treet medic groups have been on the front line of many groundbreaking movements, from the Civil Rights and New Left movements, to modern day movements such as Occupy Wall Street and Arab Spring. Perhaps more importantly, however, street medics have played a role addressing root causes of ill health and supporting the movements which transform dynamics of power, privilege, and access.
One only needs to look at the involvement of the Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR), one of the most well-documented and long-lived medic organizations in the United States.
Over the course of their decades-long tenure, MCHR members have attended hundreds of marches to tend to bludgeoned, shocked, and sore protesters, and have visited protesters in hospitals and jails to advocate for their treatment. The work of MCHR members continued between protests. MCHR doctors were involved with hospital desegregation, with members among the ranks of committees investigating whether southern hospitals were complying with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
Members Jack Geiger, Bob Smith, Jo Disparti and others began the first community health clinic, the Tufts-Delta Health Center, in Mound Bayou, where doctors wrote prescriptions of āfoodā for starving patients and started farming projects to counter widespread malnutrition, inspiring the community health clinic movement. MCHR activists volunteered at free clinics started by the Black Panthers to support uninsured and discriminated against populations, and were also among the first advocates of a national health care platform. Although the work of MCHR petered out in the 1980, the sheer scope of what MCHR doctors have accomplished is too great to describe here, but fascinating detail can be found in The Good Doctors by John Dittmer. Quentin Young, former chair and longtime MCHR volunteer, also relates his personal experiences in many of these movements in his memoir, Everybody in, Nobody Out.
Curious about the work of modern day medics, I interviewed Grace Keller, a medic who trained in 2001 in preparation of the protests of the World Economic Forum meeting, and who has since worked alongside the collectives affiliated with Common Ground Clinic (a street clinic started in the wake of Hurricane Katrina), Occupy Wall Street, and most recently, the Ferguson uprisings. Asked about the role of modern medics, she said her colleague from the Common Ground Clinic, Rachel Stern, described it best: āStreet medics reverse the medical hierarchyāinstead of the practitioner being on a pedestal, the patient and their community is on the pedestal. We are not the heroes, we are not the rescuers.ā Throughout our conversation, she deemphasized the medical role of street medics, who for the most part are not the activist doctors or medical students of the MCHR who were trained to provide more specialized care. Most street medics today access trainings ranging from 4-20 hours, with varying degrees of technical emphasis. Grace doesnāt have a bad opinion of street medicsāshe just sees their role as not primarily medical. āWe donāt make the people we support well, they make themselves well,ā said Grace. āWe just stand with them while they do that.ā Instead of being in the spotlight, street medics tend to organize alternative health care structures for people with higher levels of expertise. āFor health care workers,ā said Grace, āit can be hard to work outside of their institutions.
For a street medic, on the other hand, their average level of health knowledge is lower than most health professionals, but their ability to rapidly deploy a voluntary health infrastructure is very high, so they are able to create structures for doctors and nurses who want to help.ā
Street medics also teach protesters how to problem-solve when resources are scarce. For instance, medics in Tahrir Square during the Arab Spring taught protesters to wipe tear-gassed faces with soda pop, which was readily available. In Ferguson, medics did 2-4 trainings per day that were about 20 minutes long. āMedics would teach people how to do things like eye flushes, how to do psychological first aid, and would switch up their training topics,ā said Grace. āThen people attending would snapchat and tweet pictures of cardboard posters of our popular education materials to reach other protesters.ā
Yet these practical skills donāt fully explain the leap that medics have sometimes made to become essential parts of political movements. Grace explores this in her essay, āA Political Medicine: Trust and Power in Ferguson,ā where she argues that medics were perceived as one of the structures that helped build trust among protesters as they reimagined their communityās capacities for countering pervasive racism, violence and inequity. In my conversation with Grace, she pointed out that the medics, many of whom were white out-of-towners, became highly regarded and asked to stay, even after other solidarity activists had been asked to leave by local organizers. While it is difficult to parse out particular moments when confidence was built and trust was won, Grace credits both the medicās willingness to be accountable to the people with whom they were working and their āmagic tricks.ā
Magic Tricks
By Graceās definition, āmagic tricksā are the skills that all health workers possess that create demand for them to begin withāhow they make people feel better. For instance, how a medic makes pepper spray stop hurting. Another magic trick is a medicās ability to project a calming affect onto a crowd during dangerous or tense situations, such as after a person has been injured or when cops encircle a group of people. Grace noted: āCops also project affect onto a crowd, but their affect is fear. Other people can project a calming affectānurses and EMTs might do that for an individual, or even a family, but medics can do that for a whole crowd.ā It might be as simple as people registering that medics are on the scene to help, or the medics encouraging people with chants or songs to āWalk, Walk,ā thus preventing them from trampling each other in an attempt to flee.
Graceās signature magic trick is white flower oil. She often used this to help a fellow protester who would hit the streets with a megaphone. āHe would rally people using his megaphone until his blood pressure shot up,ā Grace described. āWhen he would start to get worked up, he would ask me for white flower oil to calm him. Instead of going home or going to the hospital, we built a relationship and he chose to seek care from me and other medics. It saved him time and indignity, and allowed him to stay in the middle of the action where he wanted to be.ā This story underscores street medicsā capacity to assess and prevent grave medical problems.
In another example, in Ferguson, āPeople were tense with fear, excitement, anger as they waited to hear about the grand juryāthat tension prevented sleep many nights. As the weeks dragged on, the sleep deprivation and intense emotions caused psychosis in some of the more vulnerable people. I heard people worrying that their sleep-deprived friends would commit suicide,ā said Grace. Recognizing that protesters were more likely to be in grave danger if they were sleep deprived, street medics shared messages about how to sleep in shifts as part of their general messaging.
To help new medics develop assessment skills, Grace often uses Hesperian Health Guides materials, because they are often written with this assessment approach in mind. She especially likes using the āMental Health Chapterā of Where Women Have No Doctor, as well as the chapter entitled āSolving Health Problems,ā which she describes as āone of the best introductions to community health work Iāve ever seen.ā A chapter from Helping Health Workers Learn entitled āLearning and Working with the Community,ā also comes in handy, because āin street medic trainings people get this idea about āthe communityā as a monolithic thing, so Iāve used this chapter to have a more realistic idea of how to work with communities and the conflicts that are already there.ā
The practitioners of MCHR and modern day street medics are usually not the leadership of the movements they participate in, but more often than not they have been a radicalizing force and a source of inspiration for both social and healthcare innovation. As Grace put it: āmany of the causes of poor health we medics canāt cure with medicine. But we have the opportunity to be at the ringside while people work to change those root causes.ā
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