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UMass Chan community celebrates service to honor MLK

Keynote speaker Riley: Health care disparities still exist

A standing-room only crowd gathered to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday, Jan. 23, by celebrating and honoring service to the community, and by hearing about what challenges still exist in eliminating health care disparities in our society, an inequality that Dr. King called “the most shocking and inhumane.”

Chancellor Michael F. Collins said that honoring service to the community was a fitting way to celebrate the memory of Dr. King and his famous sentiment “Everybody can be great . . . because anyone can serve.”

“Dr. King’s words—and the meaning embedded within them—continue to resonate as poignantly today as when they were first uttered decades ago,” said Chancellor Collins. “If, as Dr. King says, greatness is measured by and synonymous with service, then I would argue that our academic health sciences center is approaching greatness.”

The audience viewed a video capturing just a few of the many ways members of the UMMS community give back to the community, including more than 47,000 hours of service to residents of Massachusetts, including 27,000 hours in Worcester alone.

Wayne J. Riley, MD, president & CEO of Meharry Medical College in Nashville and keynote speaker, envisioned what King would have said about the poor progress that has been made in eliminating health care disparities in this country. He said King would have been “concerned,” “chagrined,” and “would have just hammered us,” given the latest statistics from the National Health Care Disparities Report that shows that much work still needs to be done.

“Keep doing what you are doing–by having this simple program today, and making sure that everyone is aware of the challenges ahead, we are meeting the challenge that Dr. King laid out for us,” said Dr. Riley. (Watch extended coverage of the event here.)

Also during the event, Chancellor Collins presented two awards to people who exemplify the Medical School’s commitment to diversity and civility.

 

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  Pranoti Mandrekar, PhD, is presented the Chancellor’s Award for Advancing Institutional Excellence in Diversity.
   
   

The Chancellor’s Award for Advancing Institutional Excellence in Diversity was presented to Pranoti Mandrekar, PhD, associate professor of medicine, for the “inspiring way you balance your own remarkable scientific career with an exceptional commitment to diversity,” said Collins. He cited her membership in executive committee of the Council on Equal Opportunity and Diversity; the Medical School’s Minority Academic Advancement Committee; and her role as a faculty mentor for students in the Pathway to Graduate Study Program in the Graduate School of Biomedical, among other accomplishments.

 

 

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  John L. Congdon is presented the Chancellor’s Award for Advancing Institutional Excellence in Civility.
   

The Chancellor’s Award for Advancing Institutional Excellence