Travel & Tours

Close this content Atlanta Black Star ‘Never Seen a Black Fetus Illustrated

Niara Savage
Sat, December 18, 2021, 10:13 PM·3 min read
Chidiebere Ibe spent the last year learning how to create medical illustrations showing Black bodies. Earlier this month, his illustration of a Black fetus in the womb went viral.

“I wasn’t expecting it to go viral,” Ibe, an aspiring pediatric neurosurgeon, told NBC News. The 25-year-old from Nigeria, who has a chemistry degree from the University of Uyo in Nigeria, is set to enter Kyiv Medical University in Ukraine in January.

Medical illustrator Chidiebere Ibe creates illustrations featuring Black bodies. Photo: Chidiebere Ibe/ Twitter
Medical illustrator Chidiebere Ibe creates illustrations featuring Black bodies. Photo: Chidiebere Ibe/ Twitter
Ibe’s illustrations went viral after a Twitter user shared saome of his work.

“I’ve literally never seen a Black foetus illustrate before, ever,” the user wrote. The tweet garnered nearely 50,000 retweets and more than 300,000 likes.

This content is not available due to your privacy preferences.
Update your settings here to see it.
Ibe is also the creative director and chief medical illustrator of the Journal of Global Neurosurgery. He said he first began interested in creating medical illustrations after noticing illustrations he saw while working with the Association of Future African Neurosurgeons didn’t depict Black skin. He also identifies himself as the only Nigerian medical illustrator.

Ibe’s website features anatomical illustrations and depictions of medical conditions using Black bodies.

One illustration features a Black person with vitiligo.

Chidiebere Ibe
Chidiebere Ibe
Another illustration features the steps of fetal myelomeningocele surgery.

Chidiebere Ibe
Chidiebere Ibe
Medical professionals praised Ibe’s work on social media. “We need diversity in our medical textbooks and patient resources,” wrote Prof Kamlesh Khunti, a diabetes and vascular medicine specialist in the U.K.

Update your settings here to see it.
“Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people. On my LinkedIn, on my Twitter, on my Instagram, I read the comments and they really touched me. I was crying,” Ibe told NBC News. “It was amazing to see how good people felt about it. People could see themselves in the drawing.”

Some doctors attribute poorer medical outcomes experience by Black patients to a lack of diverse illustrations in textbooks.

An analysis of medical textbooks by a physician at the University of Pennsylvania found that between 4 percent and 18 percent of images showed dark skin.

SOYRCE : Tahoo

 

site_map