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ARTICLE |

Problems Facing the Negro In Medicine

William H. Sprunt, MD
JAMA. 1969;210(8):1593. doi:10.1001/jama.1969.03160340201038.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  M. Alfred Haynes, MD (209:1067, 1969), may be correct in stating the problems facing the Negro in medicine today. He seems quite wrong in the solution he has for these problems, and his ardent apologia is not convincing either rhetorically or logically.Dr. Haynes advocates more black students in medical schools. Since "black students cannot, at the present time, be measured by the same standards" as their white counterparts, he favors selecting unqualified applicants. Specifically, he states that Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT) scores should be ignored and selection based on interviews by compassionate and humane physicians. Most schools have reasonably compassionate and humane physicians on their selections committees today. I doubt if any school uses MCAT scores alone, even though the interview method of selection for any type of position has been shown to be very unreliable. In essence then, Dr. Haynes would continue the

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