1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:03,320 Speaker 1: On today's episode. If I didn't know, maybe you didn't either. 2 00:00:03,520 --> 00:00:07,080 Speaker 1: I'm gonna start with something personal. On May fifth, twenty 3 00:00:07,160 --> 00:00:10,720 Speaker 1: twenty four, I lost my mom. She was complaining about 4 00:00:10,720 --> 00:00:12,960 Speaker 1: her stomach hurtain, so we took her to the er. 5 00:00:13,480 --> 00:00:16,000 Speaker 1: Hours later, she was still in pain and they finally 6 00:00:16,000 --> 00:00:19,279 Speaker 1: moved her upstairs to the ICU. Forty five minutes later, 7 00:00:19,920 --> 00:00:22,759 Speaker 1: she was on a breathing two. Her organs were shutting 8 00:00:22,760 --> 00:00:27,280 Speaker 1: down because of sepsis, and just like that, she was gone. 9 00:00:27,680 --> 00:00:31,200 Speaker 1: I didn't know. Maybe you didn't know. I didn't know. 10 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:35,440 Speaker 1: Maybe I didn't know. I didn't know. Maybe you didn't 11 00:00:35,760 --> 00:00:38,919 Speaker 1: I didn't know. I didn't know. I didn't know. I 12 00:00:38,960 --> 00:00:41,080 Speaker 1: didn't know. Well, let me tell y'all, losing your mom 13 00:00:41,200 --> 00:00:43,839 Speaker 1: is hard enough, but when you're black, you have this 14 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:49,440 Speaker 1: extra layer of PTSD. Why because you know, Black women 15 00:00:49,479 --> 00:00:53,760 Speaker 1: are often dismissed in the medical field. They're overlooked, ignored. 16 00:00:54,200 --> 00:00:57,400 Speaker 1: And it's not just a feeling, it's facts. There's a 17 00:00:57,400 --> 00:01:01,960 Speaker 1: book Medical Apartheid by Harriet Washington, and it lays out 18 00:01:02,000 --> 00:01:06,080 Speaker 1: the long dark history of how black folks, especially black women, 19 00:01:06,440 --> 00:01:10,280 Speaker 1: have been used, abused, and experimented on in the name 20 00:01:10,319 --> 00:01:13,839 Speaker 1: of science. From slavery to right now, let me break 21 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:16,160 Speaker 1: it down for you. Did you know there's still this 22 00:01:16,240 --> 00:01:19,640 Speaker 1: misconception that black women have a higher threshold for pain. 23 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:24,360 Speaker 1: And I know Mama made miracles every Thanksgiving, every Christmas 24 00:01:24,440 --> 00:01:27,560 Speaker 1: and every birthday, but their white doctors were thinking black 25 00:01:27,560 --> 00:01:31,160 Speaker 1: women were superheroes for real, or she's black, she can 26 00:01:31,200 --> 00:01:33,479 Speaker 1: take it. What And if you want to know how 27 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:36,479 Speaker 1: deep this rabbit hole goes, let's talk about Henrietta Lax. 28 00:01:36,800 --> 00:01:39,319 Speaker 1: Since went to the doctor in nineteen fifty one for 29 00:01:39,400 --> 00:01:43,280 Speaker 1: cervical cancer and without her knowledge, they took her sales 30 00:01:43,720 --> 00:01:47,880 Speaker 1: then named them healer seals h e LA And those 31 00:01:47,920 --> 00:01:51,280 Speaker 1: sales turned out to be immortal, like they could survive 32 00:01:51,360 --> 00:01:54,720 Speaker 1: and multiply in labs which had never been done before. 33 00:01:55,040 --> 00:02:01,440 Speaker 1: They helped develop vaccines, cancer treatments IVF. Heeler sales have 34 00:02:01,560 --> 00:02:05,360 Speaker 1: saved millions of lives. But here's the part that'll make 35 00:02:05,400 --> 00:02:10,120 Speaker 1: your blood boil. Henrietta Lax never gave consents and her 36 00:02:10,160 --> 00:02:15,560 Speaker 1: family never saw a dime. Pharmaceutical companies made billions off 37 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:19,400 Speaker 1: those seals while her kids and grandkids were struggling to 38 00:02:19,440 --> 00:02:21,760 Speaker 1: pay for health care. It made a bunch of dollars, 39 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:24,240 Speaker 1: but a damn sure don't make no sense. So when 40 00:02:24,240 --> 00:02:26,760 Speaker 1: we talk about black folks in the medical field, we're 41 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:29,960 Speaker 1: not just talking about distrust. We're talking about a system, 42 00:02:30,200 --> 00:02:33,800 Speaker 1: a system that has dismissed us, stolen from us, and 43 00:02:33,960 --> 00:02:38,079 Speaker 1: experimented on us without shame. And for me, every time 44 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:40,560 Speaker 1: I think about my mom's last hours, it's hard not 45 00:02:40,639 --> 00:02:43,160 Speaker 1: to wonder if she wasn't black. Wol They have taken 46 00:02:43,160 --> 00:02:46,480 Speaker 1: her pain a little more seriously, but they have moved faster. 47 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:49,639 Speaker 1: These questions hunt me, and I know I'm not alone. 48 00:02:49,800 --> 00:02:51,760 Speaker 1: That's why it's so important for us to know our 49 00:02:51,880 --> 00:02:55,200 Speaker 1: history and advocate for ourselves, because if we don't speak up, 50 00:02:55,360 --> 00:03:00,320 Speaker 1: who will. Medical Apartheid a book by Harriet Washington. It 51 00:03:00,440 --> 00:03:03,160 Speaker 1: was something that I didn't know. Maybe you didn't either,