
Availability Is Not Accessibility
11/20/23 • 37 min
In the Health Equity in Action: Community Health Workers five-part podcast series, we examine structural deficits in healthcare for underserved populations and the ways Providence is working to close those gaps and make healthcare more equitable for all.
In the second episode we spoke with Mohammad Ahmed, a cultural navigator at Swedish in Washington about the focus of his work aiming to ensure his community has equitable access to preventive services.
In the Health Equity in Action: Community Health Workers five-part podcast series, we examine structural deficits in healthcare for underserved populations and the ways Providence is working to close those gaps and make healthcare more equitable for all.
In the second episode we spoke with Mohammad Ahmed, a cultural navigator at Swedish in Washington about the focus of his work aiming to ensure his community has equitable access to preventive services.
Previous Episode

Community Health Workers: Bridging the Gap
In the Health Equity in Action: Community Health Workers five-part podcast series, we examine structural deficits in healthcare for minority populations and the ways Providence is working to close those gaps and make healthcare more equitable for all.
In this first episode, we discuss with Dr. Caterina Kine the ways Providence is looking to bridge those gaps through community health worker programs designed for specific community needs.
Next Episode

Honoring Black Pioneers in Healthcare - Part 1
For Black History Month, the Culture of Health podcast is honoring Black trailblazers in healthcare from the early 19th century to present day. Our guests for these two episodes are Dr. Nwando Anyaoku, Chief, Chief Health Equity and Clinical Innovation Officer for Providence and Dr. Richard Allen Williams, Founder of the Association of Black Cardiologists (1974). Currently he is Clinical Professor of Medicine at the UCLA School of Medicine (full Professor), where he has been a faculty member for 46 years. (see Dr. Williams full bio below)
In this first episode we will be focusing on the historical figures whose substantial contributions to medicine are even more significant when you understand the considerable barriers from which they had to overcome such as racism, segregation, and income inequality. Many, if not most Black medical students faced discrimination from their peers, professors, and patients, and they often had limited access to resources and mentorships.
In overcoming these obstacles, they were able to change healthcare and along the way they built a pathway for others to achieve great things. Many of whom we will be discussing in our second episode.
There are far too people to honor in two 30-minute episodes, but you can visit the providence blog at blog.providence.org to discover an article honoring Black medical pioneers. Below you’ll also find a couple of timelines with bios of additional noteworthy medical pioneers.
Timelines
Honoring Black Americans’ Contributions to Medicine | AAFP
From Duke University
A medical perspective: Chronology of Achievements
https://guides.mclibrary.duke.edu/blackhistorymonth/chronology
Host: Nwando Anyaoku, MD, MPH, MBA
Guest: Richard Allen Williams, MD, FACC, FAHA, FACP
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