The Dose - Lived Experience Is a Key to Health Equity
Episode Date: May 3, 2024As a physician, researcher, and educator, Dr. Cheryl R. Clark wants her students to understand what vision, love, and equity can bring to health care if we prioritize them — and why she believes do...ing so is critical to advancing health equity.  In the latest episode of The Dose podcast, host Joel Bervell talks with Clark about how she brings health equity to life, taking medical residents to Mississippi to break bread with the Civil Rights leaders who founded community health centers. They also discuss her work at the forefront of emancipatory research to connect the dots between academics, clinicians, and communities’ lived experiences.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to health care
for everyone.
How well do we connect the science and medicine in health care to social science in the quest
to improve outcomes for people who become patients?
And how much of a role does race play when we look through this dual lens and look
more closely? Those are the core questions guiding the work and career of my guest today on The Dose,
Dr. Cheryl R. Clark, a clinician, researcher, and educator at Brigham and Women's Hospital,
an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Clark serves as associate
chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine and Primary Care and oversees equity professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Clark serves as associate chief
of the Division of General Internal Medicine
and Primary Care, and oversees equity research
and strategic partnerships to support health equity.
She's also the director of the Leadership
for Health Equity Pathway
for the Internal Medicine Residency Program,
developing physician leaders,
working on innovative strategies
to confront social and structural disparities as part of
the work in achieving health equity in the United States. Dr. Clark is also the inaugural executive
director of the Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers' new Institute for Health Equity
Research, Evaluation, and Policy, a role she fills in addition to her appointments at the
Brigham and Harvard Medical School. With so many aligned interests in our work, I've been very much looking forward to this conversation. Welcome to The Dose,
Dr. Clark, and thank you so much for being here. Thank you so much for having me. Looking forward
to our conversation. Absolutely. So your work is broadly around integrating social determinants of
health into science. For people that don't know, what does that entail? And what kind of data is missing right now? Yeah, and I think a lot of what has driven me
and what matters to me is understanding how we take care of people in their full humanness.
I grew up in a place called Harvey, Illinois, south of Chicago, and it was a really warm, connected place.
It also was a part of the Great Migration.
Many of us identified as being African-American. that migrated north from the south looking for opportunity, looking to have lives that we could shape ourselves
rather than the lives shaped by structural racism that we had often endured.
And so I brought that lived experience with me
as I thought about what I wanted to do with my own career.
I knew that I was interested in science, you know, as a kid.
And I was also very lucky to be introduced to scholars who combined this idea of social science
and clinical medicine. A woman named Deborah Prothroth-Stith, who some may know as a woman
who had been the dean at the Harvard Medical School, wrote a book called Deadly Consequences that changed the field of public health
and helped us to think about the way that we see violence,
interpersonal violence happening in our communities
and how that really ought to be contextualized.
So I had personal experiences as well as the benefit of having scholars who come before me write about this in ways that really inspired me to combine a career in social science scholarship alongside clinical practice.
What kind of data would you say is missing right now within the field? I currently serve as one of the investigators of a study called the All of Us Research Program.
It has been, I think, an interesting journey to understand how to study and how to provide data that really puts people in their context. You may have their now
electronic medical records and understand, you know, are they showing up for appointments? Are
they taking their medications? But do you also have really robust information about their
interpersonal relationships? Are they lonely? Are they experiencing discrimination
when they come into care? So part of what we are missing in terms of data are the kinds of
experiences that really give us a better insight into the whole person. That's social science data
as well as the clinical data. And to understand how that information gets into our bodies and shapes our health or shapes our predisposition to illness.
The All of Us Research Program is one of the largest programs that the NIH has funded, and it's been dedicated to collect that information. I was one of the scientists who helped to lead the construction
and collection of those kinds of social data for the All of Us Research Program
as a part of understanding health, well-being, and risk factors for disease.
I wonder if the inclusion of social factors in the scientific field faces any resistance or challenges.
Is it not really a science to some people in medicine?
I think that there has been a real revolution and a real understanding that our health and at the individual level, even the ways that we deliver care are all very much
shaped by our social environment. I think that this has become a mainstream idea.
This idea even around the ways that we treat each other.
How do you think further integration of the social sciences changes the ways research is conducted, evaluated,
and distributed today? Do you see meaningful advances? And for example, what does peer review
really mean? And how do we have it in a space like this? And then of course, are there enough
researchers of color to have those peer reviews? I think that one of the most recent movements has come during COVID, during the pandemic.
And as the nation grappled with the murder of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor,
there was a big conversation that happened, I think, obviously across the country, but also within academic medicine. It was a time when we had a larger, a more focused and concentrated conversation around
who gets to build knowledge? How do we think about publishing? How do we make sure that we integrate multiple experiences into our canon or our clinical and public health understanding?
And there has been a greater attention toward making sure that voices are elevated. And several journals have made changes in leadership and have
also launched new programs to increase the training and the opportunities for leadership.
So I think those are all really good and important conversations that are currently being had.
One of your current projects focuses on community health centers,
how and why
these were founded during the civil rights movement, and the impact they've had on their
communities. One in particular, started in 1963 by Dr. Robert Smith, the Mississippi Family Health
Center in Jackson, was that state's first clinic providing care regardless of a patient's ability
to pay. That meant first-time access to healthcare for a lot
of Black people. What's happening there today that you find inspiring or even scalable?
So I was very lucky. Another just sort of personal story. I have also done research around heart
disease. The Jackson Heart Study is one of the longest lasting studies of heart disease in African Americans in the country.
And so I went down and was in Jackson, Mississippi. I should mention my family,
actually. My mom's family is from Mississippi, so it's a little further away, West Point.
But I went to Jackson and just had the honor of sitting with a physician, Dr. Robert Smith. And Dr. Smith, as you mentioned, is one of those
civil rights leaders who, during his early career, was one of the doctors who supported
Freedom Summer in 1964. This is the 60th anniversary. between June and August, physicians, about 100 or so physicians and
healthcare practitioners came to Mississippi and other cities through the South to provide medical
care and to support the activists that had been convened by Bob Moses and others to demonstrate against segregation, to protest for the right to vote, and to deconstruct and desegregate the South.
Many of those activists or none of those activists really could get care.
It was legal to put up signs to say that, you know, colored people, African Americans cannot come here to get health care.
And many of the people who lived in Jackson could not get care.
That was structured and respectful.
So Robert Smith and Dr. Aaron Shirley and others bound together and worked with physicians from northern cities to provide care for those folks
and those activists. And after that intense period, those physicians sat together and asked
themselves, how can we put together a system of care that would be durable, that would be directed toward the care of African Americans and others
in these places that haven't been able to get this care. And not only do we want to deliver
medical care, but we also want to deliver health care. We want to be able to make sure that if people need access to education, that we build those links.
If people need access to employment, well, let's make sure that we hire people in our own communities to work in the health center. federally qualified health centers, which were ultimately funded, you know, through what's now
known as the, as HRSA, Health Services Resource Administration. Those centers were designed
to provide what we now talk about as social determinants of health. And so it's important for,
you know, certainly folks who are going into the medical profession or public health to know these
stories. But I also think it's important for just the general public to know how much embracing
diverse perspectives makes care better for everybody. I want to talk a little bit more
about how we can use these stories and the data, not just to improve care for people,
but to improve how we are trained to care for people. I'm a medical student right now,
and I'm engaged all the time in learning. And I do quite a fair amount of thinking about what
I'm being taught and how we're being taught things, whether it makes sense, whether it's
inclusive, whether it has that historical context behind it. One of your initiatives brings residents
at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston who are in the Leadership for Equity pathway down to healthcare-related
civil rights centers in the South. Can you talk a little bit about the intentions of the program,
how it was developed, and why? And I'd love to discuss the impact you're seeing that trip have
because I think it's such a unique thing that is included for a residency training.
Absolutely. So the Leadership for
Health Equity Pathway was founded at the Brigham and Women's Hospital around 2018. And we'd had
these conversations around equity and what could we do to support residents. And it was also during a time of a lot of political discussion and activism after both the murder of
Michael Brown and events in Charlottesville. And we wanted to provide a setting that could make
a safe space for having these conversations and for also trying to do
some visioning. You know, what can the future of healthcare look like? We had global health,
and one of the largest and longstanding pathways was a big model for us, founded by Dr. Paul
Farmer, just a luminary in terms of thinking about what justice and health looks like. And we wanted
to provide opportunities to look at domestic or local examples. And so the Leadership for Health
Equity pathway is born out of those conversations. There are going to be some physicians who will
have that as a central motivating feature of their careers. And we wanted to provide a space for those physicians
to get together, to influence each other and network and get mentorship. And so as part of
some of our work, we did once go down to Jackson, Mississippi, or we went over, I should say,
and we were able to meet folks like Dr. Robert Smith and others, and to connect this desire that a lot of residents have
to work in what are called community health centers or federally qualified health centers
that we talked about, but to also understand a bit more of that history and to sort of hold
hands and break bread with folks who had been instrumental parts of establishing that movement, and to get that visceral sense of what leadership looks like.
So it's really important to have these historical models
of how people were able to translate love into action.
So I wanted our residents to have that model and to see that work
and to be able to use that example as they collaborate with each other
and innovate. That particular trip was an impactful way of understanding what vision and love and
equity can bring to healthcare if we prioritize it. I think that's so important what you just said,
especially the prioritization piece of it. I think when you get to residency, and obviously still medical school, but I've seen from the outside from hearing from people,
especially my peers that have gone into residency, how difficult it can be to center
that humanity when you're in some ways running a rat race of working 80 hours plus a week.
But when you have that intentionality, when programs prioritize, making sure that equity is
embedded in a system, you learn it as you go through as opposed to having to think of it as
an afterthought. Thank you for the work that you're doing there. There's also a policy component
to this kind of resident training. How is that integrated and why?
Absolutely. And so part of what we want to make sure that residents have a chance to do is we want to make sure that all physicians have the networks and the relationships that they we're operating and how to optimize some of those and
where needed to be able to advocate for change. Dr. Bisola Ojikutu is the commissioner of public
health at what's called the Boston Public Health Commission and has been extremely generous in her
time and mentoring and reaching out and helping our doctors in training to understand more about government and how public health is run.
And are there peer programs at other hospitals or medical schools? Is this a current trend of
what's happening? I guess I'm curious about if there's a broader conversation or movement going
on to integrate this kind of study and thinking into medical training. Because for me, it feels
like it's emerging practice, but it may be possible
that it's embedded in other systems as well. This has absolutely been a trend. I look to
programs that are very longstanding. For example, social medicine programs in San Francisco,
in Boston, Cambridge Health Alliance. There are multiple conversations, I would say, around,
you know, what should doctors know and how should doctors be prepared to go out in the world?
Yeah. We're kind of coming up to the last few questions, but I wanted to ask about another
project focused on emancipatory research. What do those two words mean next to each other?
And what's the methodology? I'd love to help listeners understand what that looks like in practice.
Is the foundational idea that even our discourse and the way we talk about research inherently
biased?
Or is there something else?
Thank you.
And so I'll give a little context to that.
One of my new roles, I've been in this role for about eight months now at this taping,
is as the new executive director and senior vice president of the Institute for Health Equity Research, Evaluation, and Policy at the Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers. important to have technical assistance to embed resources for scholarship, for conducting research
and evaluation. And part of the framework that we think about is a term that we're all sort of
putting together, emancipatory research. If you are in, for example, African American communities that,
as we mentioned, sort of either descended from enslavement or have this history of like structural
inequity in the United States, we have not benefited or have been actively exploited or injured as a part of science.
So part of what we want to do is extend that.
Community-based participatory research is a way of calling that out, for example,
saying that we need to do our science collaboratively,
that academics and clinicians and clinician scientists and
communities need to work together and flatten power hierarchies and do that work.
I think that we can take this paradigm further and that we can hold ourselves accountable
to two things.
One, to make sure that we invest and build the structures and support the structures
that will ultimately do the work so that when we fund a research project, the equipment,
the way that the research is framed really is done and assembled to make sure that it's sustainable
and that it uplifts the communities and organizations that are doing the work.
And the second principle is that we actually hold ourselves accountable to change.
I think what was really transformative about our experience in COVID
was noticing just how quickly
we could stand up infrastructure, how quickly we could take work and implement it and hold
ourselves accountable for it, because there was sort of a need to do that. And so this idea of
emancipatory research is a new term, and we are really excited to continue having these conversations to build it out because there's really very little literature around it. And the structures that are embedded in communities are supported and that the research is led by folks who actually can carry out the work, like community health centers that are actually taking care of patients.
And then the second is that we use methods that are rapid cycle, that we use evaluation, that we change the way that we think about how research is typically done, it can be rigorous
and still hold ourselves accountable for impact on the ground as defined by folks who are engaged
in the work. And I love that that word accountability has come up multiple times in
this conversation. And I think everything that you've said about the power of emancipatory
research, really giving communities the resources and the ability to be able to do the
research themselves in their own communities when they understand their problems. I think when you
give people that have been disadvantaged the opportunity to be able to, one, tell their own
story, but two, do their own research, and that comes with the funding and the intentionality
behind it, changes can be made and research questions that weren't previously asked can be
finally answered. I want to close out this conversation with some of your thoughts about
what you see that is encouraging you and your work. It seems like there's been a lot more
acknowledgement of the realities of what systemic racism has done to people of color in general
and people without access to care. You're based in Boston. And as you
mentioned earlier, you have strong ties to healthcare communities in the South, especially
around Jackson, Mississippi. Can you talk a bit about the overall space today? And what kind of
coordination there is amongst various initiatives with shared or similar goals? I know it's a big
question, but how do we get the most benefit and ultimately improved outcomes for patients?
You know, it is a very big question.
And I think what I might leave you with and leave your listeners with is just that part of what we need to make sure that we do is that we don't silo health care. When we think about the definition of structural racism that you mentioned or
structural inequities, what we are talking about are interlocking and sort of mutually reinforcing
systems. And what that means is that you don't get good outcomes for people if you don't think about
the context in which we live. So if we are not investing in education, higher education,
making sure that everybody is able to express their optimal talents in society, if we aren't
making sure that we are committed to making sure everybody has a home and that we are looking at equity in terms of economic mobility, then we don't have the framework
that we need for delivering healthcare in a way that is also equitable. And so that means that
this idea of equity needs to be taken up by everyone. And wherever you are in your work, whatever sector that youizes human rights, that prioritizes wellness.
So it's a conversation that needs to happen not just within health care, but across society.
Absolutely. Dr. Cheryl Clark, thank you so much for being on The Dose. Thank you for sharing your
wisdom, your passion, your research, and for being someone that's pushing healthcare forward in the right direction.
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you so much for having me.
This episode of The Dose was produced by Jodi Becker, Mickey Kapper, and Bethann Fox.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editing, Jen Wilson and Rose Wong for art and design, and Paul Frame for web support.
Our theme music is Arizona Moon by Blue Dot Sessions. If you want to check us out online,
visit thedose.show. There, you'll be able to learn more about today's episode and explore
other resources. That's it for The Dose. I'm Joel Brevelle, and thank you for listening.