{"id":27812,"date":"2023-11-02T11:00:39","date_gmt":"2023-11-02T15:00:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=27812"},"modified":"2025-01-22T14:49:55","modified_gmt":"2025-01-22T19:49:55","slug":"louis-w-sullivan-papers-now-available-for-research","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2023\/11\/02\/louis-w-sullivan-papers-now-available-for-research\/","title":{"rendered":"Louis W. Sullivan Papers Now Available for Research"},"content":{"rendered":"

By John P. Rees and James Labosier ~<\/em><\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
Secretary Sullivan\u2019s official HHS portrait, Box 86<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

A new archival collection, the Louis W. Sullivan Papers<\/a>, is now available at the National Library of Medicine for those interested in the history of the Department of Health and Human Services, Morehouse School of Medicine, public and minority health programs, and racial and ethnic diversity in the health professions.<\/p>\n

The Louis W. Sullivan Papers<\/a> consists of correspondence, speeches, briefing files, subject files, news clippings, photographs, videotapes, and awards and honors that predominantly document Louis Sullivan\u2019s tenure as Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) from 1989-1993. His pre- and post-HHS career as a hematology research scientist and medical educator, health policy expert, promoter of healthy lifestyles, advocate for improving health equity and disparities for Black and underserved populations, and increasing racial and ethnic diversity in the health professions are also documented.<\/p>\n

\"Two<\/a>
Sullivan family home (background) and funeral home (foreground), Box 86<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Louis Wade Sullivan<\/a> was born November 3, 1933 in Atlanta, Ga., however the family moved to Blakely, Ga. shortly thereafter. His mother was an English teacher and his father was a mortician who operated a funeral home and ambulance service. His parents sent him, and his brother Walter, to live with friends in Atlanta during the school year. As a young boy he found a role model in Dr. Joseph Griffin, a local physician. Sullivan was impressed both by\u00a0his professional demeanor and skill and also by how rarely he encountered a Black physician, inspiring Sullivan to pursue a medical career early on.<\/p>\n

Sullivan graduated from Atlanta\u2019s Booker T. Washington high school in 1950 as salutatorian and in 1954 he graduated from Morehouse College magna cum laude with a degree in biology. His early career started in Boston, MA. after he earned his M.D. at the Boston University School of Medicine. Certified in internal medicine and hematology, Dr. Sullivan spent the 1960s and early 1970s researching and teaching at Boston City Hospital, Harvard University, and Boston University Medical Center with a short tenure as professor at Seton Hall College of Medicine. One of his most notable studies<\/a> investigated the correlation between alcoholism and its effect on the human-blood forming system.<\/p>\n

In 1966 he became co-director of Hematology at Boston University Medical Center. The next year he founded Boston University Hematology Service at Boston City Hospital and directed the Boston Sickle Cell Center. He remained acutely aware that, despite his success, he was still as relatively unique as a Black health care professional as Dr. Griffin had been thirty years earlier.<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
Boston Sickle Cell Center newsletter, Box 2<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

In 1975 he accepted an invitation from his alma mater, Morehouse College, to build a medical education program there. A two-year program in basic medical sciences established in 1978 matured by 1985 into the Morehouse School of Medicine<\/a>, a four-year program under his stewardship as president and dean. He augmented his efforts to encourage minority medical education at Morehouse in 1977 by cofounding the Association of Minority Health Professions Schools, which advocated for training, career counseling and more scholarships for minorities in the United States. Looking more broadly at the lack of educational opportunities outside the U.S., in 1985 he was instrumental in founding Medical Education for South African Blacks (MESAB), which he chaired from 1994 to 2007. MESAB has raised scholarship funds in the U.S. and South Africa to educate thousands Black health professionals in South Africa.<\/p>\n