Elijah Saunders (1934-2015)

July 26, 2023 
/ Contributed By: Lisa Roy

A doctor and two nurses stand over two seated patients in a hospital room with a small television mounted in the corner of the room

Dr. Elijah Saunders and nursing coordinator Billie Wheeler assisting stroke patients

Courtesy The Evening Sun

Dr. Elijah Saunders, M.D., was a cardiologist and expert on hypertension whose work addressed issues of race and ethnicity in healthcare.

Saunders was born in Maryland on December 9, 1934, the son of Lawrence and Lillie Saunders from Florence, South Carolina. He attended Baltimore City Public Schools and graduated from Morgan State University in 1956. In 1960, Saunders received his medical degree from the University of Maryland and completed his residency five years later, becoming the first African American cardiologist in the state.

Dr. Saunders was one of 18 founding members of the Association of Black Cardiologists, which was formed in 1974. In 1986, Saunders participated in creating the International Society of Hypertension in Blacks. He was a charter member of the American Society of Hypertension and a past Maryland High Blood Pressure Coordinating Council president.

The project “Ethnicity and Disease” was launched in 2003 as a direct result of his research on the origin and treatment of hypertension in people of color in Afro-Caribbean countries.

To make healthcare more accessible to African Americans, Dr. Saunders started the “The Barbershop Program” in 1978, training beauticians and barbers to take clients’ blood pressure and refer them for necessary treatment.

Through his medical practice, Dr. Saunders observed that African American patients’ responses to drug medications did not match his textbook training. He co-authored a book on the matter, “Contemporary Diagnosis and Management of Hypertension in African Americans,” which demonstrated the wide range in the efficacy of some blood pressure medications based on race, leading pharmaceutical companies to use more African American participants in clinical trials. In 2015, Dr. Saunders’ contributions to medicine were celebrated at the University of Maryland School of Medicine’s graduation ceremony, where he was awarded the Dean’s Distinguished Gold Medal for his work.

Saunders received the American Heart Association Award of Merit in 1979, the Louis B. Russell Award in 1998, and the Association of American Medical Colleges’ Herbert W. Nickens Award in 2011 for promoting health equity in diagnosis and treatment. In 2020, he was posthumously recognized for his contributions as the inaugural recipient of the Greater Maryland Chapter of the American Heart Association Watkins-Saunders Award.

Saunders played violin in his spare time and co-founded the “University Players Orchestra,” comprising Baltimore medical professionals who played holiday music in the hospital lobbies of Johns Hopkins and the University of Maryland Medical Center during Christmas.

He was married to Monzella Smith, with whom he had three children, and was a Christian and a founding member of the First United Church of Jesus Christ, now known as the Transformation Church of Jesus Christ in Maryland.

Dr. Elijah Saunders died on April 6, 2015, at age 80.

https://youtu.be/TjPuJRRcyW4
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Author Profile

Dr. Lisa Roy is the newly appointed Executive Director for the Colorado Department of Early Childhood. The Department will manage Colorado’s new universal preschool program, serving 4-year-olds statewide starting in the summer of 2023. The Department will also manage comprehensive programs and services for young children, families and early childhood professionals, utilizing a “one-stop shop” application process.

Dr. Roy previously served as the director of program development for the Buffett Early Childhood Institute and as the executive director of early childhood education for Denver Public Schools. She has volunteered and worked in non-profit and government roles supporting families with young children for over 30 years.

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Boards Dr. Roy has served on include: Emily Griffith Foundation, Denver Early Childhood Council, Afterschool Alliance, KIPP Colorado, Mental Health Center of Denver, Tony Grampsas Youth Crime Prevention and Intervention, and Denver Welfare Reform.
Dr. Roy’s current memberships include: National Association for the Education of Young Children, Colorado Women’s Forum, and Golden Key Society
Dr. Roy was recently honored with the Harmon Award for Early Childhood Mental Health from the Colorado Association for Infant Mental Health.
Dr. Roy has presented several times a year at local (Omaha and Nebraska for the last few years, and Denver and Colorado for more than three decades), as well as National webinars and conferences.
Dr. Roy writes for pleasure as a literary nonfiction and historical writer primarily. Dr. Roy’s writings include:
Prairie Pioneer, Essay Daily – January 31, 2022
Submit, Ouch, Revise, Resubmit, Brevity Blog – December 30, 2021
Summer of ’68: Crab Feast, The Linden Review – December 7, 2021
Various articles with Blackpast.org, Blackpast.org – January 12, 2020
Salsa Soul and Spirit Book Review, Taylor and Francis Online – January 29, 2015

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Roy, L. (2023, July 26). Elijah Saunders (1934-2015). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/dr-elijah-saunders-1934-2015/

Source of the Author's Information:

Blumenthal, R. S., Cooper, L. & Miller, M. (2015) A Tribute to Elijah Saunders, M.D., Cardiology Today https://www.healio.com/news/cardiology/20150420/a-tribute-to-elijah-saunders-md

University of Maryland Medical System (2023) https://www.umms.org/about/equity-diversity-inclusion/news/holidays/black-history-month/resources/saunders

Mensah, G. A. & Norris, K. C. (2015) Advancing Health Equity: Honoring the Legacy of Dr. Elijah B. Saunders https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4671438/

Further Reading