Named by Time magazine as one of the "Nation's 50 Future Leaders Age 40 and Under," Regina M. Benjamin, MD, MBA, is Founder and CEO of the BayouClinic in Bayou La Batre, Alabama.
Following graduation from Xavier University, Morehouse School of Medicine, and the University of Alabama School of Medicine, Dr. Benjamin chose to return to the region in which she grew up, opening a family practice in Bayou la Batre, a small shrimping village along the Gulf Coast. In an area where need, not money, is prevalent, most of Dr. Benjamin's patients hold low-paying jobs that do not provide them with any health insurance.
Since 1990, Benjamin has been the sole family physician in this impoverished Gulf Coast town of 2,500 residents. She kept her clinic financially afloat by moonlighting in emergency rooms and nursing homes. When Hurricane Georges wrecked the building in 1998, she spent the next two years treating patients out of her Ford pickup. After earning her MBA from Tulane University, Dr. Benjamin converted her office to a rural health clinic dedicated to serving the community.
Dr. Benjamin's extraordinary dedication and self-sacrifice have earned her consistent national media attention. Featured in a New York Times article labeling her as an "Angel in a White Coat," she was named "Person of the Week" on ABC's "World News Tonight with Peter Jennings" and "Woman of the Year" by "CBS This Morning." She was featured on the December 1999 cover of Clarity magazine, appeared on the January 2003 cover of Reader's Digest, and has been featured in numerous other publications, including Redbook, Southern Living, People, Coastal Living, and Good Housekeeping. Despite the nationwide media recognition for her efforts, Dr. Benjamin insists that the greater reward is achieved "in the individual patient, one at a time."
Dr. Benjamin is former Associate Dean for Rural Health at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine in Mobile where she administered the Alabama-AHEC program and USA Telemedicine Program. In 1998 she was the United States recipient of the Nelson Mandela Award for Health and Human Rights. In 1995, she was elected to the American Medical Association Board of Trustees, making her the first physician under age 40 and the first African-American woman to be elected. She also served as President of the American Medical Association Education and Research Foundation (AMA-ERF) and is a current member of the AMA Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs. In 2002 she became President of the Medical Association State of Alabama, making her the first African American female president of a State Medical Society in the United States. Dr. Benjamin is also co-author of the book How's Your Health? What You Can Do To Make Your Health and Health Care Better.
A member of the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine, Dr. Benjamin is also a diplomate of the American Board of Family Practice and a Fellow of the American Academy of Family Physicians. She was a Kellogg National Fellow and a Rockefeller Next Generation Leader. Some of her numerous board memberships have included the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, Catholic Health East, Federation of State Medical Boards, Alabama Board of Medical Examiners, Alabama State Committee of Public Health, Alabama Rural Health Association, Leadership Alabama, Mobile Area Red Cross, Mercy Medical, Mobile Chamber of Commerce, United Way of Mobile, and Former Vice President Deep South Girl Scout Council. She is also a Trustee of Birmingham Southern University and Florida A&M University.
She was appointed by the Department of Health and Human Services Secretary to the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act Committee (CLIAC), the Council of Graduate Medical Education (COGME), and the NIH National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities. She is former chair of the USMLE Step 3 Committee and member of the National Board of Medical Examiners. In Alabama, Dr. Benjamin served as Vice President of the Governor's Commission on Aging, and was a member of the Governor's Health Care Reform Task Force and the Governor's Task Force on Children's Health. She has also spent time doing missionary work in Honduras and is a former Board Member of Physicians for Human Rights.
Dr. Benjamin is also one of the most inspirational speakers available to today's healthcare community. Consistently guided by a strong sense of social conscience, she stresses the importance individual leadership, particularly when dealing with such societal issues as racial and ethnic health disparities in our healthcare system and the challenges faced when treating the working poor. A strong proponent of community involvement, she emphasizes the importance of continually working to improve the quality of healthcare service. She's also an inspiring example of the intangible benefits available to anyone who is committed to making a difference.
Within the United States, Dr. Benjamin says solving our country's healthcare woes will require societal change: an overhaul of policies, broader insurance systems, and better distribution of physicians nationwide. Her prescription for the small shrimping village of Bayou La Batre, Alabama, is simple: Give treatment to all patients, whether they can pay or not.
When President Obama selected Dr. Regina Benjamin to be his Surgeon General, he chose a rural family doctor who had had spent her entire career caring for the poor and uninsured. As the founder of the Bayou Clinic in Bayou La Batre, Alabama (the shrimping village featured in the movie, Forrest Gump), Dr. Benjamin continues a career dedicated to underserved communities. To serve patients “too poor for insurance and too rich for Medicaid.” Dr. Benjamin created a community-based, integrated and prevention-focused system of care that became a model for serving low income communities. Legendary for accepting buckets of oysters as payment, she also mortgaged her own home to rebuild the clinic after it was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Dr. Benjamin’s initiatives demonstrate what we can learn from her clinic as a microcosm for larger healthcare delivery systems. She blends heartwarming patient care stories from the Bayou, current policy innovations that are improving outcomes across the Gulf states region, and the national perspective of a former Surgeon General in this informative talk.
Regina Benjamin is a national leader in preventive medicine, fighting health disparities and developing innovative community-based strategies for low-income and rural communities. As a rural family doctor serving poor communities, Dr. Benjamin has spent her career seeing the impact of healthcare disparities and the social determinants of health on several generations of patients in her community. She knows it’s well-documented and researched that your ZIP code is a better predictor of your health and longevity than your genetic code. As Surgeon General and founder and CEO of the Gulf States Health Policy Center, Dr. Benjamin has been the driving force behind research and policies to promote equity and access. Taking a public and population health perspective, she reviews the range of social determinants, ranging from income and education, to the poor conditions of neighborhoods and recreational opportunities. Dr. Benjamin also explores practices and policies that will narrow the health gap.
As Surgeon General, Dr. Regina Benjamin made mental health a public health issue by integrating both mental health and suicide prevention into the first national prevention strategy. Dr. Benjamin continues to influence both national and regional health policy as an advocate for a preventative public health approach to mental health — treating it as a chronic disease and eliminating stigma. In this insightful talk, Dr. Benjamin discusses what we need to do to put mental health on an equal level with physical health, such as increasing access and integrating behavioral health and preventative mental health into primary care. Combining her unique perspective as a policy maker, community practitioner and Surgeon General, she provides an achievable prescription for improving the mental health of our nation.
As Surgeon General, Dr. Benjamin not only de-stigmatized talking about suicide, she made suicide prevention a national priority. One of her proudest accomplishments as SG was to include suicide prevention in a national prevention strategy that put mental health on an equal level with physical health. Today, as both a practitioner and a policy maker, she continues to be a strong advocate for erasing stigma to prevent suicide and treating the “diseases of despair” that have become a national epidemic. Calling for suicide education that teaches everyone to recognize the warning signs of suicide, and ways to make it easier for those who are struggling to get help, Dr. Benjamin provides actionable solutions to one our nation’s most tragic public health issues.