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Pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha’s Vision of ‘What We Can Do Next’

Ambitious Program Rx Kids works to eradicate child poverty in Flint, Michigan, and beyond

Dr. Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha with one of her patients. (MSU Division of Public Health, College of Human Medicine)

This is part of our Community Cultivator series, which highlights how innovators across all sectors build and sustain global communities from the ground up.

What if we let pediatricians run the world? Hear me out.

In April 2020, just a few weeks into the pandemic, Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha that said: “To expect resilience without justice is simply to indifferently accept the status quo.” With the imminent launch of , an ambitious program to eradicate child poverty in Flint, Michigan, the pediatrician aims to show the country and the world how to build a resilient community at a systems level. The program will scale up the promise of unconditional cash allowances as well as establishing new child care centers, expanding home visiting and partnering with groups like and .

Early Learning Nation magazine caught up with Hanna-Attisha, associate dean for public health in the MSU College of Human Medicine and director of the Michigan State University-Hurley Children’s Hospital Pediatric Public Health Initiative, to learn more about her new organization, her thinking and what drives her.

Transformative change is possible. Hanna-Attisha came to national prominence in 2015 by calling attention to the dangerous levels of lead in Flint’s drinking water. It was a long struggle, but she persisted and organized and eventually, she won over the skeptics and brought about reform. “We all would love to see overnight change,” she admits, “and it can get frustrating when that doesn’t happen, but in this work, it’s important to recognize the long game.”

After she testified before Congress on the dangers to children of the more than , Congress dedicatedin the 2022 National Infrastructure Act. As another example, she points to the that is now part of the U.S. Farm Bill. “If we can do it with water and nutrition,” she says, “we can do it with democracy and community building. It just takes a different way of looking at things.”

If things can change in Flint, they can change anywhere. Hanna-Attisha’s outspoken advocacy on the Flint water crisis prompted the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control to create the to monitor how residents are doing after the water crisis.

The emblem of the initiative is the Sankofa, the mythical African bird that’s flying forward but looking back and holding an egg in its mouth. “That’s what Flint is,” she says.  “We are determined not to be defined by the crisis, but rather to be defined by what we can do next.”

It’s not just about Flint. The city where and where, she says, the middle class was born, . The lead crisis was only the latest in a series of man-made disasters to befall Flint.

Hanna-Attisha describes Rx Kids as “a society-wide hug for an entire city.  We’re saying, ‘We see you, we hear you’.” And yet she maintains that the project goes beyond the residents of Flint and extends to reframing the narrative on poverty at a scale that hasn’t been tried before. “This is not about one city,” she contends. “It’s about shining a spotlight on how we could do better for all children.”

It’s not just about the cash, either. Inspired by the success of guaranteed income experiments like the and the Abundant Birth Project, Rx Kids will “prescribe” Flint families $7,500 in cash, including a one-time $1,500 payment to expectant mothers.

“It’s going to be coupled,” she says, “with arts and humanities and storytelling. And joy, as much as possible.” By running the program in a values-driven way, she aspires to rebuild the social contract and to have an impact on things like civic engagement, voting, crime, violence and trust in government.

Social entrepreneurship runs on trust. Top-down leadership has abused minority communities in Flint and around the world. That’s why everything Rx Kids does goes hand in hand with community. “We’re trying to do things in a way that restores self-determination and participatory democracy,” Hanna-Attisha says, citing a recent design retreat conducted with the participation of a mothers advisory panel. “They share their lived experiences of how hard it is to make ends meet, how hard it is to raise a family with limited resources,” she recalls.

She’s also building common cause with those she terms unlikely partners, including lawyers and CEOs. “When we break down silos,” she says, we find, ‘Oh my gosh, I had no idea this person cared about early childhood, about economic justice.’ When we make that tent bigger with partners who share our same passion, it allows us to advance this work.”

Immigrants make America healthy. Along with , Hanna-Attisha was born in another country. Her family, she notes, fled the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. “We came for the American dream, and I grew up grateful every day, but also cognizant of what bad people in power can do to vulnerable populations,” she says.

Her 2017 New York Times editorial, “” excoriated President Trump’s ban on travel from Muslim countries to the United States. Needless to say, the Covid pandemic raised awareness of—and appreciation of—immigrants working in health care. In the process, she hopes that the country will rethink its immigration policies and attitudes toward immigrants.

Reading recharges. When the pediatrician/activist/author/entrepreneur needs to recharge her batteries, she reaches for a book. “Reading is my escape,” she says. “It’s my source of knowledge that I didn’t get in school, and it’s also how I am able to see and appreciate the world. Literature and the humanities help us develop our empathy. We can step into the shoes of others.”

The page on her personal website includes books on Michigan history, Arab-Americans, the environment and the Spanish Civil War, among other subjects. Recent favorites include Matthew Desmond’s and T.J. Klune’s (two very different titles).

Young patients still give her life meaning. Despite her growing responsibilities with Rx Kids, Hanna-Attisha still sees patients once a week. “My clinical time is joy,” she says. “Hanging out with kiddos is what grounds me. It gives me the drive to do the policy stuff and the population-level stuff.”

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 91ɬ. Learn more here.

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