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History
Dr. Louis Sullivan,
President Emeritus of Morehouse School of
Medicine, Dr. Walter Bowie, Dean Emeritus of
the School of Veterinary Medicine at
Tuskegee Institute and Anthony Rachal,
Executive Vice President of Xavier
University of Louisiana, College of Pharmacy,
established the Association of Minority
Health Professions Schools (AMHPS) in 1976,
specifically to promote a national minority
health agenda. To address this need, AMHPS
began the task of quantifying the health
status and health personnel needs of the
minority community.
In 1983 it released an historic report
“Blacks in the Health Professions: A
National Crisis and a time for Action.”
This report chronicled and provided for the
first time, a comprehensive assessment on
the number of African-American health
professionals in all disciplines represented
by AMHPS. The document, in part ignited
concern within the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services. As a result, then
Secretary Margaret Heckler assembled a
nationally distinguished panel of experts to
address the issue of minority health. The
panel issued its report in 1985, entitled
“Task Force Report on Black and Minority
Health.” It was one of the first
federally sanctioned reports that identified
the glaring disparity in the health status
of Blacks, Hispanics, and the majority
population. |
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The alumni of the
AMHPS institutions, located primarily in
underserved rural and inner city communities
as health care providers, also make up the
largest percentage of African Americans in
health sciences academia. Several programs
to strengthen the applicant pool and enhance
retention and graduation of minority health
sciences students have been pioneered by
member institutions.
Today, AMHPS includes 12 historically black
medical, dental, pharmacy and veterinary
schools. The members include two schools of
dentistry, four schools of medicine, five
schools of pharmacy and one school of
veterinary medicine.
For more information on all twelve members,
please go to
Members Institutions.
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