Resuscitating MLK/Drew
Suffering from years of neglect and mismanagement, the termination of the medical center’s doctor-training program has wider implications surrounding the production of minority physicians and the overall health of the local community.
By David Pluviose
To this day, the widespread racial disparities that prompted the August 1965 riots in the Watts community of South Los Angeles frame many of the discussions about race in America. The death and destruction wrought during that five-day upheaval, along with the findings of the December 1965 McCone report that the lack of adequate health care facilities was a contributing factor to the civil unrest, prompted city and state officials to put in motion plans to build a medical school and teaching hospital in the Watts community.
The opening of the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in 1970, followed by the Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center in 1972, led to critical milestones in the recovery of the community. The thousands of minority doctors produced by Drew helped heal the social wounds that had been ripped open during the riots.
But all has not been well at the teaching hospital. A Pulitzer Prize-winning Los Angeles Times exposé in 2004 revealed widespread neglect and mismanagement that the university administrators had swept under the rug for years. Ultimately, Los Angeles County terminated MLK/Drew’s doctor-training program late last year after the hospital failed a make-or-break federal inspection. This prompted the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, to pull its vital $200 million in funding for the hospital. Drew University President Susan Kelly, brought in last year to turn around the troubled institution, fears the resulting health care crisis will revive the civil unrest that prompted the riots more than 30 years ago.
“There were lots of discussions in this community in 1963 and 1964, before the Watts riots, because everyone knew that there were very few beds, very few doctors,” says Kelly. “But it took the Watts riots, 32 deaths and 1,000 people injured and millions of dollars worth of property damage before anyone sat up and said, ‘I think they mean it; I think it’s true.’ Today, you’ve got a predominately Latino community, and if you understand the Latino community, it is more fragmented politically. I don’t know that you will get riots, but you may get increasing gang warfare.”
Lark Galloway-Gilliam, executive director of the Los Angeles-based Community Health Councils, says the displacement of the 251 residents is going to exacerbate lingering health care disparities, as the number of doctors available to treat South Los Angeles patients has fallen precipitously.