This article reassesses and recontextualizes findings of an independent writing group commissioned in 2005 by what was then known as the Institute for Ethics of the American Medical Association (AMA). The authors were members of this group, which uncovered a paradigm case of structural racism that has perpetuated health inequity since the issue of admitting African Americans was first raised at the AMA’s national meetings immediately after the Civil War ended, in 1868. Upon publication of the writing group’s findings, the AMA publicly apologized for its social, cultural, and political roles in the racist history of organized medicine. Now, in 2021, the authors of this article seek to situate this aspect of the AMA’s history as it prepares itself for antiracist leadership in the health care sector.
CITATION STYLE
Baker, R., & Wynia, M. K. (2021). Living Histories of Structural Racism and Organized Medicine. AMA Journal of Ethics, 23(12), E995–E1003. https://doi.org/10.1001/amajethics.2021.995
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