Mississippi Today
On this day in 1901
Oct. 16, 1901
President Theodore Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington, founder of the Tuskegee Institute who was perhaps the best known African American of his day, to a meeting in the White House. When the meeting went long, the President asked Washington to stay for dinner, the first Black American to do so. The President’s act drew harsh criticism from many white Americans.
“The outrage was just unbelievable,” said Deborah Davis, author of “Guest of Honor: Booker T. Washington, Theodore Roosevelt, and the White House Dinner That Shocked a Nation”.
“‘Dining,’ and I put it in quotation marks, was really a code word for social equality.”
That outrage continued, she said. “There was hell to pay, first weeks, then months, then years, then decades. This story did not go away. And, you know, an assassin was hired to go to Tuskegee to kill Booker T. Washington. He was pursued wherever he went. Theodore Roosevelt was criticized in ways that presidents were not criticized. There were vulgar cartoons of Mrs. Roosevelt that had never been done before. This was all new territory.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Mississippi receives ‘F’ rating on preterm birth rate
Mississippi received an F grade for its rate of preterm births in 2023 – those occurring before 37 weeks gestation – from the 2024 March of Dimes report card.
Mississippi’s preterm birth rate was 15%, the worst in the country. Any state with a rate greater than 11.5% also received an F. The U.S. average was 10.4%.
Preterm births in Mississippi have risen steadily over the last decade, increasingly nearly 2% since 2013. In Jackson, the state capital, nearly one in five babies are born preterm, according to the report.
“As a clinician, I know the profound impact that comprehensive prenatal care has on pregnancy outcomes for both mom and baby,” Dr. Amanda P. Williams, interim chief medical officer at March of Dimes, said in a press release. “Yet, too many families, especially those from our most vulnerable communities, are not receiving the support they need to ensure healthy pregnancies and births. The health of mom and baby are intricately intertwined. If we can address chronic health conditions and help ensure all moms have access to quality prenatal care, we can help every family get the best possible start.”
In addition to inadequate prenatal care, factors such as smoking, hypertension, diabetes and unhealthy weight can cause people to be more likely to have a preterm birth.
The report highlighted several other metrics, including infant mortality – in which Mississippi continues to lead the nation.
In 2022, 316 babies in the state died before their first birthday. Among babies born to Black mothers, the infant mortality rate is 1.3 times higher.
The state’s maternal mortality rate of 39.1 per 100,000 live births is nearly double the national average of 23.2.
Mississippi has yet to expand Medicaid – one of only 10 states not to do so – and tens of thousands of working Mississippians remain without health insurance. It also has not implemented paid family leave, doula reimbursement by Medicaid, or supportive midwifery policies – all of which March of Dimes says are critical to improving and sustaining infant and maternal health care.
The Legislature passed a law last session that would make timely prenatal care easier for expectant mothers, but more than four months after the law was supposed to go into effect, pregnant women still can’t access the temporary coverage.
“March of Dimes is committed to advocating for policies that make healthcare more accessible like Medicaid expansion, addressing the root causes of disparities, and increasing awareness of impactful solutions like our Low Dose, Big Benefits campaign, which supports families and communities to take proactive steps toward healthy pregnancies,” Cindy Rahman, March of Dimes interim president and CEO, said in a press release.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 2017
Nov. 15, 2017
Author Jesmyn Ward became the first Black American to win the National Book Award twice.
Growing up in DeLisle, Mississippi, “I read everything,” she wrote. “Still, I still felt as if a part of me was wandering. That there was a figure in me, walking the desert, waiting for a word. A word that would sound out of the wilderness to declare that it was speaking to me, for me, within me. The sonic sear of that voice: a new knowing of not only the world I walked, but of me.”
She became the first person in her family to go to college. She attended Stanford University, where she earned a bachelor’s in English and a master’s in media studies.
When a drunken driver killed her younger brother, she decided to become a writer in his memory.
After earning a master’s in fine arts in creative writing from the University of Michigan, she and her family were caught by the floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina, but managed to take shelter with a family.
She won her first National Book Award for “Salvage the Bones,” which was set during the days of Katrina.
“When I hear people talking about the fact that they think we live in a post-racial America,” she said, “it blows my mind, because I don’t know that place. I’ve never lived there.”
She won her second National Book Award for “Sing, Unburied, Sing,” becoming the first woman and first Black American to win two National Book Awards. She also won a MacArthur “genius” grant, one of a handful of Mississippians to receive the award. In 2022, she became the youngest person to ever receive the Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine will close following settlement with UMMC in federal trade secrets lawsuit
A settlement in a federal trade secrets case will force a Madison health care center that treats children with complex medical conditions to close by the end of the year and prohibit its founding doctor and CEO from practicing medicine in Mississippi ever again.
The Oct. 18 agreement concludes a seven-year legal battle between the University of Mississippi Medical Center and the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine that began after pediatric hematologist Dr. Spencer Sullivan, the former director of UMMC’s Children’s Hemophilia Treatment Center, struck out to form the private, for-profit medical organization in 2016.
Three doctors who practiced at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine will form a new private practice in Flowood next year, according to business filings and the clinic’s website.
The center served over 9,500 patients from every Mississippi county in 2022 and employed over 100 staff members during the 2023 fiscal year, according to a recent court filing. The clinic provides subspecialty medical care, including hematology, pediatric cardiology and pediatric rheumatology, and operates a clinical pharmacy and pediatric urgent care.
Mississippi has just under 18 specialty pediatricians per 100,000 children, the lowest rate in the Southeast and the third lowest in the country, according to data from The American Board of Pediatrics.
The center served as a safety net for pediatric subspecialty care in 2022 when UMMC went out of network with Blue Cross Blue Shield, the state’s largest provider of private health insurance.
The legal conflict between the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine and UMMC began in state court, but after new evidence was uncovered in 2018, UMMC filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging that Sullivan and the Center for Advanced Medicine violated federal trade secrets law by utilizing confidential patient and hospital financial information to open the new health center.
Judge Carlton Reeves ruled in favor of UMMC in October 2021 in federal court, writing that evidence in the case “reveals a clear, persistent pattern of perjury, evidence destruction, and concealment.” A trial on damages was delayed several times before the parties reached a settlement agreement in October.
Sullivan will be forced to relinquish his Mississippi medical license for life and close all clinic locations in Mississippi by Dec. 31. The Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine must “indicate that UMMC is the institution in Mississippi that can best meet the patients’ medical care and pharmacy needs” in a letter notifying patients it is closing, according to the agreement.
Sullivan and the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine will be liable for $28.3 million if any terms of the contract are breached.
The center filed for bankruptcy in April 2023, and submitted a plan of liquidation in accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement on Oct. 31. Since opening, the center has either lost money or yielded a modest profit and faced various financial struggles, including loss of physicians to private practice and legal fees, according to the plan of liquidation.
Sullivan declined to comment for this article, and UMMC did not respond to questions from Mississippi Today.
Pediatric hematologist and oncologist Dr. Sharon Pennington, the Chief Medical Information Officer for the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine, is listed as the registered agent of a new private practice in Flowood, shows a business filing publicly available on the Secretary of State’s website.
The clinic will open in January 2025. Dr. Whitney Herring and Dr. Michael Mattingly, medical directors for pediatric metabolic medicine and pediatric and fetal cardiology at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine, respectively, will also join the clinic, according to its website.
Pennington and Mattingly declined to comment for this story. Herring did not respond to Mississippi Today by press time.
A legal saga
One year after Sullivan left his post at UMMC to form the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine, UMMC filed a lawsuit in state court alleging that he had violated the terms of his contract, including a non-compete clause, causing damages to the hospital. UMMC alleged that Sullivan was motivated to leave after he learned of the Hemophilia Treatment Center’s high revenue.
In Sullivan’s employment contract with UMMC, he agreed not to engage in a clinical practice within a 25 mile radius from UMMC, hire recent UMMC employees or use any patient information or lists to encourage them to leave UMMC after departing the hospital.
UMMC alleged that Sullivan took 80% of the patients he treated while practicing at UMMC to his new clinic which he staffed with UMMC employees, including pediatric rheumatologist Dr. Nina Washington, his codefendant in the case.
Children’s of Mississippi at UMMC is the state’s only dedicated children’s hospital and offers a wide range of pediatric subspecialty care. Each year, the hospital treats about 150,000 children, the majority of whom are enrolled in Medicaid.
Sullivan and Washington argued in a counterclaim that the Hemophilia Treatment Center facilities and staffing were “woefully inadequate,” and that mold and cockroaches were “pervasive.” They contended that because of the poor conditions of their employment, UMMC, too, had breached the terms of its contracts.
An amended complaint filed by UMMC in November of 2017 broadened the hospital’s allegations against Sullivan, alleging that Sullivan had obtained a confidential patient list and financial information which he used to solicit patients and establish the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine.
After an article about the lawsuit appeared in the Clarion-Ledger in 2018 that referenced the confidential patient list, the ex-husband of Linnea McMillan, a nurse who left UMMC to join Sullivan’s practice, turned a printed patient list he found in McMillan’s car in 2016 over to UMMC.
The discovery prompted UMMC to file a federal trade secrets lawsuit in June 2019, naming Sullivan, the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine, McMillan and former UMMC staff members Kathryn Sue Stevens and Rachel Henderson as defendants.
Sullivan directed McMillan and Stevens to compile the patient list in the spring of 2016 while working at UMMC as he prepared to open his new practice, alleged UMMC in the lawsuit.
Defendants denied taking or using the list until March 2020, when Henderson admitted that she lied in her deposition, and along with Sullivan, Stevens and McMillan, possessed and used the list at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine.
She also produced nearly 1,500 pages of previously unproduced text messages, which revealed that Harris, Stevens and McMillan shredded the patient list to conceal evidence in the case.
Henderson was dismissed from the case after coming forward with new information.
Sullivan committed perjury by falsely claiming he did not possess an external hard drive with files from UMMC, determined the federal judge. Sullivan produced the drive only after a magistrate judge forced him to choose between producing the hard drives or his computer.
“A review of the voluminous record in the case reveals a clear persistent pattern of perjury, evidence destruction, and concealment,” wrote Reeves in his default judgment in favor of UMMC.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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