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"The Haves vs. the Have Nots:
In healthcare, does class matter?"
Dr. Gloria WilderBrathwaite
Medical
Director, Mobile Health Programs at Children's National Medical
Center in Washington, D.C.
Raised
by a single mother in a poor Brooklyn neighborhood, Dr. Gloria
Wilder-Braithwaite grew up much like the children she treats
today. Her community, Bedford Stuyvesent (better known as
“Bed Sty, Do or Die” by its citizens), was a tough
place to be as a child. A recipient of welfare, Medicaid and
other forms of public assistance, Wilder-Braithwaite depended
on a public clinic for medical care, an experience that left
her traumatized. She remembers vividly the smells of urine
and vomit that permeated the air in the clinic. She also recalls
lining up with the other children in the room, all naked at
the same time. These memories fueled her motivation to become
a doctor. Initially thought to be autistic, Wilder-Braithwaite
was, in fact, a gifted student. After graduating from the
New York City public school system, she received a scholarship
to Howard University, where she majored in microbiology and
chemistry. She then earned her master’s degree in public
health from George Washington University and her doctor of
medicine degree from the Georgetown University School of Medicine.
Today, she is the medical director of the Washington, D.C.
Children’s Health Project, a mobile health care unit
that provides pediatric care for almost 1,700 patients each
year. In 2002, she received the “Use Your Life Award”
from Oprah’s Angel Network, which recognizes organizations
and individuals that are reaching out to others and making
a difference.
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