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{{Infobox Scientist
{{Infobox Scientist This guy eats poo and blood!!!!!!!!!!!!
|name = Charles Richard Drew
|name = Charles Richard Drew
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Revision as of 20:01, 1 March 2008

Template:Infobox Scientist This guy eats poo and blood!!!!!!!!!!!! Dr. Charles Richard Drew (June 3, 1904April 1, 1950) was an African-American physician and medical researcher. He researched in the field of blood transfusions, developing improved techniques for blood storage, and applied his expert knowledge in developing large-scale blood banks early in World War II. He protested against the practice of racial segregation in the donation of blood from donors of different races since it lacked scientific foundation. In 1943, Drew's distinction in his profession was recognized when he became the first African American surgeon to serve as an examiner on the American Board of Surgery.

Early life

Charles Drew was born in Washington, D.C. . to Richard and was the oldest of four children. In high school and at Amherst College, Drew excelled in athletics and became an All-American in football as a halfback[1]. Drew was a member of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Two years after college, Drew worked as an athletic director, football coach, and science teacher at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1928, he entered medical school at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. Drew continued to excel in sports while at McGill, and joined British professor Dr. John Beattie in blood research. He continued his research when he worked as an intern and later resident at Montreal General Hospital.

Participation in the "Blood For Britain" Project

In late 1940, just after earning his degree, Dr. Drew was called upon by John Scudder to help set up and administer an early prototype program for collecting, testing, and distributing blood plasma in Britain.[2] Called Blood for Britain, the group was organized around eight hospitals in New York City, who would collect and test blood plasma, package it and ship it to Britain, which by this time had a serious shortage of blood due to the effects of the Battle of Britain.

Dr. Drew created protocols and procedures for the collection, testing, and shipping of blood to England. Total collections came to almost 15,000 people donating blood, and over 5,600 gallons of blood plasma.[2] However, due to racial tensions during the 1940's in America, there was a great deal of controversy involving whether or not to use black peoples' blood plasma or to limit it to white donors. Furthermore, when the project was turned over to the government in early 1941, the military announced its policy of segregation, and would not mix blood from blacks and whites, leading to segregated donation centers. Despite all his work on the project, and despite the fact that he was the driving force behind its procedures and policies, they refused to offer him leadership of the new project, over objection from Dr. Scudder and others, instead suggesting he be 'assistant director' [3] While no clear record exists of what Dr. Drew's thoughts were, it is known he left his position there to accept the Chair of Surgery at Howard University that same year.

Death (and Urban Legend)

Charles R. Drew died at the age of 45 from injuries suffered in a car accident in Green Level, North Carolina. Dr. Drew was driving, along with three other passengers, on North Carolina highway 49, en route from Howard University to the Tuskegee Institute for a medical convention. According to Dr. John Ford, one of the passengers, the automobile ran off the pavement, and overturned as Drew tried to cut back on to the highway. Dr. Drew and Dr. Ford were thrown from the car. Drew was taken to Alamance General Hospital in Burlington, North Carolina and died later that morning of severe head and chest injuries.[4]

After Dr. Drew's death, the myth arose that the African American physician had been denied treatment by other hospitals because of his race. The spread of the myth was traced later by author Spencie Love in One Blood: The Death and Resurrection of Charles R. Drew. In a 1964 newspaper feature about the very real problem of discrimination in medical care, National Urban League Chairman Whitney Young cited Dr. Drew's death as an example.[5]

According to the legend, "the nearest hospital" refused to admit Dr. Drew because of his race, and vital time was lost in taking him further away to a "black hospital".[1] Dr. Charles Mason Quick, an African-American physician in North Carolina, helped debunk the myth (which had even been published in school textbooks) in an interview with the Greensboro News and Record (Greensboro, NC), later picked up by UPI. "Quick said he was three emergency room doctors at the old Alamance General Hospital work desperately for two hours trying to save the life of Drew," before Dr. Drew died in the emergency room. "I'm a black man. And this is my state. I know you can indict North Carolina for a number of things. But you can't indict her for this," Quick was quoted as saying.[6]

Dr. Ford, who had been a passenger with Dr. Drew at the time, added that "We all received the very best of care. The doctors started treating us immediately. ... I can truthfully say that no efforts were spared in the treatment of Dr. Drew, and, contrary to popular myth, the fact that he was a Negro did not in any way limit the care that was given to him."

The myth is still rerun, literally, having been adapted to a 1973 episode of M*A*S*H. In the season two episode, "Dear Dad... Three", Hawkeye Pierce and Trapper John McIntyre explain to a soldier (played by Mills Watson) who doesn't want "colored blood", the history of blood plasma; ironically, the myth of the life and death of Charles Drew was employed to dispel another myth, that the transfusion of blood from one race to another was unsafe (while there are statistically-significant correlations between ethnicity/nationalities and blood type frequencies, all blood types are found in all ethnic/national groups and blood can be safely transfused one person to another regardless of ethnicity if the blood types are compatible.[7] There is no way to discern whether an individual blood sample comes from an African American, a European American, or a "pure-blooded" African)

Although racism played little direct part in Drew's death, sleep deprivation certainly did. Charles Drew was characterized by colleagues as "tireless," which was high praise for any doctor and reflects the standard training regimen of the profession: doctors were expected to live on less sleep than lesser mortals, for days, weeks, or years at a time. His companions on the fatal trip (all black doctors) reveal that they had all been working hard, with little time for sleep; They were traveling from one medical convention to another; and they had been up most of the night before the crash; shortly before, they had stopped for donuts and coffee. This problem was worsened by the lack of hotel accommodations for black doctors in the segregated South: black doctors and other travelers generally stayed with church-going families, who tended to keep more practical hours than doctors did.

The fatal accident occurred when Drew had been driving another doctor's 1949 Buick Roadmaster—the archetypal doctor's car in 1950—for many sleepless hours. Apparently, he briefly fell asleep at the wheel, then abruptly reawakened when the right wheels drifted off the edge of the paved road and someone called out to him. He tried to get back on the road by gradually steering left, but that caused the wheel rim to catch on the pavement's edge, flipping the car. An expert stunt driver might know how to recover by moving further right and then turning the wheel sharply left, but few drivers are taught this technique—driving instructors teach skills tested on driver's-license tests, which do not include any emergency maneuvers—and it is not easy to remember when exhausted. The car rolled, the doors popped open, and Drew was hanging halfway out the door as the car rolled over him. His injuries were extensive. Dr. John Ford was thrown out, breaking his arm and injuring his knee.

Several motorists stopped to offer help. One white man who stopped said "It looks like you boys are in some trouble," according to Dr. Bullock, the car's owner. Several ambulances arrived. The first one on the scene (which was owned by a funeral parlor, as most ambulances were in 1950), picked up Drew and Ford and took them five miles to Alamance County General Hospital. The driver didn't try for Duke University Hospital, a much better hospital, because it was thirty miles away: Drew would have been dead on arrival. Drew was not officially admitted to the hospital, because he died in the emergency room before he could be stabilized.

The car had no seat belt, so injuries were predictably severe, although two passengers were not seriously injured. When Drew and the other injured doctor were brought into the emergency room, the doctors did not discriminate on the basis of their skin color, but soon figured out that they were doctors and that one of them was famous. Despite the best care available in a small rural hospital, Drew's injuries proved quickly fatal. As Drew's colleague and fellow passenger observed, a transfusion would have made matters worse, because of uncontrolled internal bleeding.

Commemoration

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Notes

  1. ^ http://wa.essortment.com/whoischarlesr_rkbb.htm
  2. ^ a b Blood : An Epic History of Medicine and Commerce. ISBN 0-688-17649-6.
  3. ^ Blood : An Epic History of Medicine and Commerce. ISBN 0-688-17649-6.
  4. ^ "Prominent Negro Surgeon Is Killed When Car Wrecked Near Haw River," The Daily Times-News, (Burlington, NC), April 1, 1950, p9
  5. ^ Spencie Love, One Blood (UNC Press, 1996), p2
  6. ^ "'Black MD wasn't refused treatment'," The Chronicle Telegram (Elyria, O.), July 12, 1982, p4
  7. ^ Modern Human Variation: Distribution of Blood Types
  8. ^ Charles Drew Health Center
  9. ^ About Dr. Charles R. Drew, Charles Drew Charles Drew Science Enrichment Laboratory, Michigan State University
  10. ^ Dr. Charles R. Drew Elementary School, Broward County Public Schools
  11. ^ Dr. Charles R. Drew Elementary School, Montgomery County Public Schools
  12. ^ Charles R. Drew Hall, Howard University

Further reading

  • Schraff, Anne E. (2003) Dr. Charles Drew: Blood Bank Innovator Enslow, ISBN 0-7660-2117-3
  • Love, Spencie (1996) One Blood: The Death and Resurrection of Charles R. Drew Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press (1997 reprint) ISBN 0-8078-4682-1
  • Wynes, Charles E. (1988) Charles Richard Drew: The Man and the Myth University of Illinois Press, ISBN 0-252-01551-7

External links