Anne Brooks

Anne Brooks D.O. (born 1936) is an American a Roman Catholic nun and osteopathic physician who is CEO of Tutwiler Clinic, a non-profit entity in Tutwiler, Mississippi. Located in Tallahatchie County, it is in the Mississippi Delta.[1] Tutwiler Clinic provides health services to the poor, medically under-served, largely African-American community.[2]

Early years

Anne Brooks was born in Washington, D.C. in 1938. She was an only child; her mother became alcoholic and her father was a Navy captain.[1] When she was 10, her parents divorced. Because of his tours at sea, her father sent her to a Catholic boarding school in Key West, Florida.[1] At the age of 11, Brooks decided to become a nun.[1]

Brooks became a Roman Catholic nun of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary in 1955 at the age of 17.[1][3] That same year, Brooks was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis.[3] She was told that she would be on crutches or in a wheelchair the rest of her life.[1] She attended Barry University in Miami, Florida and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in elementary education.[1]

She started her career teaching at Catholic elementary parochial schools in Florida. She also volunteered at drug rehabilitation clinics and abused women centers, among other places.[1]

Medical school

While volunteering at a free clinic in 1972, she met Dr. John Upledger, who treated her for her arthritis.[1][3] Inspired by Dr. Upledger, and with his encouragement, at the age of 40 Brooks started medical school at Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, completing her program in 1982.[1][4]

During her fourth year of medical studies, Brooks took a month off and traveled to Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, and Mississippi. She said about this travel, "there were a couple of things I wanted to know. One of them was how as a nun, with a vow of poverty, how do I run a practice?"[4]

After seeing much rural poverty, she returned to Michigan and wrote letters to towns in Mississippi that might need a doctor.[4] Tutwiler was the only town that answered Brooks.[4] Brooks moved to Tutwiler and, in the summer of 1983, she opened the Tutwiler Medical Clinic.[2]

Tutwiler Clinic

The clinic accepts all patients, regardless of their ability to pay.[1] The clinic does not have a fixed budget and more than 75% of its operating funds come from individual donations.[5] The clinic provides medical, counseling, dental, optical, podiatry, education, and outreach services.[5]

Over two thirds of the clinic's patients do not have any type of public or private insurance coverage. The median household income in the county is $18,800 per year.[5] Seventy percent of patients do not have any way of paying for their care.[6]

Other

From 2000-02, Brooks served as Chief of Staff at Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center, a 195-bed hospital in Clarksdale, Mississippi.[7]

Awards

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Bill Shaw, "Sister Anne Brooks, Doctor and Nun, Practices Without Preaching to the Poor", People magazine, Vol. 27, No. 12, 23 March 1987, retrieved on March 8, 2012
  2. 1 2 "Sister Anne Brooks Marks 20 Years As a Doctor", Catholic Online, 3 June 2003, accessed 27 December 2015
  3. 1 2 3 Donald C. Carlson and Erin N. Syers, Journal of the Student National Medical Association, 17 September 2010, retrieved on March 8, 2012, "I am SNMA: Sister Anne Brooks, D.O."
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Sister Anne Brooks", Spartan Sagas, Michigan State University, retrieved on March 8, 2012
  5. 1 2 3 Tutwiler Clinic, retrieved on March 8, 2012, at "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
  6. Saul Gonzalez, "Mississippi Delta Health Care", Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, PBS, September 24 2010; retrieved on March 8, 2012
  7. 1 2 3 Mississippi Legislature House Resolution 77 (2005); retrieved March 8, 2012.
  8. Pat Grauer, "Alumni Profile," Michigan State University, retrieved on March 8, 2012 "Sister Anne Brooks, Blooming Where She's Planted" Archived 6 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "Sister Anne Brooks Receives Grant for On-Going Work in Mississippi Delta" Archived 22 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine., Mississippi Catholic, September 18, 2009; retrieved March 9, 2012.
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