NEW YORK – Eight years ago, at the age of 50, I had a triple bypass
heart operation. To say I was shocked is an understatement. I don’t
smoke, drink or do drugs. Having played football in high school and
college, I thought I was in pretty good physical shape. But that
Southern-style cooking back in Tuscaloosa, Ala. finally caught up with
me. Yet, I was one of the fortunate ones -- having open heart surgery
probably saved my life. The surgeon who operated on me neglected
his own health. He knew that he, too, needed to have an operation but
kept putting it off. He put it off too long – he died of a heart
attack. The person who has made certain that I don’t put off anything
that might be detrimental to my health is Dr. Boisey O. Barnes Jr., a
prominent Washington, D.C. cardiologist. Last Friday, the
Association of Black Cardiologists (ABC) and the National Medical
Association (NMA) held a testimonial banquet here in his honor. I had
the honor of introducing him, so I thought I’d get my licks in first.
Dr. Barnes has joked about seeing me on TV more than he sees me in his
office. I took some especially heavy ribbing when he spotted me a
couple of years ago at the televised daily briefings on the war in
Iraq. He recounted every time Gen. Vincent Brooks called on me in Doha,
Qatar. But the tables eventually turned. Dr. Barnes was the lead
investigator in the first national study of cholesterol in
African-Americans. He enrolled me in the medical trial and provided me
with new medicine that significantly lowered my cholesterol level.
Because of his success, he began appearing on television more than I
was. He was on ABC and BET. He testified before the FDA. Don’t hold me
to this, but I think I even saw him at hearings on the FBI and CIA. In
addition to getting an opportunity to rib Dr. Barnes about his becoming
a media star, I was proud to see this skilled and understated man get
long overdue national recognition. The banquet room in the
Sheraton Hotel was filled with talented physicians, including Dr. Edith
Irby Jones, who served with me on the Board of Trustees at Knoxville
College, our alma mater; Dr. Winston Price, outgoing president of the
National Medical Association; incoming NMA President Dr. Sandra L.
Gadson; Dr. Paul Underwood, president of the Association of Black
Cardiologists, Dr. Jesse McGee, chairman of ABC’s board and Dr. B.
Waine Kong, the CEO of ABC. When I looked out on that room, I
thought about all of the medical journal reports showing that many
White physicians do not recommend cutting-edge technology – and in some
cases, routine procedures – to their Black patients at the same rate
they offer those options to White patients. But African-Americans who
select Black doctors don’t run into that problem. Still, many Blacks
are so brain-washed that they avoid the physicians who have their best
interests at heart. Interestingly, most of the testimonials about
Dr. Barnes were about his heart, his giving heart. Michelle Miller, a
correspondent for BET News, told of how Dr. Barnes had a special way of
encouraging her in her youth, former students at Howard University
Medical School credited him with encouraging them to pursue careers in
cardiology, many spoke about his shying away from the spotlight (until
it was forced upon him because of his pioneering work) and many noted
his deep devotion to his daughters, Tamera and Bridget, and wife,
Bernadine, a former model, radio announcer and teacher. At the
end of the evening, when it was time for Dr. Barnes to make remarks, he
thanked his family and friends for supporting him and spent the
remainder of his time pleading – almost begging – members of the
audience to take better care of themselves. As if still teaching a
class at Howard, he reminded everyone that heart attacks can be
avoided, if one monitors cholesterol levels, blood pressure, eat
properly and regularly exercise. With tears welling in his eyes, Dr.
Barnes recounted the loss of many friends, some of them physicians, who
had died prematurely of a heart attack. “No one has to die of this
disease,” he said. That’s a message he repeats over and over –
even when his colleagues try to honor him. Dr. Barnes is more committed
to saving lives than taking bows for personal achievements. He is a
cardiologist with a heart.
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