Pediatricians called to action in addressing children’s trauma from police brutality
FROM AAP 2020
The voice of pediatricians
The voices of pediatric providers have a key role in the national discussion about this issue, Mr. Brooks said, because medical professionals have so much of America’s truth. One Pew Research Center survey found that 74% of Americans had a mostly positive view of medical doctors, compared with only 35% with a positive view of elected officials and 47% of the news media.
“As health care professionals dedicated to pediatrics, you are uniquely qualified, circumstantially and historically called in this moment to respond to this tragedy and trauma of police brutality as visited upon our children because you have been entrusted with America’s trust and credibility,” Mr. Brooks said.
He described several ways pediatricians can use storytelling to shift how the country perceives the issue of police brutality and the impact on children.
“Some children we deem to be sufficiently perfect that we can have sympathy and empathy for them,” Mr. Brooks said. “Other children are deemed to be so imperfect that we cannot have sympathy and empathy for them.” Within days of Michael Brown’s death by police in Ferguson, Mo., for example, a “post mortem character assassination” deemed Mr. Brown “too imperfect for empathy,” Mr. Brooks said.
“Dr. Brooks hit the nail on the head,” attendee Jeanette Callahan, MD, a pediatrician with Cambridge Health Alliance in Massachusetts, wrote during the session. “We must tell the stories that we hear every day from our patients.”
Pediatricians also can bring science and research into the public conversation to help people better understand children, just as the amicus briefs of pediatricians and neuroscientists in U.S. Supreme Court cases led the court to declare the death penalty and life sentences without parole as unconstitutional for minors.
“You as pediatricians, as physicians, as nurses, as health care professionals have the ability to cast doubt on things that people believe to be true and give them conviction with respect to things we know to be true as a consequence of data and our moral understanding,” Mr. Brooks said. He encouraged pediatricians to “engage in storytelling and justice-seeking by expanding and diversifying the resources we bring to public policy,” including science, data, and expertise.
Two recent examples of this professional activism include Massachusetts pediatrician Fiona Danaher’s testimony to the U.S. House of Representatives regarding current immigration policies’ impact on children and the work of Michigan pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha’s in exposing the Flint water crisis. Mr. Brooks shared a quote from Dr. Danaher: “For me, treating children humanely is a question of basic morality. I knew I couldn’t sit on the sidelines.”
Neither can pediatricians sit on the sidelines now with the issue of police brutality, Mr. Brooks said.
“You as pediatricians can call on America to engage in a Hippocratic approach to policing, that is to say, do no harm,” he said. “It’s not enough for us to content ourselves with children not becoming hashtags, not becoming police homicides. We have to also consider the trauma of overpolicing and oversurveilling our communities of color.”
He also recommended pediatricians remind the country that addressing social determinants of health also addresses social determinants of crime, providing an opportunity to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline.
In the comments, attendees shared other ways pediatricians can influence policy in favor of children.
“Pediatricians can reach out to police departments, prosecutors, and public defender offices, the local judiciary, and local attorney associations, etc., to describe and explain the effects of policing on children and adolescents,” wrote Trina Anglin, MD, PhD, who retired in August 2019 as chief of the Adolescent Health Branch in the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Maternal and Child Health Bureau. “We can bring the voices of young people to others. At the community level, each professional group meets on a regular basis; each group also talks to the other groups.”
Others echoed these suggestions. “Expand your voice outside your office,” wrote Jimmell Felder, MD, of Pediatric Associates Greenwood in South Carolina. “Attend city council meetings and discuss the stories of our patients with the people who make the policies. It is part of our job to advocate for our patients.”
Joanna Betancourt, MD, a pediatrician with Salud Pediatrics in Algonquin, Ill., encouraged fellow attendees to “vote locally and nationally for people that are open to change legislation that supports the well-being of all children.”
Given all the trauma of 2020, Patricia Deffer-Valley, MD, of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison, said pediatricians cannot have “moral paralysis.”
Mr. Brooks had no relevant financial disclosures. Disclosure information was unavailable for others quoted in this article