| R 085 |
| 2025 -- H 5326 Enacted 02/06/2025 |
| H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N |
| CELEBRATING “NATIONAL WOMEN PHYSICIANS DAY” ON FEBRUARY 3, 2025, IN THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND |
Introduced By: Representatives Diaz, Shekarchi, Blazejewski, Chippendale, Hull, J. Lombardi, Felix, Morales, Slater, and Stewart |
| Date Introduced: February 06, 2025 |
| WHEREAS, National Women Physicians Day commemorates the birthday of Dr. |
| Elizabeth Blackwell, who, in 1849, became the first woman to receive a medical degree in the |
| United States; and |
| WHEREAS, Dr. Blackwell championed the participation of women in the medical field |
| and ultimately opened her own medical college for women, the Women's Medical College in |
| New York City. In addition, during the Civil War, she and her sisters worked closely with |
| Florence Nightingale, training nurses for Union Hospitals, to provide care for the sick and |
| wounded; and |
| WHEREAS, National Women Physicians Day honors the pioneering achievements and |
| ongoing contributions of all female physicians in the field of health care, including the notable |
| accomplishments of Dr. Velma Scantlebury-White, who was the first Black woman transplant |
| surgeon in the United States and who, over her 40-year career, performed an estimated 2,000 |
| organ transplants; and |
| WHEREAS, Dr. Velma Scantlebury-White is no stranger to overcoming challenges. She |
| grew up in Barbados, and at the age of 15, immigrated to Brooklyn, New York, with her family. |
| Pursuing her dream of becoming a physician, she eventually earned her medical degree from |
| Columbia University, and eight years later, earned her Doctor of Surgery from Pitt School of |
| Medicine, a first in the country; and |
| WHEREAS, Dr. Velma Scantlebury-White is recognized as one of the top doctors in the |
| United States and is passionate and dedicated to educating communities of color about the need |
| for more organ donors and the rising number of patients in need of transplantation; and |
| WHEREAS, Since 1849, women physicians have made remarkable strides in health care, |
| and as of May 2024, there were 424,536 female physicians in the United States; and |
| WHEREAS, In addition, over the course of the last four years, women have made up the |
| majority of medical school applicants, matriculants, and enrollees; however, a 2021 report from |
| the Rand Corporation found that female physicians earn $2 million less than men over the course |
| of their career; and |
| WHEREAS, Women physicians bring unique perspectives to patient care, and serve as |
| leaders, educators, researchers and mentors to future generations; and |
| WHEREAS, National Women Physicians Day honors the achievements of female |
| physicians and is a time to not only recognize the contributions of female physicians to |
| healthcare, but to also inspire future generations of female physicians, and to advocate for equal |
| pay and leadership opportunities; now, therefore be it |
| RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island hereby |
| celebrates February 3, 2025, as “National Women Physicians Day”; and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
| transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Mariah Stump, MD, MPH, President of the |
| Board of Directors, Rhode Island Medical Women’s Association (RIMWA). |
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