Novartis Teams Up With HBCUs to Combat Systemic Racial Disparities in Healthcare

The pharmaceutical company Novartis, which is headquartered in Switzerland, and the Novartis US Foundation today announced a planned 10-year collaboration with Coursera, the National Medical Association, the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta and 26 additional HBCUs to co-create programs that address the root causes of systemic disparities in health outcomes and create greater diversity, equity, and inclusion across the research and development ecosystem.

As an initial step, the Novartis US Foundation plans to invest $20 million in scholarships, mentorships, and research grants over the next 10 years to help create equitable access to high-quality education and professional development for HBCU students in health-related fields. This will include three-year scholarships of $10,000 a year for up to 360 students at select HBCUs.

The partner institutions have pledged to co-develop programs focused on building trust in the health care system with communities of color and making measurable progress towards health equity. Working together with the communities they aim to impact, the collaboration will focus on improving access to high-quality education, technology, improved health outcomes, and promising jobs; increasing clinical trial and clinical trial investigator diversity; addressing inherent bias in the data standards used to diagnose and treat disease; and finding actionable solutions to environmental and climate issues that disproportionately affect health among communities of color.

“Health equity is not only accessible healthcare for patients but developing educational and professional opportunities to create a diverse pipeline of educators, clinicians, and other professionals, as well as ensuring all are included in clinical studies,” said Valerie Montgomery Rice, president of the Morehouse School of Medicine. “This is a first of its kind collaboration and Morehouse School of Medicine is excited to work with Novartis and this coalition of medical schools, colleges, universities, and other leading companies and organizations to create centers of excellence for clinical trials, data standards research, and environment and health research. We know that real change starts here, when work is done to make a significant impact on representation and inclusion.”

Related Articles

1 COMMENT

  1. What a bunch of malarkey from Novartis. Novartis is the same White MNC that Does Not have any native born Black American men on its Board. Novartis need to start with their upper echelon hiring disparities first and foremost. Let me get this straight. Novartis has revenues of almost $49 BILLION USD and has the Chutzpah to give a meager $20 MILLION to HBCUs. Really. Can you say this is nothing but another tax write offs along with giving the appearance as if Novartis is doing their part to lessen health disparities in which they’re part of the problem from top down.

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Black First-Year Student Enrollment Plummets at Harvard Law

This academic year, only 19 Black students enrolled in Harvard Law's first-year class. This is the lowest number of Black first-year law students at Harvard since 1965.

Recent Books of Interest to African American Scholars

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education regularly publishes a list of new books that may be of interest to our readers. The books included are on a wide variety of subjects and present many different points of view.

While Diversity Among College-Educated Adults Increases, Diversity in the Teacher Workforce Lags Behind

A new study has found that while diversity has grown among America's college-educated adults , diversity in the country's teacher workforce is lagging behind.

Soyica Diggs Colbert Appointed Interim Provost at Georgetown University

A Georgetown faculty member for more than a decade, Dr. Colbert has been serving as the inaugural vice president for interdisciplinary studies and the Idol Family Professor in the department of Black studies and the department of performing arts.

Featured Jobs