39 pages • 1 hour read
Harper describes her next career stop, landing at Montefiore Hospital in North Philadelphia, which she found similar in many ways to Mercy Hospital. At Montefiore, her role as an assistant medical director required effective leadership and administration. She remembers treating teens, such as 13-year-old Gabriel, who was trying to navigate the complex code of ethics in his urban neighborhood. He fell unconscious on the way home after being threatened in a parking lot. Harper had no previous experience talking to patients who dealt with this kind of violence: “Public violence was new to me. I hadn’t grown up with the reality of being unsafe outside the home, of not knowing whether you can walk to the store without being attacked or go to school without being shot” (124). Despite her medical expertise, she was unsure of how to get through to patients whose upbringing was so different from hers.
She then remembers Jeremiah, a man in his 20s whom she treated after he incurred a gunshot wound to the head during a violent gang incident. Harper did all she could do to save his life as he pled with her to do anything to keep him alive.
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