By Brittany Bailer
The Georgetown-Howard Center for Medical Humanities and Health Justice hosted their first public event, a fireside chat centered around health narratives in the Black community with Gene Demby, co-host of NPRâs Code Switch podcast, and Marcia Chatelain, Pulitzer Prize winning historian.
Co-executive directors Dana A. Williams, Ph.D., dean of the Howard University Graduate School, and Lakshmi Krishnan, M.D., Ph.D., founding director of the Georgetown Medical Humanities Initiative, founded the center based on a shared interest in how the humanities can improve healthcare training, delivery, and practice in ways that enact justice. This yearâs theme â lore â explores how the histories, identities, and traditions of communities of color impact their views on medical care.
Chatelain and Demby shared perspectives on how they approach storytelling, noting that the lore, or the knowledge and traditions passed down among a culture, that impacts health comes from a range of places. One example focused on how advertising campaigns, particularly those of McDonaldâs and popular brands of menthol cigarettes, have enabled corporations to become deeply entrenched in Black communities.
Chatelain’s Pulitzer Prize winning book, âFranchise: The Golden Arches in Black America,â explores this idea through research and conversation. The âCalvin Got a Jobâ campaign that ran throughout the 1990s followed a Black Brooklyn teenager who went from hanging out on the street corner to being employed at the neighborhood McDonald’s. His storyline unfurled throughout the decade, following him from the drive-thru window to management and eventually to the promise of owning a franchise.
âWhen you look at the majority of advertising toward African Americans for McDonaldâs in a lot of the legacy publications they don’t talk about the food. They talk about the fact that McDonaldâs has made millionaires and how itâs one of the greatest employers of Black youth, and this is where it starts to become a health crisis,â said Chatelain.
âIf you think about the interventions around nutrition and diet, your doctor might tell you to stop eating McDonaldâs, but if it wasn’t for McDonaldâs, your child wouldnât get a sports team, or there wouldn’t be an art exhibit in your neighborhood, or you wouldn’t have jobs for the kids that youâre concerned about in your neighborhood,â Chatelain continued. âUnpacking the complexity of that kind of thing is the hard work of telling a story. Stories have layers, many of which are filled with lore.â
âBuilding trust with certain communities can be difficult because it involves interrupting the trust that those people have built with sources that have misinformed them,â said Demby.
The pair discussed how advertising to the Black community has consistently been heavily researched and targeted by corporations and other entities. Millions of dollars are invested in determining what Black people will respond to and how to take advantage of their ideas of masculinity, status, etc. Demby highlighted the importance of storytelling in building an audience, as viewers are more attracted to stories than they are to plain facts.
âIt is exciting to see a collaboration between Georgetown and Howard. As a medical student, I thought the conversation today touched on some very interesting ideas, particularly the importance of understanding how race and class have deeply influenced people’s perspectives on health,â said Noah Nelson, Howard University medical student from Chicago, Illinois.
âThey mentioned the MOVE bombings in Philadelphia and 1995 Chicago heat wave as health crises that changed the relationships between Black communities and governmental institutions. As a medical practitioner, it is important to take a holistic view of peopleâs health decisions to consider how their lived experiences inform those decisions.