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James W Serene's avatar

I'm a retired physician, trained at Grady Hospital in Atlanta, Ga. My favorite mentor was Hamilton Holmes, a Black orthopedic surgeon. I then worked in a small North Carolina town and sent my 3 children to public schools which were 60% Black. I must agree with Glenn that statistical differences do not automatically relate to "systemic racism". For example, the peri-natal complication rate is much higher among Black women. A NYT article claimed systemic racism when Serena Williams had a pulmonary embolus. Serena, like many Black women, had gained a lot of weight with her pregnancy. Any OB/GYN will tell you that increases blood pressure, glucose levels, and many other peri-natal complications result from being overweight. A study from the CDC showed that culturally, Black women have thought that gaining a lot of weight when pregnant resulted in healthier children, -- a social myth that remains. If one really wants to help decrease the peri-natal complications for Black women, one should compare social and physical habits for various groups during that time and see if there are any patterns. Study the issue scientifically rather than emotionally.

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spiral8802's avatar

That race card is really getting dog eared.

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