TY - JOUR T1 - Racism, history and medical education JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2020-320448 SP - archdischild-2020-320448 AU - Richard David AU - James W Collins Y1 - 2021/02/17 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/early/2021/02/17/archdischild-2020-320448.abstract N2 - The year 2020 will be remembered as the year of the COVID-19 pandemic and the year of a sea change in attitudes about race and racism in America. On 25 May, a policeman in Minneapolis calmly put a Black man to death by pressing his knee into the neck of the handcuffed, prostrate victim and holding it there for over 8 min until the man became unresponsive. This execution-style killing was witnessed by millions. It made the myth of a ‘colorblind America’ seem like a bitter joke. The protests in thousands of cities and towns across the USA and in other countries reflected a turning point in recognition by the majority of people a truth that African–Americans had known for centuries: despite the inspiring words of the Enlightenment era revolutions, equality and fraternity had not been achieved in the Western democracies, and all men, however they may have been created, were not treated as equals by societies in which they live.Meanwhile, trainees in the medical professions, along with their senior colleagues, battled the worst pandemic in a hundred years. However, even if not as dramatic and shocking as Derek Chauvin murdering George Floyd on camera, the pandemic revealed the ongoing inequity in survival for African–Americans that holds true for most causes of death in this country, be they age-old maladies or novel infectious diseases. It … ER -