Arkansas Minority Health Commission

Arkansas minority health commission ends diversity scholarship following lawsuit

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

Quinyatta Mumford credits an Arkansas Minority Health Commission scholarship with affording her the opportunity to finish her doctorate in public health with less stress.

The single mother of three will graduate from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences next week and was disheartened to learn the Minority Health Workforce Diversity Scholarship is being discontinued as part of a lawsuit settlement.

“We already know that minorities are underrepresented across health care and in public health, so if we take away the ability to incentivize those that are typically marginalized, then it’s going to make it very difficult to entice people, not only to go into the field, but to entice people to come to Arkansas,” she said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-05-12/arkansas-minority-health-commission-ends-diversity-scholarship-following-lawsuit

Jenny Kane/AP

Masks hang from an IV pole at a hospital.

Austin Porter, DrPH, MPH, Honored by Arkansas Minority Health Commission

By Kev' Moye

Austin Porter, DrPH, MPH, an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health, has tirelessly worked to help Arkansas’ minority communities get pertinent information about COVID-19.

For his dedication, the Arkansas Minority Health Commission honored Porter with the Governor’s Health Policy award during its 2022 Biennial Health Summit.

The awardee is chosen by the governor and reflects someone who has had a tremendous impact on the health and healthcare of minority Arkansans through public policy.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/06/03/austin-porter-drph-mph-honored-by-arkansas-minority-health-commission/