November 16, 2021

Strengthening its commitment to the Austin community, Texas Children’s Pediatrics is thrilled to announce the opening of a new Community Health Center in Windsor Park. The new site joins 12 other Texas Children’s locations in Central Texas providing trusted, high-quality medical services to children and adolescents.

Texas Children’s Pediatrics Windsor Park will be named the Jodie Lee Jiles Community Health Center, to honor Jodie Lee Jiles’ extraordinary lifelong advocacy for underserved populations. Jiles, a member of The University of Texas System Board of Regents and director of business development at Transwestern, has served on the Texas Children’s Board of Trustees since 2002, and has been a Texas Children’s Emeritus Trustee since 2019. His passion for giving back and strong ties to Austin – as a graduate of The University of Texas at Austin – are a few of the many reasons Texas Children’s chose to dedicate the site in his honor.

“I am incredibly humbled and honored by this recognition from Texas Children’s,” said Jiles. “I am deeply moved by the organization’s mission and pleased that the new facility will provide quality health care to a traditionally underserved community.”

Regardless of a family’s financial situation the Jodie Lee Jiles Community Health Center will provide primary health care services to children from birth to age 18. The new location also offers the opportunity to develop a long-term relationship with board-certified pediatricians, Dr. Ana Avalos and Dr. Shauna Butler.

“We’re excited about the ability to serve even more families in the Austin community,” said Dan Gollins, president of Texas Children’s Pediatrics and Texas Children’s Urgent Care. “We hope the clinic will be a great representation of Mr. Jiles’ passion for reaching every child in the community, ensuring they have the resources needed for a healthy future.”

“My dream has always been that every child in America and especially in Texas has access to preventative care, primary care and hospitalization when necessary,” said Mark A. Wallace, president and CEO of Texas Children’s Hospital. “I’m happy to say that this dream is coming true through the Jodie Lee Jiles Community Health Center and because of people like Jodie who never stop advocating for what is right. We are thrilled to name the Windsor Park facility in his honor.”

Texas Children’s Hospital is also constructing a $485 million top-tier, freestanding children and women’s hospital in North Austin, set to open in February 2024. Please stay tuned for available positions as our new hospital gets under development. To learn more visit our Austin Expansion site on Connect: https://texaschildrens.sharepoint.com/sites/Austin

Following his dream to become a security officer when he grows up, Devarjaye Daniel was sworn in as an Honorary Security Officer by Texas Children’s Security Department. During his recognition, he received a certificate, badge as well as a uniform.

Devarjaye, often known as “Turtle” in honor of his favorite Ninja Turtles, is a patient at Texas Children’s Cancer and Hematology Center who was diagnosed with a brain tumor called ependymoma. After his tumor came back despite receiving the best available treatments, Devarjaye went on to participate in a genomic sequencing study, TX KidsCanSeq, which identified a rare and unique genetic change within his tumor. This resulted in a precision oncology strategy where Devarjaye can now take oral medication to control his tumor.

His visits are known to be filled with his jokes, laughter, and desire to serve others; his honor as a junior officer tracks right in line with his desire to contribute to his community.

Leslie Morris shares the importance of leveraging online patient educational resources to help nurses connect with patients and families so they can make informed health care decisions. Read more

Structural racism is a system in which public policies and institutional practices work to influence, perpetuate, and reinforce racial inequities. Structural racism is not a new concept, however. Current events within the US have brought to light a deep-rooted issue that has been affecting the country since it was formed. Structural racism impacts social, economic, and political systems that were built to serve and benefit us. There have been many instances in history where racism has impacted our systems:

In health care

Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis. Conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service, the purpose of this study was to observe untreated syphilis in 600 low-income Black men. They were promised free healthcare and consultation services. When penicillin became the standard treatment for syphilis, researchers withheld knowledge of this treatment from the participants. These men were taken advantage of and deceived into participating in a study that had no intentions of providing a diagnosis, treatment, or cure, due to promise of free healthcare services. Researchers employed discriminatory selection and unethical treatment of subjects – based on men’s race and income status – to advance their science, with little care for the health and well-being of their vulnerable participants.

This study is also commonly documented as the beginnings of Black and African-American people’s distrust in the health care system, and part of the reason why minority individuals are reluctant to seek healthcare services or trust their healthcare providers. And to this day, Black men and women face higher risks of chronic illness, infection, and injuries compared to their White counterparts.

In the economy

“Redlining.” Established in the 1930s, redlining was once used by banks, the real estate industry, and various federal government agencies. Lenders and the federal government outlined on a map (in red) the neighborhoods where people of color lived. If you lived inside the red lines, your loans were considered high-risk and banks were less likely to give loans or invest, or you were offered higher interest rates for lending – all leading to higher prices for individuals of color, leaving them at an economic disadvantage. Lasting impacts of redlining can still be seen today: Black people remain disproportionately in debt, have reduced wealth in the minority population as a whole, and are less likely to own property or other assets when compared to their White counterparts. There have since been legislation efforts to counter the impact of historical redlining, such as the Fair Housing Act (1968), to prohibit discrimination in the purchase, sale, rental, or financing of housing and the Community Reinvestment Act (1977) to encourage banks to meet the credit needs of moderate to low income neighborhoods.

In politics

Voting. The electoral college, established within the Constitution, is a system in which each state is granted two senators and a certain number of representatives in Congress to represent their vote. Because the Constitution gives every state two senators, rural states which tend to be whiter and less populated, end up with a greater representation in the Electoral College than more populated and more demographically diverse states (for example: Wyoming has 580,000 and California has 39.5 million people, but each state has two senators).

Similar disparities exist when considering congressional districts, as well. Every 10 years, voting district boundaries are redrawn and must have populations roughly equal to one another. You may have heard the term gerrymandering – it’s the drawing of boundaries within states that gives one political party an unfair advantage over another. An example of this could be splitting the congressional district to separate Black voters into different districts, splitting their vote intentionally so that the majority vote within their district is unlikely to be in their favor.

In education

The school-to-prison pipeline. Researchers and scholars have explored links between race, behavior, and suspension rates and there is no evidence that Black students misbehave at higher rates than their white counterparts. Disciplinary records for white students often note objective behavioral offenses such as vandalism or obscene language, while disciplinary records for Black students are more likely to be noted for subjective offenses such as disrespect, insubordination, or disorderly conduct. Starting at an early age, Black children are also more commonly disciplined, suspended and taken out of school, and placed into the juvenile justice system. A preschool study noted that while Black children only make up 18 percent of the preschool population, 48 percent of preschool children suspended more than once are Black. There is a disproportionate number of Black students taken out of the education system and placed into the justice system, showing that racial disparities and discriminatory practices are still at play in the education system to this day.

In the criminal system

U.S. Prisons: Our nation’s prisons are disproportionately filled with Black men and women. The 13th amendment states that “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” Shortly after the ratification of the 13th amendment, Jim Crow laws, a set of laws legalizing racial discrimination, were enacted. Jim Crow laws served to enable decision makers to essentially re-enslave Black people on the basis of what they deemed as crimes. Black Codes (part of Jim Crow laws) were strict local and state laws that detailed when, where, and how formerly enslaved people could work and for how much pay. These codes worked in conjunction with labor camps for the incarcerated, where prisoners were treated as enslaved people. Decades later, the Crime Bill of 1994 provided funding for prisons, encouraging mass incarceration, and included provisions to more severely punish justice-involved youth (further reinforcing the school-to-prison pipeline). These structures within the criminal system have worked to establish incarceration, crime, and punishment as a profitable industry. In the present day, 33% percent of US prisoners are Black, compared to their representation as 12 percent of the general population, while white individuals are 30 percent of prisoners and 63 percent of the general population.

These are just a few examples, out of many, of how our social, economic, and political structures have policies and practices in place that continually disadvantage Black individuals and their communities. We are fortunate to live in a time where information has become more transparent and available; we have come a long way in reversing discriminatory policies, but there is plenty of work left to do. The first step to creating change is to raise awareness about the ways in which public policies and practices can create and maintain inequities along racial lines.

November 15, 2021

First Lady Dr Jill Biden, Congresswoman Sheila Jackson and US Surgeon General Dr Vivek Murthy visited Texas Children’s as part of an initiative to encourage kids to get shots. Read more

November 11, 2021

Dr Ananth Annapragada, vice chief of Research in the Edward B Singleton Department of Radiology, professor of Radiology and Obstetrics & Gynecology and program director of Basic Science Research at Texas Children’s Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine, has been named as a fellow of the National Academy of Inventors.

Annapragada is one of 175 notable academic inventors to receive this honor. His election was announced at the end of 2020 and he was recently honored during the 10th Annual NAI Meeting in Tampa, Florida.

Among his many accolades, Annapragada is also a member of the Dan L. Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center, a fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineers and a standing member of the NIH Nanotechnology (NANO) Study Section. His research primarily focuses on the development of novel technologies to address driving biological and medical questions. The innovative technologies he and his team develop include imaging for various cancers and Alzheimer’s disease, 3D Bioprinting and computational biology such as artificial intelligence and natural language processing.

Annapragada holds several patents, including 15 in the United States and nearly 100 worldwide with the majority of them in next generation imaging technologies, CT vascular imaging and MR molecular imaging.

The NAI Fellows Program highlights academic inventors who have demonstrated a spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on the quality of life, economic development, and the welfare of society. Election to NAI Fellow is the highest professional distinction accorded solely to academic inventors.

In honor of Veteran’s Day, we want to recognize all the brave individuals in our Texas Children’s family for their service.