Category: 14. Physical health, conventional
medicine, and folk medicine
STEE002. Steelman,
Ben. Still a pioneer: rural patients focus of Lumbee doctors
life. Star news (Wilmington, NC) Sunday, March
28, 2004: 1D, 7D. 1,328 words.
Publication type: Newspaper article
Electronic access: Full text available
in LEXIS-NEXIS Academic
This article reviews the forty
years of accomplishments of physician and professor James
G. Jones. In 1958, Jones was the first Native American graduate
of Wake Forest University as well as the first Native American
to receive a doctorate from its medical school. Thereafter,
Joness accomplishments have included founder, and twenty
years as chairperson, of East Carolina Universitys department
of family medicine; president of the organization that became
the American Academy of Family Physicians; executive director
of the North Carolina Health Planning Commission; and being
named the North Carolina Academy of Family Physicianss
2003 Family Physician of the Year.
Seven years ago, after his 1995
retirement from East Carolina University, Jones became both
medical director of and a staff physician with a chain of
three nonprofit primary-care clinics in Pender County. Most
of his work with patients is at the Maple Hill Clinic.
Jones was a staunch advocate
for establishing a medical school at East Carolina University
when many people, particularly in the UNC System, doubted
the need for another medical school in the state. He felt
it was imperative to provide an institution for training physicians
in rural areas, especially in the eastern part of the state.
He has also worked in many ways (including the Access III
regionalized Medicaid program) to get new health care graduates
to come to, and settle in, rural areas.
His concern about the U.S. health
care system is that it is a sick care system.
He states, If youve got insurance in America,
youll get the best care in the world. Still, within
the shadows of these places, youve got people who have
to decide whether to buy their medicine or eat. We have people
here who have gone without medical care so long that disease
has just ravaged themconditions like diabetes that could
have been managed if theyd gotten help in time. It just
touches your heart (paras. 20-22).
Additional Subjects:
James G. Jones | Rural health care | East Carolina University
| Access III
This annotation was written on
June 30, 2004.