[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 39 (Thursday, March 10, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S1433]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DOCTOR QUENTIN YOUNG
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I would like to take a few minutes to talk
about an extraordinary person who passed away on Monday, March 7, at
the age of 92. Dr. Quentin Young was a dedicated physician and an
advocate for civil rights in Chicago.
Some of Dr. Quentin's patients included the Rev. Martin Luther King,
Jr., the Beatles, Studs Terkel, the late Mayor Harold Washington, and
even President Obama.
Dr. Young's commitment to the common good is what makes him a legend.
He spent 35 years at Cook County Hospital and 56 years of private
practice in Hyde Park improving health care while fighting for social
justice and racial equality. His autobiography is titled, ``Everybody
In, Nobody Out: Memoirs of a Rebel Without a Pause.'' And he meant it.
Doctor Quentin Young grew up in Hyde Park in Chicago's Southside. And
when America entered World War II, he enlisted in the Army and served
his country honorably.
After returning from the war, Dr. Young graduated from medical school
at Northwestern University and would go on to spend 35 years at Cook
County Hospital treating patients and becoming a moral voice during the
Civil Rights era. When people outside of Chicago hear the words Cook
County and hospital, people think about the show ``ER'' and doctors
resembling George Clooney. For the people in Chicago, they think of Dr.
Quentin Young.
Dr. Young's experience at Cook County Hospital and his efforts during
the Civil Rights movement were intertwined. In 1951, he was a founder
of the Committee to End Discrimination in Chicago Medical Institutions,
which focused on ending racist practices in Chicago's hospitals and
clinics.
By 1960, the Cook County Hospital was serving the Black community and
immigrant Mexican community almost exclusively. Eighty percent of
Chicago's Black births and nearly half of all Black deaths were at Cook
County Hospital. This place was one of the frontlines of social
inequality and Dr. Young and his family fought to change that. His
efforts were not limited to the Chicagoland area. Dr. Young was a
founder and national chairman of the Medical Committee for Human Rights
or MCHR, which formed in June 1964 to offer support and medical care
for civil rights workers, community activists, and summer volunteers
working in Mississippi during the Freedom Summer.
It was the MCHR that provided help and emergency medical care to
anti-war protesters at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in
Chicago. In October of that year, Dr. Young received a summons by the
House Un-American Activities Committee for his involvement in MCHR. He
valiantly defended the MCHR's work.
After Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., was struck in the head by a rock
while marching through a White neighborhood, Dr. Young was there to
patch him up. He was not only Dr King's physician but a fellow marcher
during the Marquette Park protest in 1966.
Dr. Young and the late Dr. Jorge Prieto, former head of the Chicago
Board of Health, became the primary force behind the movement to found
neighborhood medical clinics in the late 1960s. These clinics gave
medical help to countless people when they couldn't afford to go to the
doctor.
From 1972 to 1981, he served as chairman of Medicine at Cook County
Hospital. His example helped bring many dedicated people back to the
hospital, but it wasn't without challenges. The staff went on strike
because of the lack of resources in 1975. Dr. Young sided with the
young doctors, and the governing commission fired him for it. With
loyalty, the striking staff took his office door off its hinges so
management couldn't change the locks and held a 24-hour vigil outside
his office until he regained his position after a court fight.
In 1980, Dr. Young founded the Chicago-based and Illinois-focused
Health & Medicine Policy Research Group, which conducts research,
education, policy development, and advocacy for policies that impact
health systems to improve the health status of all people. He would go
on to serve as Mayor Harold Washington's appointment as president to
the Chicago Board of Health.
Dr. Quentin Young never lost his passion for providing equal access
to health care for the people of Illinois. Since retiring from private
practice in 2008, he fought hard for a single-payer system.
In 2001, at the age of 78, he walked 167 miles across Illinois, from
Mississippi River to Lake Michigan, with former Governor Pat Quinn to
promote access to health care.
He never wavered in his belief in humanity's ability and
responsibility to make a more equal and just nation. My prayers and
thoughts go out to his family, Michael, Ethan, Nancy, Polly, Barbara,
William, Karen, and his nine grandchildren.
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