Thursday, October 3, 2024 4pm to 6pm
About this Event
280 Hicks Way, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
The UMass Amherst School of Public Health and Health Sciences and Office of Equity and Inclusion invite the UMass community to a screening of FACES OF MEDICINE, a documentary created and directed by Dr. Khama Ennis, and discussion with the director. The film will be screened with the Q&A session to follow on Thursday, October 3rd, from 4-6 pm in the Student Union Ballroom. The event is free and open to the public.
FACES OF MEDICINE is a documentary project celebrating the paths of some of the Black women who represent only 2.8% of physicians in the United States. This episode features Massachusetts stories as the filmmakers aim to change the expectation of what our doctors look like and who our physicians are. These are the paths of some of the amazing people who are taking care of all of us. The documentary shares their journeys, successes and struggles while reflecting on the allies and challengers who got them where they are.
Dr. Thea James, an emergency physician and one of the first college graduates in her family. She has been an integral part of the medical community in Boston for decades with a focus on people affected by violence & trauma as well as addressing the root causes of health inequity.
Dr. Rose Cesar immigrated to Boston from Haiti as a teen and started medical school at UMass as a newlywed. She has cared for patients in Franklin county for many years as a gastroenterologist and for most of that time, she has been the only Black female physician at her hospital.
Dr. Valerie Stone grew up in NJ in a time where her father could not see the point of her considering med school. She chose a different path that led to her being an early trailblazer and expert in the care of people with HIV and AIDS.
Dr. Lynnette Watkins is the former President and Chief Operating Officer of Cooley Dickinson Hospital. As the daughter of a physician, she is a rare second generation Black ophthalmologist. Hers is a unique perspective on medicine and leadership as a Black woman.
Dr. Khama Ennis spent twenty years as an Emergency physician, including 5 years as the chief and medical director of the Cooley Dickinson Hospital Emergency Department. She has since shifted her focus towards Health Equity and Integrative Health. She developed Faces of Medicine to demonstrate the need for diverse representation in medicine, starting with increasing the numbers of Black female physicians. She has also completed fellowship training in Lifestyle Medicine and is currently completing a fellowship in Integrative Health. She recently became Assistant Medical Director of University Health Services (UHS) at UMass Amherst. She has also recently co-founded a new nonprofit called Diversify Medicine with an aim to expand the pipeline of future physicians.
Film teaser and more at https://www.facesofmedicine.org.
Post-screening talk back featuring: Khama Ennis, MD, MPH, the project’s Executive Producer, Director & Creator. Audience members will be invited to share their reactions and ask questions.