Noteworthy Black Psychiatrists on the Last Day of Black History Month

I wanted to give a shout-out to Dr. H. Steven Moffic, MD for his article highlighting the career of a notable black psychiatrist, Dr. Alvin F. Poussaint, MD, who sadly died on February 24, 2025. I’m mortified that I hadn’t heard of him before now.

It reminded me of the time I mentioned another black psychiatrist I had never heard of either, Dr. Chester Middlebrook Pierce, MD, in a post about the book “Our Hidden Conversations” about a year ago.

I wondered if Dr. Pierce and Dr. Poussaint ever met. I looked this up but couldn’t find a definite link.

Dr. Moffic’s essay, in which he mentions antisemitism. also reminded me of an essay also published in Psychiatric Times in 2020 by Dr. Robert M. Kaplan, MD. The title is “Alois Maria Ott: I was Hitler’s Psychologist.”

It gives even more texture to Dr. Poussaint’s views on whether or when extreme racism should or should not be classified as a mental illness. My own residency training experience was marked by being assigned to a patient said to have schizophrenia—who angrily shouted when he saw me, “I don’t want no nigger doctor!” My faculty supervisor didn’t think I should be reassigned to an alternate patient, a decision I’m still ambivalent about.

Black History Month 2025 ASALH Theme

This is Black History Month and the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) theme this year is African Americans & Labor.

When I look back on my youth, I think of my time learning on the job to be a survey crew technician and drafter for a consulting engineer company in Mason City, Iowa, Wallace Holland Kastler Schmitz & Co. (WHKS & Co.).

I was probably not the first black person to work for WHKS & Co. One other black person who was one of very few role models for African Americans was a guy named Al Martin, who I’ve posted about before.

My time there was in the 1970s and there were not many job opportunities open to minorities. I learned more than just the skills specific to the job. I learned that I could succeed in life, which was valuable later on. I developed the confidence to seek other opportunities which included going to medical school and becoming a physician.

Although racism was not absent at WHKS & Co., there was just enough open-mindedness to support my ambition to move forward in life despite the barriers to success in society that existed.

I think the ASALH theme for Black History Month in 2025 is vital to reflect on in the present day. People from all walks of life can relate to this.

Carter G. Woodson is considered the father of Black history and was the founder of Black History Month.