Health
Black Doctors Convene Annual Meeting On Patient Equity
Black physicians from across the nation gathered in Washington, D.C. to tackle health disparities, push policy change, and advance equity in care during the National Medical Association’s 2026 colloquium.
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WASHINGTON, D.C.
The National Medical Association (NMA), the nation’s largest and oldest organization representing African-American physicians and their patients, recently convened leading clinicians, researchers, and health advocates for its 2026 National Colloquium on African-American Health at The Morrow Hotel in Washington, D.C.
Guided by this year’s theme, “The New Reconstruction: Mobilizing Healthcare Justice for a New America, Our Patients, Providers, and Policy,” the colloquium served as a national platform to advance solutions addressing health disparities and systemic inequities impacting Black communities and other historically underserved populations.
Through a series of dynamic panels, workshops, and collaborative sessions, attendees discussed critical topics including chronic disease, artificial intelligence in healthcare, workforce development, and the intersection of policy and patient care.
Sessions throughout the convening explored innovative approaches to managing conditions disproportionately affecting Black Americans, ensuring equity in emerging health technologies, and strengthening trust between providers and communities.
A key component of this year’s colloquium was direct advocacy. NMA physician leaders organized into advocacy teams and walked across Capitol Hill, not only as clinicians but as champions for their patients and communities. They met with lawmakers to address pressing healthcare issues and advance equitable policy solutions. As part of these efforts, the NMA presented Senator Cory Booker with an award recognizing his continued support for advancing Black health and healthcare equity.
Moreover, the NMA hosted the Gary C. Dennis, M.D. 25th Annual Health Policy Awards Dinner, where it honored leaders in health and advocacy. Award recipients included Althea Maybank, M.D., M.P.H., who received the Louis Stokes Health Advocacy Award; Monique De Four Jones, M.D., M.B.A., M.S., who received the James M. Whittico, Jr., M.D. Community Advocate Award; and Dionne Warwick, recipient of the NMA President’s Distinguished Achievement Award.
“This colloquium is more than a convening, it is a leadership training ground and an advocacy forum,” said Roger A. Mitchell Jr., President of the National Medical Association. “It is where we conduct focused exploration of the policies that shape our patients’ lives and develop positions that will be advanced at the local, state, and federal levels. In this New Reconstruction, our patients are not statistics, they are sacred. Our providers are not merely practitioners, they are advocates and architects of justice. And our policy is not paperwork, it is power.”
To learn more about the NMA, please visit https://www.nmanet.org/.

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