A very important feature of the Humanitarian Logistics and Healthcare class that I teach at the Isenberg School of Management, UMass Amherst is guest lectures from outstanding practitioners. There are truly "heroes" among us. On March 27, 2025 (before I headed to the airport to fly to the University of Louisville to give an invited seminar), the students and I had the incredible honor of hearing Khama Ennis, MD, MPH, FACEP, FAIHM speak on her journey from being born in Jamaica to becoming a leading medical professional, heading the ER department at the Cooley Dickinson Hospital, becoming a documentary maker, and even working at Bellevue Hospital in NYC during 9/11! The messages from students continue as to the impact that her guest lecture made on them.
Dr. Ennis's intelligence, courage, creativity, and care for her patients and community are truly inspiring. We are incredibly lucky to now have Dr. Ennis with us at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Health Services. A short bio of Dr. Ennis can be found here: https://www.umass.edu/uhs/about/directory/khama-ennis-md-mph. Her first alma mater is also my alma mater - Brown University.
Dr. Ennis's documentary, Faces of Medicine, "explores the paths of Black female physicians in the United States," of which there are very few: https://www.facesofmedicine.org/. She kindly allowed us to view the documentary, which I found to be profound, inspiring, and, actually, very elegant. It was wonderful to hear from other female Black doctors, some of whom are in our region of western Massachusetts!
It was poignant to hear from a student in the class, whose family also comes from Jamaica, as to the impact that Dr. Ennis's presentation had on her.
It is such a small world. Dr. Ennis trained at MGH in Boston where our cousin, Dr. Toby Nagurney, was head of the ER and also a faculty member at the Harvard Medical School. I shared photos with him of Dr. Ennis with my students and he was delighted. He said that she has not changed at all.
And, when, upon the return from speaking at a conference in Buenos Aires 15 years ago, and while taking a walk in our neighborhood, I slipped and fell where a pothole had been recently patched up, and our UMass Health Services, for some reason, could not treat the scar on my bleeding forehead, I headed to the Cooley Dickinson ER. There, after about 4 hours of a grueling wait, which I blogged about https://annanagurney.blogspot.com/2010/06/operations-and-emergency-room.html , Dr. Ennis came to the rescue and essentially "glued" the wound.
Thank you, Dr. Ennis, for all that you have done and are doing! We are so lucky to now have you at the UMass UHS (Health Services)!