February celebrates Black History Month, an annual recognition of African
American courage, resiliency and achievements in U.S. history. This year,
the theme, black resistance, explores how African Americans have resisted
historic and ongoing oppression in all forms, including access to quality
health care.
In honor of Black History Month,
Southeast Georgia Health System shares the stories of three African American medical pioneers, Alice Ball;
Daniel Hale Williams, MD; and, Marilyn Hughes Gaston, MD.
Alice Ball was an African American chemist who developed the first successful
treatment for those suffering from leprosy.
After earning undergraduate degrees in pharmaceutical chemistry (1912)
and pharmacy (1914) from the University of Washington, Ball transferred
to the College of Hawaii (now known as the University of Hawaii) and became
the first African American and the first woman to graduate with a Master
of Science degree in chemistry in 1915. She was offered a teaching and
research position there and became the institution’s first female
chemistry instructor at the young age of 23.
As a laboratory researcher, Ball worked extensively to develop a successful
treatment for those suffering from leprosy. Her research led her to create
the first injectable leprosy treatment using oil from the chaulmoogra
tree, which up until then, was only a moderately successful topical agent
that was used in Chinese and Indian medicine. Ball successfully isolated
the oil into fatty acid components of different molecular weights allowing
her to manipulate the oil into a water soluble injectable form. Ball’s
scientific rigor resulted in a highly successful method to alleviate leprosy
symptoms, later known as the “Ball Method,” that was used
on thousands of infected individuals for over thirty years until other
medications were introduced.
Daniel Hale Williams, MD, founded the first black-owned hospital in America,
and performed the world’s first successful heart surgery, in 1893.
At age 20, Williams became an apprentice to a former surgeon general for
Wisconsin. Williams studied medicine at Chicago Medical College.
After his internship, he went into private practice in an integrated neighborhood
on Chicago's south side. He soon began teaching anatomy at Chicago
Medical College and served as surgeon to the City Railway Company. In
1889, the governor of Illinois appointed him to the state’s board
of health.
Determined that Chicago should have a hospital where both black and white
doctors could study and where black nurses could receive training, Williams
rallied for a hospital open to all races. After months of hard work, he
opened Provident Hospital and Training School for Nurses on May 4, 1891,
the country’s first interracial hospital and nursing school.
One summer night in 1893, a young Chicagoan named James Cornish was stabbed
in the chest and rushed to Provident. When Cornish started to go into
shock, Williams suspected a deeper wound near the heart. He asked six
doctors (four white, two black) to observe while he operated. In a cramped
operating room with crude anesthesia, Williams inspected the wound between
two ribs, exposing the breastbone. He cut the rib cartilage and created
a small trapdoor to the heart.
Underneath, he found a damaged left internal mammary artery and sutured
it. Then, inspecting the pericardium (the sac around the heart) he saw
that the knife had left a gash near the right coronary artery. With the
heart beating and transfusion impossible, Williams rinsed the wound with
salt solution, held the edges of the palpitating wound with forceps, and
sewed them together. Just 51 days after his apparently lethal wound, James
Cornish walked out of the hospital. He lived for over 20 years after the
surgery. The landmark operation was hailed in the press.
In 1894, Williams became chief surgeon of Freedmen’s Hospital in
Washington, D.C., the most prestigious medical post available to African
Americans at that time. There, he made improvements that reduced the hospital’s
mortality rate. In 1895, he helped to organize the National Medical Association
for black professionals who were barred from the American Medical Association.
Williams later returned to Chicago and continued as a surgeon. In 1913,
he became the first African American to be inducted into the American
College of Surgeons.
In a pivotal experience while working as an intern at Philadelphia General
Hospital in 1964, Marilyn Hughes Gaston, MD, admitted a baby with a swollen,
infected hand. The baby suffered from sickle cell disease, which hadn’t
occurred to Gaston until her supervisor suggested the possibility. Gaston
quickly committed herself to learning more and eventually became a leading
researcher on the disease. She became deputy branch chief of the Sickle
Cell Disease Branch at the National Institutes of Health, and her groundbreaking
1986 study led to a national sickle cell disease screening program for
newborns. Her research showed both the benefits of screening for sickle
cell disease at birth and the effectiveness of penicillin to prevent infection
from sepsis, which can be fatal in children with the disease.
In 1990, Gaston became the first black female physician to be appointed
director of the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Bureau
of Primary Health Care. She was also the second black woman to serve as
assistant surgeon general as well as achieve the rank of rear admiral
in the U.S. Public Health Service. Gaston has been honored with every
award that the Public Health Service bestows.