
The Pulse Closing the Gap: Improving Health Outcomes for Black Americans
Feb 5, 2026
Gladys McLean, a family cook who adapts Southern recipes for healthier eating, Nicole Curry, a reporter who explored cooking and culture with her aunt, Dr. Ayla Stanford, a pediatric surgeon and health equity advocate running for Congress, and Dr. Fatima Cody-Stanford, an obesity medicine physician-scientist, discuss culturally tailored nutrition, community-based trust-building in care, structural drivers of health disparities, and efforts to expand access to quality care.
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Patient Invitation Reflects Deep Trust
- Fatima Cody-Stanford made time for an elderly patient who tracked her down after recognizing her on TV.
- The patient later seated Fatima next to her at her 90th birthday, saying, "you're the one keeping her alive."
Obesity Is Multifactorial And Generational
- Obesity is multifactorial: genetics, behavior, stress, sleep, and work schedules all contribute.
- Fatima Cody-Stanford highlights generational stress and allostatic load as drivers of fat storage in Black communities.
Weight Stigma Keeps Patients Away
- Weight bias and the "eat less, move more" mantra persist in medicine and deter patients from seeking care.
- Fatima Cody-Stanford warns that such stigma prevents clinics from feeling like safe, compassionate places.




