Ginari Gibb Price is a physician and psychiatrist who has been in practice for ten years. She is a graduate of Clark Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia, where she received her Bachelor of Science degree in Biology in 1996, and of the Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, where she received her medical degree.
As she knows, the Meharry Medical college is one of the oldest and largest black academic medical schools in the United States. Meharry is designed to train doctors, dentists, researchers, and other health care professionals. The school was founded in 1976 and was originally part of Central Tennessee College, and was the first medical school in the South for African American students. Meharry became its own school in 1915, and is about to celebrate its centennial year.
Ginari Gibb Price is proud to have attended Meharry, which was founded a mere eleven years after the end of the Civil War. The school's basic philosophy is that by eliminating health disparities through research and applied science, the graduates of its schools can alleviate suffering. It is a faith-based school whose motto is, "Worship of God Through Service to Mankind."
Ginari Gibb knows that she was fortunate to gain admittance to Meharry Medical School. Competition to get in is fierce; the school admits just 105 applicants to its medical school and thirty residents every year. After receiving her medical degree she went on to do an Internship in Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, also in Nashville, and her residency in psychiatry at the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta.
As she knows, the Meharry Medical college is one of the oldest and largest black academic medical schools in the United States. Meharry is designed to train doctors, dentists, researchers, and other health care professionals. The school was founded in 1976 and was originally part of Central Tennessee College, and was the first medical school in the South for African American students. Meharry became its own school in 1915, and is about to celebrate its centennial year.
Ginari Gibb Price is proud to have attended Meharry, which was founded a mere eleven years after the end of the Civil War. The school's basic philosophy is that by eliminating health disparities through research and applied science, the graduates of its schools can alleviate suffering. It is a faith-based school whose motto is, "Worship of God Through Service to Mankind."
Ginari Gibb knows that she was fortunate to gain admittance to Meharry Medical School. Competition to get in is fierce; the school admits just 105 applicants to its medical school and thirty residents every year. After receiving her medical degree she went on to do an Internship in Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, also in Nashville, and her residency in psychiatry at the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta.