Education
She received her Bachelor of Surgery from Albion College in 1956 and her Doctor of Medicine from Wayne State University School of Medicine in 1959. She completed her fellowship at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine from 1964-1966.
She received her Bachelor of Surgery from Albion College in 1956 and her Doctor of Medicine from Wayne State University School of Medicine in 1959. She completed her fellowship at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine from 1964-1966.
She instructed at several institutions including Cornell Medical School and New York Medical College. She has sat on the Medical Review Board of the New York State Commission of Corrections several times and has been the chair since 2008. She served as director and chief of psychiatry at Metropolitan Hospital Community Health Center.
She was the first in her field to start programs for children with developmental disabilities and mental illnesses.
Her programs were implemented in public schools and reduced the institutionalization of children. In the 1970s, she hosted a talk show and co-hosted a radio show that educated parents.
After 9/11, the World Trade Center attack, and Hurricane Katrina, she helped victims recover from disaster-induced mental illness.
She is also a member of the American Psychiatric Association and Black Psychiatrists of America, and was president of the latter from 1976-1978.