
Dr. Kirk A. Campbell is an orthopedic surgeon at °µĶųTV Langone, as well as an alum of °µĶųTV Grossman School of Medicineās Orthopedic Surgery Residency.
Photo: °µĶųTV Langone Staff
Diversity among U.S. physicians has improved in recent years, but entrenched racial disparities still persist. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), more than half of all physicians are White and fewer than 5 percent are Black. For orthopedic surgery, the specialty that attends to bones, joints, muscles, tendons, and ligaments, the disparity is even more pronounced. Only 1.9 percent of practicing orthopedic surgeons are Black, and just 5 percent of orthopedic residents are Black.
A notable outlier is the at °µĶųTV Grossman School of Medicine, where closing the diversity gap has been a priority for more than a decade. Under the leadership of Joseph D. Zuckerman, MD, department chair and the Walter A.L. Thompson Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, and Kenneth A. Egol, MD, vice chair for education and the Joseph E. Milgram Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, the schoolās has become one of the nationās most diverse. Among the programās 70 trainees, 10 are Black, or almost 15 percentānearly 3 times the national average for orthopedic surgery residency programs. The number of women in the program is 23, or more than 30 percent, which is more than double the national average.
āThatās huge,ā says Toni M. McLaurin, MD, professor of orthopedic surgery and director of the departmentās diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. āItās not something you see in most orthopedic residency programs throughout the country.ā The achievement builds on years of sustained and systemic efforts rooted in a culture of inclusivity. It starts with a diverse faculty to provide mentorship opportunities and serve as role models, and extends to medical students. āWeāve created a to expose medical students to orthopedic surgery very early in their education,ā says Eric J. Strauss, MD, director of the Orthopedic Surgery Residency. āWeāve found that many of the students who spend the summer with us go on to apply for orthopedic surgery residency programs.ā
Another differentiator is a that enables underrepresented students in their fourth year of medical school to experience the Orthopedic Surgery Residency for a month. Still another is a workshop in which Black orthopedic faculty members discuss their professional pathway and demonstrate surgical techniques at meetings of the Student National Medical Association, a national organization committed to supporting underrepresented minority medical students.
The departmentās diversity gains have been āa self-perpetuating phenomenon,ā says Dr. Zuckerman. āWeāve crossed the hump, the biggest obstacle, which is having a critical mass to make our orthopedic surgery residency program more attractive to underrepresented minority medical students. People want to train in programs where they see people similar to themselves.ā
āStudy after study shows that patients experience better outcomes when theyāre cared for by people who may look similar or have similar backgrounds or cultural similarities.āāKirk A. Campbell, MD, Orthopedic Surgeon at °µĶųTV Langone
The same is true of patients. āStudy after study shows that patients experience better outcomes when theyāre cared for by people who may look similar or have similar backgrounds or cultural similarities,ā says Kirk A. Campbell, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at °µĶųTV Langone who is Black and completed his residency at °µĶųTV Grossman School of Medicine. āThere may be little subtleties that someone else may not pick up on, so I think itās important to really promote diversity and equity within medicine.ā