
Biography
Born May 15, 1934, in East Harlem, New York, Poussaint was the seventh of eight children. He traced his desire to become a doctor in part to a bout of rheumatic fever he suffered as a child that left him hospitalized for months. Additional motivation came when his mother died of cervical cancer when he was in high school.
When Poussaint was accepted into the elite and predominantly white Stuyvesant High School, he rose to the challenges not only of rigorous academics but also of racism — dual skills that continued to serve him well while earning a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University in 1956 and an MD from Cornell University Medical College in 1960 as the only Black student in his class.
Poussaint completed a psychiatry residency at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute, where he became chief resident in psychiatry. He also earned a master’s degree in psychopharmacology at UCLA.
During the height of the civil rights movement in June 1965, Poussaint moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where he served as southern field director of the Medical Committee for Human Rights. He spent two years providing medical care to civil rights workers and helping desegregate hospitals and health care facilities throughout the South.
It was in this capacity that he participated, alongside more than 100 volunteer health care workers, in the historic 54-mile march from Selma to Montgomery, risking his life in the process of coordinating and administering medical care to protestors, many of whom were attacked and beaten while marching.
He later became a founding member of Operation PUSH (People United to Serve Humanity) and served as chair of the board of directors of PUSH for Excellence.
Poussaint moved to Boston in 1967 to direct a psychiatry program in a low-income housing development through Tufts University Medical School.
Two years later, he was recruited to HMS as associate dean for student affairs and as an associate professor of psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital. He was later promoted to professor of psychiatry. He served as a clinician at the Massachusetts Mental Health Center and Boston Children’s Hospital.
Honors and awards
In 2014, HMS honored Poussaint with a Diversity Lifetime Achievement Award.
Poussaint’s work earned a variety of awards, including the 2010 Association of American Medical Colleges’ Herbert W. Nickens Award, which honors outstanding contributions to promoting justice in medical education and health care. He won a New England Emmy award in 1997 as co-executive producer of the television special Willoughby’s Wonders, a children’s educational show about an urban soccer team, highlighting skills of teamwork, inclusion, and cooperation.
In addition to receiving numerous honorary degrees, Poussaint was named a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a life member of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Legacy
Poussaint completed an oral history interview as part of the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine exhibit Perspectives of Change: The story of civil rights, diversity, inclusion and access to education at HMS and HSDM. Researchers interested in accessing the interview files on-site can contact the Center for the History of Medicine at Countway Library.
Poussaint is survived by his wife of 32 years, Tina Young Poussaint, HMS professor of radiology and head of the Department of Radiology at Boston Children’s; son Alan; daughter Alison; sister Dolores Nethersole; and numerous nieces and nephews.