NEW YORK, May 1 /PRNewswire/ -- The May issue of BLACK ENTERPRISE (BE)
unveils its 2008 report on the best and brightest in medicine. In "America's
Leading Doctors," BE names 140 top-notch physicians responsible for saving
millions of lives through the revolutionary treatment of diseases, from cancer
and diabetes to heart attacks and HIV/AIDS. Many of these doctors have been
responsible for major medical breakthroughs and have participated in the
creation of drugs that have vastly improved the quality of life for patients.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080501/NYTH109 )
BE developed its May cover package at a time when African Americans
continue to contend with an ever-widening gap in the quality of available
healthcare. Some of the factors that contribute to this escalating crisis
include lack of access to services and the alarmingly high cost of adequate
care. Meanwhile, the proportion of the nation's black doctors has remained
stagnant. African Americans make up 13.4% of the total U.S. population but
only 5.6% of all U.S. physicians and surgeons -- 44,900 out of 888,000. Even
fewer black doctors are in positions of power and leadership. Just under a
dozen serve as chairs of departments at the nation's medical schools.
"A consistent objective of BLACK ENTERPRISE is to communicate that without
investing in the quality of our health and that of our families and
communities, it is all but impossible to create sustainable, multigenerational
wealth," says Founder and Publisher
Earl G. Graves Sr. "The life of my father
was cut short at the age of 46 by a heart condition that was likely both
preventable and treatable. The exceptional black physicians we highlight
uniquely understand the medical issues that confront African Americans. Their
expertise makes them an essential part of the solution to the healthcare
crisis facing black Americans and our entire nation."
The cover features New York University School of Medicine Cardiologist
Jennifer H. Mieres, Cedars-Sinai Neurosurgery Chair Keith L. Black, and
Vanderbilt University Medical Center Pediatrician Kevin B. Johnson. What sets
this year's list apart from our previous lists, published in 1998 and 2001, is
a stronger weighting of innovators involved in medical breakthroughs among
specialties. The editors spent more than six months engaged in research,
consulting organizations such as the National Medical Association, American
Medical Association, Association of Black Cardiologists, American Cancer
Society, Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, American Diabetes
Association, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. BE also contacted
top-ranked physicians as well as the nation's leading medical schools,
including Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, Meharry Medical
College, Howard University College of Medicine, Morehouse School of Medicine,
Duke University School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Weill
Medical College of Cornell University, and Mayo Medical School.
The complete "America's Leading Doctors" feature story is available in the
May 2008 issue of black enterprise on newsstands now.
BLACK ENTERPRISE, your ultimate source for wealth creation, is the premier
business, investing, and wealth-building resource for African Americans. Since
1970, BE has provided essential business information and advice to
professionals, corporate executives, entrepreneurs, and decision makers. Every
month, BLACK ENTERPRISE magazine provides 3.9 million readers with information
on entrepreneurship, careers, and financial management. A multimedia company,
BE also produces radio and television programming, business and lifestyle
events, Web content, and digital media. BLACK ENTERPRISE is the definitive
source of information for and about African American business markets and
leaders, and the authority on black business news and trends.