7th Annual Harold Jordan Memorial Lecture 2/28 | Kim Gordon-Achebe, MD

"Beyond Traditional Boundaries: Forging a Health Equity-Focused Identity in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry"

About the Speaker:

Kim Gordon-Achebe, MD
CEO & Founder of BHETC, LLC
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Tulane University, School of Medicine
Former Program Director, University of Maryland, Department of Psychiatry, 
 

Objectives:

The activity is designed to help the learner

1.   Analyze how practitioners can leverage their professional identity to advance health equity initiatives for minoritized youth and families in non-traditional psychiatric spaces.
2.   Compare traditional and equity-focused approaches to child and adolescent psychiatric care, with emphasis on addressing systemic barriers to mental healthcare access.
3.   Identify innovative strategies for integrating social justice principles into psychiatric practice while working within established healthcare systems.
4.   Outline practical methods for developing and sustaining a professional identity as a health equity-focused psychiatrist while maintaining personal wellbeing and professional effectiveness.

 

About The Harold Jordan Memorial Lecture:

In 1964, Harold Jordan, M.D., became the first African American resident at VUMC, where he maintained a clinical appointment until 2016. He went on to serve as the Chair of Psychiatry and Dean of the School of Medicine at Meharry Medical College. He also served as the Assistant Commissioner for Psychiatric Services and the Commissioner of Mental Health and Mental Retardation in Tennessee. In fact, one of the buildings on the campus for the Department of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (DIDDs) is named after him based on his contributions.

In 2019, the Harold Jordan Lecture was established by the VUMC Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Department to honor his contributions to the field of psychiatry, mental health services in the state of Tennessee, and to our department and neighboring Meharry Medical College. In 2019, the inaugural lecture was given by Lloyda Williamson, M.D., the current chair of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Meharry Medical College. She was a student during Dr. Jordan’s appointment as chair, and her lecture focused on the importance of increasing the number of Black psychiatrists, and encouraging recruitment, advocacy, and inclusion to combat disparities in professional representation. In 2020, Francis Lu, M.D., presented on tools for culturally competent care in the DSM-5, including the outline for cultural formulation and the cultural formulation interview.

In 2020, the leadership of the Department felt an increased obligation as providers of mental health care to address issues within foundational policies and institutions of our country including STEM education, healthcare delivery and access, and specifically mental health care, to name a few. The impact of these destructive deep-rooted institutional policies as they relate to mental health care have also been highlighted in many venues in recent months including by the APA and AACP, and AACAP. Indeed, long-standing issues of racism, segregation, poverty, exposure to violence including police violence, food and housing insecurity, and criminalization of mental health, are deeply linked to increased risk for, and morbidity and mortality from, mental illness and therefore affect us profoundly as mental health care providers.

The Vanderbilt University Medical Center Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences condemns behaviors, practices, and policies that perpetuate racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia and other issues that target members of our community.
 
Such discrimination and bigotry unjustly contribute to medical and psychological morbidity, economic inequality, and mortality.  The Department is committed to ending these behaviors, practices and policies by  providing an inclusive and supportive environment for our faculty, staff, and trainees, and also advocating for change in our community to facilitate better care and outcomes for our patients.

 

Related Articles:

Harold Jordan, VUMC’s first African American resident, who forged a career in academia and public service, dies at 87
(VUMC Reporter December 31, 2024)

Inaugural lecture honors Jordan’s contributions
(VUMC Reporter February 14, 2019)

Hidden Figure
(VUMC Voice September 5, 2017)

 

CME/CE credit for Psychiatry Grand Rounds is only available during the live feed time and for a brief time immediately following. The code for this week's session is displayed at the opening and closing of the meeting and also in the Chair's Office Account Name during the meeting.

 

For CME/CE information about this session, please visit:

https://vumc.cloud-cme.com/course/courseoverview?P=0&EID=103324

 

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Meeting ID: 222 068 927 194
Passcode: Gr6ut2Nn


This talk is sponsored by the
Orr Lecture Fund
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences 
This educational activity received no commercial support.