’s historically Black university. Undergraduates who want to become doctors are mentored as they complete their pre-med studies, and those who hit certain benchmarks are admitted to Schmidt after they graduate.

Dr. Michelle Wilson took that route and graduated from Schmidt this spring. She’s headed to Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, Georgia, for a residency in family medicine. Wilson was drawn to that specialty because she can do primary care but also deliver babies. She wants to build a practice focused on the needs of Black families.

“We code-switch. Being able to be that comfortable with your patient, I think it’s important when building a long-term relationship with them,” Wilson said.

“Being able to relax and talk to my patient as if they are family — I think being able to do that really builds on the relationship, especially makes a patient want to come back another time and be like, ‘I really like that doctor.’”

She said she hopes her work will inspire the next generation of Black doctors.

“I didn’t have a Black doctor growing up,” Wilson said. “I’m kind of paving the way for other little Black girls that look like me, that want to be a doctor. I can let them know it’s possible.”

This story is part of a partnership that includes NPR, WLRN and KHN.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/black-obstetricians-racism-health-care/

New Jobs
Here's What's Getting Coders Hired in 2026 - YouTube Uncovr Raises $7 Million in Seed Funding from Index Ventures to Build the System of ... Changes at Springfield-based health system affect 53 employees 1 in 12 medical billing companies just vanished - KevinMD.com Photos: Ozarks Lunkers fall to Memphis in nail-biter - Springfield Daily Citizen AI won't kill work but entry-level jobs may get scarce—here's how India should address it Driver arrested after deadly crash on I-44 in Springfield AI is making your medical bills higher, not lower, PwC report shows | Fortune Automation impacts 53 jobs at CoxHealth - Springfield Daily Citizen I've been unemployed since March…..yesterday I started my first coding job! - YouTube Huge Fraud in the Name of Medical Coding in Nandyal | TV5 News - YouTube Fake Jobs Scam in The Name Of Medical Coding At Nandyal District | Sakshi TV - YouTube Medical Coding Specialist (Dual Posted with Job ID 59698) - Chronicle of Higher Educat... Lawsuit: Man was framed by childhood friend, charged by CMPD, then fired - Charlotte Observer Today is Medical Coder Day: The importance of medical coding - The Hans India Nurse.org's 2026 Beyond the Bedside Poll: 500+ Nurses Left the Bedside—But Not Nursing Remote Medical Billing and Coding Roles Are Booming in 2026 - MSN 20 remote jobs that don't require a degree revealed — and the pay is surprisingly good There are sterile processing jobs you can get without certification - YouTube AI-Driven Layoffs In Healthcare: Navigating Legal Risks and Operational Challenges Jobs You Can Train for in Under a Year That Pay Well - Cheapism This “Hidden” $50K Healthcare Role Has Massive Demand #shorts - YouTube If you want to land your first job medical device sales without a degree or previous experien... I'm a Nurse Who Can't Find a Job, so I Became a Realtor. Here's Why It Makes Sense Minnesota West Medical Coding Specialist Program earns national PCAP approval How Nagaharini Yakkaluru, CPC-A, Is Gaining Real-World Coding Experience Through Project Xter... Standard AI is a Black Box. Here is Why RAAPID Built a Glass One for Risk Adjustment. 40 best remote jobs to boost your income and fit your schedule - MSN Part-Time Adjunct Instructor - Medical Billing and Coding Specialist Program St. Mary's Law master's degree provides legal foundation AI Didn't Fix HCC Coding—It Made It Harder; This is How to Fix It | Healthcare IT Today 20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor's Degree PeopleShores taps Missouri health care talent for new medical billing and coding roles Corti's new Symphony AI beats OpenAI and Anthropic on medical coding - TNW INLEXZO™ (gemcitabine intravesical system) Assigned Permanent Billing Code, Supporting ... Corti Ships Symphony for Medical Coding with more than 25% Accuracy Edge Over OpenAI ... San Jacinto College opens fast-track pathways to high-demand allied health careers How Amazon Connect Health brings agentic AI to the point of care | AWS for Industries A Nurse Worked 17 Hours—What Happened When She Got Home Is Going Viral Clash of insurers, providers takes us into the weeds of the hospital bill - The Boston Globe The 2026 guide to St. Louis health care training and education services 8 careers that can land you best remote jobs - Vanguard News Mayor Chess: 'Welcome to the neighborhood, Cornerstone Medical Training' Your Health Deploys Fathom Autonomous Medical Coding Platform Across All Service Lines UPMC, Microsoft invest in AI medical coding startup - Becker's Hospital Review Healthcare careers in months, not years - Times Republican Pickaway-Ross student's BPA win leads to national competition - Chillicothe Gazette Microsoft Launches Copilot Health 'Hub' to Access and Interpret All Users' Health Data HIMSS26: Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture to Bring Autonomous AI to Medical Coding Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture, Bringing Autonomous Coding to the Frontlines of ... - WFXG