Glenn Ellis Warrior for Wellness
Glenn Ellis Warrior for Wellness
Junious Ricardo
Stanton
Glenn Ellis
was born in Birmingham Alabama during the tumultuous era when
Blacks were actively engaged in a valiant struggle for human rights,
desegregation and relief from the enduring ravages of racial oppression. He
grew up in the thick of the struggle, seeing first hand how reactionary whites
resorted to indiscriminate violence and terrorism in their vain attempt to
stifle the movement.
Ellis was one of a family of nine children who
grew up in a tight nit segregated community. His father worked in the steel
mill. The four girls killed in the 16th
Street Church bombing on September 15, 1963: Addie
Mae Collins, Carol Denise McNair, Carole Robinson and Cynthia Wesley were
childhood friends of Ellis.
That hideous act of terror also
injured over twenty innocent people most Ellis and his family knew. The rampant violence became part of the
fabric of life in Birmingham .
Ellis was classmates with Condoleezza Rice. He knew James Bevel and Hosea
Williams from their activism in the community and he worked for the legendary
entrepreneur and patron of the struggle A.J. Gaston.
This experience and the tutoring of
his parents, grandparents, teachers and community infused Glenn Ellis with as
purpose and mission. He witnessed what it meant to sacrifice to ameliorate the
egregious affects of racism and privation on Black people and do whatever could
be done to facilitate change for the better. His community and family motivated
him to expand his horizons and opportunities, to always remember his people and
his obligation help his community.
Ellis migrated to Philadelphia
to attend the University
of Pennsylvania . He
always had an interest in medicine, health and well being, so he was in the
pre-med academic track at Penn.
But Ellis’ motivation caused him to take an alternative track from medical
school. He chose to pursue advanced degrees in public health and health care
ethics. In that capacity Ellis travels
the world researching, lecturing and comparing US “healthcare” with services
provided by other countries and cultures.
Sharing how his experiences in
Birmingham and working with Dick Gregory helped shape his life path and his
push to derail America’s racist system, Ellis said, “When racism takes place
within the context of healthcare and medicine, now we’re talking life and
death. Statistically over one hundred thousand Black people die every year from
preventable deaths that only take place because of racism. This is not to say
there are some white doctors out there injecting poison into people but rather
they are neglecting to raise the level of care that somebody deserves or making
sure their complaints are believed.”
As an example Ellis shared that
many sickle cell patients are viewed as drug addicts, junkies or malingerers
due to racial bias on the part of emergency room physicians and nurses. “A
study was done at Virginia Tech that did a survey of medical students around
the country and this study revealed that the overwhelming number of medical students
think Black peopled because of our melanin can tolerate a higher threshold of
pain so they require less pain medication and they are minimizing the pain
Black people are experiencing.
“There are different ways to
articulate it so if you come in and state exactly what kind of medication you
need then you are a drug seeker, that’s what they (the medical people) call
them, or a junkie. If you can’t articulate it (the level of your pain) but are
begging for something to alleviate the pain, they downplay it like ‘You’re not
hurting that bad.’ If the person has been to the hospital before (for
treatment) then they say, ‘You like the high’ or ‘they must be selling it’”.
Citing similar studies at
Philadelphia Children’s Hospital and in Boston Ellis stated the studies showed
the Black children were consistently given less medication and attention. “All
this speaks to how deeply institutional racism is entrenched in our society and
more so in the medical field.”
Ellis has studied abroad and
observed how other countries treat their citizens. Ellis travels around the United States
lecturing medical students, hospital staffs and administrators to point out
these patterns in the hope these students and administrators will see their
roles differently and change the paradigm. He also writes a syndicated weekly
column, he hosts a radio program on WURD and has written four books with a new
one coming out in March and two others in the works on medicine, health care
and the history of Black doctors in Philadelphia .
For Ellis this is a calling, a life’s mission.
“I don’t have a choice, this is an obligation. I’m grateful that this is
something I love, that I am passionate about and all that but I don’t have a
choice. I am grateful the ancestors opened a pathway for me to get to where I
need to be going, I take this very seriously.”
Glenn Ellis is a man of the people;
he is available for consultations, lectures and workshops. He’s committed to
sharing information via the media and in person. His Website is https://www.glennellis.com there you can
access archives of his podcasts, his newspaper columns and purchase his books.
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