Helen Rodríguez Trías
Helen Rodriguez-Trias | |
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The first Latina president of The American Public Health Association | |
Born |
1929 New York City, New York |
Died |
December 27, 2001 New York City, New York |
Nationality | American |
Notes | |
Rodriguez-Trias was a founding member of the Women's Caucus of the American Public Health Association. She was also the recipient of the Presidential Citizen's Medal. |
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Puerto Rican Nationalist Party |
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Helen Rodríguez Trías[lower-alpha 1] (1929 – December 27, 2001) was a pediatrician, educator and women rights activist. She was the first Latina president of the American Public Health Association, a founding member of the Women's Caucus of the American Public Health Association, and the recipient of the Presidential Citizen's Medal. She is credited with helping to expand the range of public health services for women and children in minority and low-income populations in the United States, Central and South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East
Early years
Rodriguez-Trias' parents moved to New York City from Puerto Rico in the early half of the 20th century. After her birth, her family returned to Puerto Rico only to return to New York in 1939. In New York, Rodriguez-Trias experienced racism and discrimination for the sole reason that she was Puerto Rican.[1] In school, she was placed in a class with students who were academically handicapped, even though she had good grades and knew how to speak English. After she participated in a poem recital, her teacher realized that she was a gifted child and sent her to a class with gifted children.[2]
Puerto Rican independence activist
Rodriguez-Trias's mother was a school teacher in Puerto Rico. However, in New York, she was not able to get a teacher's license because, at that time, bilingualism was considered a handicap. Therefore, her mother had to take in boarders in order to meet her financial needs and to pay the rent. After Rodriguez-Trias graduated from high school, she decided that she would like to study medicine and that her chances would be much better in Puerto Rico, because the island had a good scholarship system.[2]
In 1948, she began her academic education at the University of Puerto Rico in San Juan. The university had a very strong independence movement and Rodriguez-Trias became involved with the student faction of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. Nationalist leader Don Pedro Albizu Campos was invited to speak by the student council, however the chancellor of the university, Jaime Rexach Benítez, did not permit Albizu access to the campus. The students consequently went on strike, with Rodriguez-Trias amongst them, but her brother did not approve of this. He threatened to cut off her college expenses and she returned to New York.[2]
In New York, she married and had three children, before she decided to return once more to Puerto Rico to pursue her degree. At the University of Puerto Rico, she became a student activist on issues such as freedom of speech and Puerto Rican independence.[3] She earned her BA degree in 1957 and entered UPR's school of medicine. She earned her medical degree in 1960 and soon after gave birth to her fourth child.[1] During her residency at the University Hospital in San Juan, she established the first center for the care of newborn babies in Puerto Rico. The hospital's death rate for newborns decreased 50 percent within three years.[2] She established her medical practice in the field of pediatrics in the island after completing her residency. During this timeframe she divorced her husband and in 1970 returned to New York.
Medical career
Rodriguez-Trias headed the department of pediatrics at Lincoln Hospital in the South Bronx. At Lincoln Hospital, Rodriguez-Trias lobbied to give all workers a voice in administrative and patient-care issues. She became involved with the Puerto Rican community and encouraged the health care workers at the hospital to become aware of the cultural issues and needs of the community.[3] Rodriguez-Trias was also an associate professor of medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University, and later taught at Columbia and Fordham universities.
Advocate for Women's Rights
During her years in Puerto Rico, Rodriguez-Trias became aware that unsuspecting Puerto Rican women were being sterilized and that Puerto Rico was being used by the United States as a laboratory for the development of birth control technology.[3] In New York, after attending a conference on abortion at Barnard College in 1970, she focused on reproductive rights of women and became an advocate for women's reproductive rights, campaigning for change at a policy level. In 1970, Rodriguez-Trias was a founding member of Committee to End Sterilization Abuse and in 1971, a founding member of the Women's Caucus of the American Public Health Association. Rodriguez-Trias supported abortion rights, fought for the abolishment of enforced sterilization, and sought that neonatal care to underserved people be provided. In 1979, Rodriguez-Trias became a founding member of the Committee for Abortion Rights and Against Sterilization Abuse and testified before the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare for passage of federal sterilization guidelines. The guidelines, which she drafted, require a woman's written consent to sterilization, offered in a language they can understand, and set a waiting period between the consent and the sterilization procedure. She is credited with helping to expand the range of public health services for women and children in minority and low-income populations in the United States, Central and South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.[3]
In the 1980s, Rodriguez-Trias served as medical director of the New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute. She worked on behalf of women from minority groups who were infected with the HIV virus. In the 1990s, she served as health as CO-director of the Pacific Institute for Women's Health, a nonprofit research and advocacy group dedicated to improving women's well-being worldwide and focused on reproductive. Rodriguez-Trias was a founding member of both the Women's Caucus and the Hispanic Caucus of the American Public Health Association and the first Latina to serve as the president of the APHA.[1][3]
Later years
On January 8, 2001, President Bill Clinton honored Rodriguez-Trias with the Presidential Citizen's Medal, the second-highest civilian award in the United States, for her work on behalf of women, children, people with HIV and AIDS, and the poor.[1][3][4] Later that year, on December 27, Rodriguez-Trias died, a victim of cancer.[1][3]
See also
- History of women in Puerto Rico
- List of famous Puerto Ricans
- List of Puerto Rican scientists and inventors
- Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
- List of Puerto Rican Presidential Citizens Medal recipients
Notes
- ↑ This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Rodríguez and the second or maternal family name is Trías.