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Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field - Health - Nairaland

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Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by AniOmaa: 6:28pm On Dec 13, 2021
Meet the student bringing Black illustrations to the medical field

Chidiebere Ibe said he hopes his creations will help change the field of medical illustration, which is predominately white and male.

Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News.

Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News.

Have you ever seen a medical illustration featuring a Black body? Social media users admitted they hadn’t when an image of a Black fetus in a Black woman’s womb went viral this month.

Chidiebere Ibe, 25, is behind the image. The Nigerian medical student, who will enter Kyiv Medical University in Ukraine next month, describes himself as a self-taught medical illustrator. He said he’s spent at least a year learning to draw anatomy, focusing on Black skin every step of the way.

“I wasn’t expecting it to go viral,” Ibe, an aspiring pediatric neurosurgeon, said of the image in an interview. “I was just sticking up for what I believe in, advocating for equality in health through medical illustrations. I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature.”

He began publishing the images on social media, showing conditions like empyema thoracis and seborrheic eczema on Black skin. Many of the images show skin conditions prevalent with Black people, combating a misrepresentation that often leads to misdiagnosis. The fetus illustration went viral after a Twitter user shared the photo, writing, “I’ve literally never seen a black foetus illustrated, ever.” The post was retweeted more than 50,000 times, and the illustration garnered more than 88,000 “likes” on Instagram and even made its way to TikTok. Ibe drew praise from medical professionals far and wide.

“Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people. On my LinkedIn, on my Twitter, on my Instagram, I read the comments and they really touched me. I was crying,” Ibe said. “It was amazing to see how good people felt about it. People could see themselves in the drawing.”

“Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people," said illustrator Chidiebere Ibe.Chidiebere Ibe
Ibe said he became interested in medical illustrations after graduating with an undergraduate degree in chemistry from the University of Uyo in Nigeria and preparing to enter medical school. Ibe, who leads creative design at the Association of Future African Neurosurgeons, was working under Dr. Ulrick Sidney Kanmounye at the association to learn anatomy drawing when, he said, he came to a realization: “The drawings I saw aren’t in Black skin.” This launched him into studying medical illustration and focusing on Black skin. A little over a year later, Ibe said, the viral images have landed him an offer to pursue a PhD at a New York university after medical school.

Anatomy drawings have been around for thousands of years, but medical illustration was established as a profession in the United States in the late 19th century, according to the Association of Medical Illustrators (AMI). The lack of Black representation in medical journals and textbooks is no secret, though. A January study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin.

Ni-ka Ford, the chair of AMI's diversity committee, said this is an extension of medical racism.

Just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin, according to researchers at the University of Pennsylvania.Chidiebere Ibe
“The field is so closely connected to medicine and health care, which have a lot of roots in systemic racism. So that’s a big part of it,” Ford said. “Medical illustrations have historically have always been very predominately white and male centered. … A lot of textbooks have already been published and are already in the rounds around the world and they are very exclusionary in the visual content of people of different backgrounds.”

The few Black medical illustrators in the predominately white field have been working to right the injustice, Ford said. Earlier this year, she and the association’s diversity team launched the #AMIDiversity campaign, urging medical illustrators everywhere to post their work of “nonwhite bodies.” Ford said the association plans to hold the campaign annually. The team is also working on efforts to get more Black people into the field.

Chidiebere Ibe
Ford, who has been a practicing medical illustrator for four years, said diverse medical illustrators are imperative for making diagnoses. She described medical illustrations as “visual education material” that play a major role in training medical professionals. “It literally affects patient health at the end of the day,” she said.

She added that diverse medical illustrations promote empathy in doctor-patient relationships and, in turn, improve patient care. When patients see reflective medical illustrations in their doctor’s office, it promotes trust and honest communication that are often vital in medical care, Ford said. There are a lot of positive implications for both the medical field and the patient when illustrations reflect different skin types, Ford added. And Ibe agreed.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/meet-student-bringing-black-illustrations-medical-field-rcna8277?cid=sm_npd_nn_tw_ma

49 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by AniOmaa: 6:30pm On Dec 13, 2021

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by AniOmaa: 6:30pm On Dec 13, 2021

3 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by AniOmaa: 6:32pm On Dec 13, 2021
Naija on the map

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by bomb24: 7:14pm On Dec 13, 2021
Igbo amaka nke uku!

84 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by bomb24: 7:14pm On Dec 13, 2021
ebonyi to the world men!

lalasticlala
mynd44
oam4j
ishilove
Dominique

25 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Oloniyan(m): 7:15pm On Dec 13, 2021
Great one from 9ja

21 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by PennywysCares(m): 6:17pm On Dec 16, 2021
cheesy
Isooorite

Nwokoma Chukwu gozie gi

23 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by ImoleNaija: 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Only God knows where I was when people were picking genius brains. Na to dey commend the genius I know.

Good luck to him!

104 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Eriokanmi: 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Quite innovative

9 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by lonelydora: 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Igbo amaka

25 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by slawormiir: 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Damnnn niggar
Nice

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Crowwejihadist: 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Keep making southern Nigeria proud.

8 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by money121(m): 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Ok
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Hintona(f): 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Hmm

Integrated basic science and biology textbooks have been doing this tey tey

24 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by oluwaseunamos33(m): 6:18pm On Dec 16, 2021
Good
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by boogie2: 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
I feel like clapping but too tired.
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by BigSarah(f): 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
Way to go... Inclusiveness is necessary

3 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by opalu: 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
Ok
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Amuluonyenaego: 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
Ezigbo nwa afo igbo

7 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by brain54(m): 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
It takes a racist to see a racist...








Bloody racist!
Just kidding though...

6 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by basty: 6:19pm On Dec 16, 2021
Now he is Igbo Amaka, not wawa.
If you know you know.
Bloody Hypocrites.

Igbo ji ihu abụọ mara

6 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Hintona(f): 6:20pm On Dec 16, 2021
brain54:
It takes a racist to see a racist...








Bloody racist!

How is he racist sir
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Racoon(m): 6:21pm On Dec 16, 2021
Proud of you nwannem.Ndi Chineke goziri na agozi.

5 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by gomohe9963: 6:21pm On Dec 16, 2021
undecided
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by gboyetade: 6:21pm On Dec 16, 2021
Nice one
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by WibusJaga: 6:23pm On Dec 16, 2021


I was expecting one of our Northern brothers, at least for once.

16 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by brain54(m): 6:25pm On Dec 16, 2021
Hintona:


How is he racist sir
Some things are subtle and not all out in your face....



Learn to read in between the lines!

4 Likes

Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by seunayantokun(m): 6:25pm On Dec 16, 2021
Commendable! God bless him a lot.
Re: Meet Chidiebere Ibe, Bringing Black Illustrations To The Medical Field by Thunderfayayou: 6:26pm On Dec 16, 2021
AniOmaa:
Meet the student bringing Black illustrations to the medical field

Chidiebere Ibe said he hopes his creations will help change the field of medical illustration, which is predominately white and male.

Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News.

Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News.

Have you ever seen a medical illustration featuring a Black body? Social media users admitted they hadn’t when an image of a Black fetus in a Black woman’s womb went viral this month.

Chidiebere Ibe, 25, is behind the image. The Nigerian medical student, who will enter Kyiv Medical University in Ukraine next month, describes himself as a self-taught medical illustrator. He said he’s spent at least a year learning to draw anatomy, focusing on Black skin every step of the way.

“I wasn’t expecting it to go viral,” Ibe, an aspiring pediatric neurosurgeon, said of the image in an interview. “I was just sticking up for what I believe in, advocating for equality in health through medical illustrations. I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature.”

He began publishing the images on social media, showing conditions like empyema thoracis and seborrheic eczema on Black skin. Many of the images show skin conditions prevalent with Black people, combating a misrepresentation that often leads to misdiagnosis. The fetus illustration went viral after a Twitter user shared the photo, writing, “I’ve literally never seen a black foetus illustrated, ever.” The post was retweeted more than 50,000 times, and the illustration garnered more than 88,000 “likes” on Instagram and even made its way to TikTok. Ibe drew praise from medical professionals far and wide.

“Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people. On my LinkedIn, on my Twitter, on my Instagram, I read the comments and they really touched me. I was crying,” Ibe said. “It was amazing to see how good people felt about it. People could see themselves in the drawing.”

“Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people," said illustrator Chidiebere Ibe.Chidiebere Ibe
Ibe said he became interested in medical illustrations after graduating with an undergraduate degree in chemistry from the University of Uyo in Nigeria and preparing to enter medical school. Ibe, who leads creative design at the Association of Future African Neurosurgeons, was working under Dr. Ulrick Sidney Kanmounye at the association to learn anatomy drawing when, he said, he came to a realization: “The drawings I saw aren’t in Black skin.” This launched him into studying medical illustration and focusing on Black skin. A little over a year later, Ibe said, the viral images have landed him an offer to pursue a PhD at a New York university after medical school.

Anatomy drawings have been around for thousands of years, but medical illustration was established as a profession in the United States in the late 19th century, according to the Association of Medical Illustrators (AMI). The lack of Black representation in medical journals and textbooks is no secret, though. A January study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin.

Ni-ka Ford, the chair of AMI's diversity committee, said this is an extension of medical racism.

Just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin, according to researchers at the University of Pennsylvania.Chidiebere Ibe
“The field is so closely connected to medicine and health care, which have a lot of roots in systemic racism. So that’s a big part of it,” Ford said. “Medical illustrations have historically have always been very predominately white and male centered. … A lot of textbooks have already been published and are already in the rounds around the world and they are very exclusionary in the visual content of people of different backgrounds.”

The few Black medical illustrators in the predominately white field have been working to right the injustice, Ford said. Earlier this year, she and the association’s diversity team launched the #AMIDiversity campaign, urging medical illustrators everywhere to post their work of “nonwhite bodies.” Ford said the association plans to hold the campaign annually. The team is also working on efforts to get more Black people into the field.

Chidiebere Ibe
Ford, who has been a practicing medical illustrator for four years, said diverse medical illustrators are imperative for making diagnoses. She described medical illustrations as “visual education material” that play a major role in training medical professionals. “It literally affects patient health at the end of the day,” she said.

She added that diverse medical illustrations promote empathy in doctor-patient relationships and, in turn, improve patient care. When patients see reflective medical illustrations in their doctor’s office, it promotes trust and honest communication that are often vital in medical care, Ford said. There are a lot of positive implications for both the medical field and the patient when illustrations reflect different skin types, Ford added. And Ibe agreed.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/meet-student-bringing-black-illustrations-medical-field-rcna8277?cid=sm_npd_nn_tw_ma

Igbo Amaka!

4 Likes 1 Share

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