Posted on 03/25/2021 6:51:36 AM PDT by Heartlander
Critical Race Theory and claims about structural racism in American society are infiltrating medical care and education. There is a major effort in medical education today to indoctrinate students and resident physicians into Critical Theory. This is, in my view, a deeply misguided approach.
The issues raised by Critical Race Theory are real but I believe that the diagnosis is deeply flawed. The question we face is: How can we protect medical education and practice from this latest iteration of Marxism, and at the same time work to improve deficiencies in education and medical care that Critical Race Theorists correctly point out?
It is undeniable that there are structural problems in medicine. Many of these problems impede good medical care, especially for poor and minority patients. An impoverished black person in Chicago’s South Side is unlikely to get the same quality of medical care that a wealthy white person in Cambridge, Massachusetts, gets. But race is not the only factor — Oprah Winfrey has access to better medical care than a poor white man living in a trailer park in Appalachia.
Let’s look at some of the other structural problems at play in substandard medical care:
Racial discrimination is obviously a problem in America, but Critical Race Theory generally overstates its impact and downplays the impact of the myriad other problems that impair the quality of healthcare for many Americans.
Structural racism exists in America — affirmative action is perhaps the clearest example — but amid structural poverty, structural crime, structural drug abuse, an epidemic of abortions of minority children, civil unrest, bad and corrupt government, structural unemployment, chronic welfare dependency, and an educational system in shambles, structural racism likely plays a very small role in our problems.
Critical Race Theory advocates assert, of course, that all of these other structural problems are caused by structural racism, but that is dubious. Greed, hate, envy, lust, and pride — the perennial motives for sin — are obviously at the core of our social breakdown. Murder, rape, robbery, gang membership, etc., have many causes, but racism is obviously only remotely related, where it is a cause at all.
It is noteworthy that policies hawked by Critical Race Theory advocates — handcuffing and defunding the police, fostering welfare dependency, encouraging racial hatred and resentment — are just those policies that have generated dysfunctional cities. Chicago, Baltimore, and Detroit and the panoply of violent corrupt municipalities in which so many black Americans live and (too often) die much too soon are bastions of leftist politics. That’s highly congenial to Critical Race Theory but not at all congenial to actual betterment of the lives and health of their citizens.
Structural racism is, I think, more the consequence of societal dysfunction than the cause. The catastrophic social and economic policies hawked by leftists are a major cause of what structural racism there is in America. Impoverished corrupt dangerous cities cast a pall on minority Americans, giving millions of other Americans the impression that minority Americans are violent and dysfunctional. For example, the continuously televised Black Lives Matter-inspired George Floyd riots — night after night of wanton arson, looting, and murder — horrified and terrified hundreds of millions of Americans. Cities set in flames by rioters inspired by peddlers of Critical Race Theory obviously did not serve to ease racial animosity and foster racial comity. Hate and fear breed more hate and fear.
There are myriad structural problems in our society that impair healthcare. When we account for structural crime, structural corruption, structural misgovernment, structural educational failures, and the like, structural racism recedes as a cause. Ironically, many of these societal failures across generations can be laid at the feet of ideologues and political grifters such as Critical Race Theory advocates who run America’s blighted cities and hawk leftist remedies.
We need to address these societal and medical problems. A good place to start would be to hold to account the leftists who now, ironically, claim to be the solution to the very problems they have caused.
Cross-posted at Mind Matters, published by Discovery Institute’s Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence.
The situation in Medicine is much worse than the article states. The woke narrative has permeated virtually all aspects of patient care, teaching, research, Academic appointments and policies, professional journals and of course funding. People have not yet understood that their caregivers are agents of the state and closely follow the politically correct narrative. The quality of care is declining rapidly. Young physicians are poorly educated, narcissitically flaunt their boorish stupidity and demand high pay for lousy work. The Hippocratic oath and traditional medical ethics? Forget about it.
The marxification of medical schools has been underway for a number of years. I would argue that the intrusion of government and medical insurance (aka “healthcare”) into doctor/patient decisions and communications are largely responsible. It has escalated costs and created layers of bureaucracy that require a third party payer for even the most routine medical visits.
The other generally ignored phenomenon is that the medical profession is now dominated by liberal feminists, as a significant majority of new medical students and doctors are female. They are being trained to believe they have a sort of super morality by virtue of wearing the white coat, and that we should all unquestioningly follow their prescription for how we live our lives. I know from first hand experience.
Who do I sue for being denied a PAP smear? Dr. Rachel Levine?
One school’s new test takes off more points for not introducing yourself to patients by the proper pronouns than if you miss every question in the thyroid section ...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.