HOW THE D.E.A’s HAS UTILIZED PREDICTIVE ALGORITHMS TO UNDERMINE HEALTHCARE DELIVERY IN URBAN COMMUNITIES AND RAISING SUICIDE RATES AMONG AFRICAN AMERICANS

by l. joseph parker, md, neil anand, md et. al., republished from kevinmd.com by youarewithinthenorms.com

NORMAN J CLEMENT RPH., DDS, NORMAN L. CLEMENT PHARM-TECH, MALACHI F. MACKANDAL PHARMD, BELINDA BROWN-PARKER, IN THE SPIRIT OF JOSEPH SOLVO ESQ., INC.T. SPIRIT OF REV. IN THE SPIRIT OF WALTER R. CLEMENT BS., MS, MBA. HARVEY JENKINS MD, PH.D., IN THE SPIRIT OF C.T. VIVIAN, JELANI ZIMBABWE CLEMENT, BS., MBA., IN THE SPIRIT OF THE HON. PATRICE LUMUMBA, IN THE SPIRIT OF ERLIN CLEMENT SR., EVELYN J. CLEMENT, WALTER F. WRENN III., MD., JULIE KILLINGSWORTH, RENEE BLARE, RPH, DR. TERENCE SASAKI, MD LESLY POMPY MD., CHRISTOPHER RUSSO, MD., NANCY SEEFELDT, WILLIE GUINYARD BS., JOSEPH WEBSTER MD., MBA, BEVERLY C. PRINCE MD., FACS., NEIL ARNAND, MD.RICHARD KAUL, MD., IN THE SPIRIT OF LEROY BAYLOR, JAY K. JOSHI MD., MBA, AISHA GARDNER, ADRIENNE EDMUNDSON, ESTER HYATT PH.D., WALTER L. SMITH BS., IN THE SPIRIT OF BRAHM FISHER ESQ., MICHELE ALEXANDER MD., CUDJOE WILDING BS, MARTIN NJOKU, BS., RPH., IN THE SPIRIT OF DEBRA LYNN SHEPHERD, BERES E. MUSCHETT, STRATEGIC ADVISORS

Ukuthula (Peace, in this world of sin) – “In The Blood of Jesus Brings Us Peace,” Hlumelo’s Swansong | Cape Town Youth Choir

political and economic power is often reflected by skin color in the United States

The true definition of criminal behavior has always been problematic. Are we criminals because we break the law or have been convicted? Famous and revered people throughout history have broken the law but are seldom defined as criminals.

All the United States’ founding fathers self-admittedly committed treason against the crown, a capital offense. In contrast, others, like Stalin and Hitler, had every legal right to order the execution of millions of citizens under their laws but were often still described as criminals.

The power of this label should not be understated, as it often correlates with the amount of sympathy afforded should a citizen be wrongfully targeted or mistreated.

Two American states, South Carolina and Missouri, executed men whom most knowledgeable reviewers, including prosecutors, agreed were provably innocent.

George Junius Stinney Jr. (October 21, 1929 – June 16, 1944) was an African American boy who, at the age of 14, was convicted and then executed in June 1944, thus becoming the youngest American with an exact birth date confirmed to be both sentenced to death and executed in the 20th century.

However, every appellate and supreme court, state and federal, deemed them unworthy of the opportunity to prove innocence.

South Carolina has executed its first death row inmate in 13 years for the murder of a convenience store clerk in 1997. Khalil Divine Black Sun Allah, 46, died by lethal injection on Friday evening after the US Supreme Court refused to stop the execution and the state’s governor Henry McMaster denied clemency
Khalil Divine Black Sun Allah, 46, died by lethal injection on Friday, September 20, 2024, the evening after the US Supreme Court refused to stop the execution and the state’s governor, Henry McMaster, denied clemency.

Is it a coincidence that both these men were Black? It turns out that the odds your conviction will be overturned in a federal court if you are non-white is about 7.56 percent, about half that for white appellants in America (15 percent).

DR. DAVID LEWIS, MD: When it was actually broken down and presented to the jury, the prosecution narrative melted like an ice cube in the Arizona desert. They had no answers for an actual medical defense. We took them to the pool’s deep end, where they couldn’t swim.

However, the effect is prevalent long before anyone reaches the appeals court. There is no doubt that in many nations, including the United States, minority citizens are often the focus of police actions.

Man Faces Execution on Sept. 24 Despite Evidence of Innocence
Marcellus Williams exucuted by State of Missouri on Sept. 24 even though there is no reliable evidence proving that he committed the crime for which he was sentenced to death.
United States Department of Justice “War On Drugs” and a Long History of Corruption/ 60 minutes/Ed Bradly/2003

DOJ-D.E.A. NOW TARGETING OUR SUCCESS

@thedailyremedy

Physicians targeted by law enforcement are often misrepresented in the media! https://loom.ly/dY-bHLo #black #physician #DEA #racial #profiling #opioids

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ROLLS ROYCE

Citizens of color in the United States, by almost every measure applied, are suspected more, policed more, stopped more, searched more, arrested more, convicted more, incarcerated more, and reincarcerated more than the majority population or those with more power.

Ultimately, it always comes down to that last measure: power. Those paid to search and arrest citizens can run into problems if they target a citizen with the resources to fight back.

Since political and economic power is often reflected by skin color in the United States, who the federal government deems worthy of adequate medical care is now determined by this seemingly trivial aspect of humanity.

DAVID LEWIS A BOARD-CERTIFIED ANESTHESIOLOGIST WHOSE WIFE SEEN HERE IS A PEDIATRIC NEO-NATAL CARDIOLOGIST. BUT IN AMERICA, THEY ARE BOTH NOT PERMITTED TO HAVE NICE THINGS WITHOUT BEING CALLED DRUG PUSHERS AND DRUG DEALERS
Robert Snell of Detroit News Smear Campaign of Dr. David Lewis, MD

And while we imperfect human beings are often biased, unvetted AIs will be perfectly so. This is now reflected in which the DEA targets physicians.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force partner with federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement and public health to better facilitate information sharing through the use of investigative de-confliction tools, including the DEA Analysis and Response Tracking System (DARTS) and the De-confliction and Information Coordination Effort (DICE), as well as other information coordination systems.

Dr. Beverly Prince, MD E.N.T. (Otolaryngologist), a mother and Brilliant Head and Neck Surgeon in Harlem Village, New York, has had her entire Career Undermined and Disrupted by State and Federal Agency Data Analytic Bias

These efforts are coordinated between the DEA’s Special Operations Division, the OCDETF Fusion Center, and the El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC), to share de-identified, real-time data between public health and public safety, when feasible, to reach maximum harm reduction in communities.

ARMED D.E.A. AGENTS ATTACKED HOME OF DR. DAVID LEWIS, MD (LATER FOUND NOT GUILTY)

Task forces utilize other artificial intelligence systems, including the National Benefit Integrity Medicare Drug Integrity Contractor (NBI MEDIC) Qlarant Artificial Intelligence System, the CMS Predictive Learning Analytics Tracking Outcomes Tool (PLATO), and the National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association’s (NHCAA) Online Special Investigation Resource and Intelligence System (SIRIS).

Dr. Dralves Edwards, D.O., of Dallas, Texas demonstrates how Regulatory Racism in payments particularly undermines African American Physicians:
One of the most concerning aspects of this sordid legacy is the impact on healthcare. In merging data from public health and law enforcement sources, AI-driven systems like NBI MEDIC and CMS’s Predictive Learning Analytics Tracking Outcomes (PLATO) are not just used to identify criminals; they are also used to scrutinize doctors and patients. 

Predictive algorithms, rather than solving problems, can often entrench systemic inequalities.

In the ongoing battle against the so-called opioid epidemic, the DEA has increasingly turned to the power of artificial intelligence (AI) and predictive algorithms to identify and charge physicians accused of overprescribing opioids.

While this high-tech approach may seem like a necessary step toward regulating the medical profession, its use in poor urban communities has resulted in devastating, unintended consequences.

Anita Louise Jackson, 62, was falsely convicted of adulterating surgical devices used in more than 1400 nasal surgeries performed and was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

African American communities, in particular, are facing rising suicide rates, exacerbated by the closure of healthcare clinics and the criminalization of doctors serving these areas. Behind the statistics lies a deeper story of systemic inequality and the dangers of technology when it amplifies, rather than mitigates, existing social issues.

S. Craig Watkins @scraigwatkins @UTAustin
| I study Tech&SocialJustice, AI, & Post-COVID Society . New books: TheDigitalEdge, Don’t Knock the Hustle, Young People’s Transition to Creative Work

AI-driven crackdown that disproportionately targets physicians serving marginalized populations, further limiting access to health care

Dr. S. Craig Watkins, the Ernest A. Sharpe Centennial Professor and Executive Director of the IC² Institute at the University of Texas at Austin is at the forefront of understanding these complex dynamics.

A scholar and expert on technology’s social and behavioral impacts, Dr. Watkins leads research teams investigating how AI, data systems, and machine learning influence everything from healthcare access to mental health outcomes, particularly in marginalized communities.

Harvey Jenkins MD, Harvard Train Orthopedic Surgeon, arrested and forced to plea guilty to 29 felony lies and received no prison time.

His work sheds light on how predictive algorithms, rather than solving problems, can often entrench systemic inequalities.

The DEA’s use of AI-based predictive algorithms to monitor and prosecute doctors has disproportionately affected physicians serving low-income and minority populations.

These algorithms scan prescription patterns, patient data, and geographic factors to identify doctors who are statistically more likely to be overprescribing opioids.

While the goal is to stop bad actors from contributing to the opioid crisis, the reality is that many legitimate doctors, particularly those serving African American and low-income communities, are being targeted.

Hank Asher, founder of TLO LLC, sits for a photograph at the company’s facility in Boca Raton, Florida, U.S., on Thursday, Aug. 4, 2011. Asher is an active philanthropist, donating both his money and efforts, primarily focusing on working with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and cancer research. Photographer: Eliot J. Schechter/ Bloomberg via Getty Images
Hank Asher’s contributions to law enforcement were no less controversial. Before his involvement in data mining, Asher’s past included a stint in the Bahamas, where he was implicated in a major cocaine smuggling operation. Although he was never charged, this dark episode continued to follow him throughout his career.

In urban communities where access to health care is already limited, the closure of clinics due to DEA crackdowns is a significant blow.

HARVEY JENKINS, MD INTERVENTIONAL ORTHOPEDIC SPINE SURGEON

When doctors are charged or forced to close their practices, patients—many of whom are managing chronic pain, addiction recovery, or mental health issues—are left without medical care.

This not only deprives vulnerable individuals of necessary treatment but also forces them to seek illicit alternatives or suffer in silence.

Predictive algorithms are designed to identify patterns, but those patterns are often based on biased data. In the case of the DEA, the data used to train these algorithms reflects decades of policing that has disproportionately focused on poor and minority communities.

PROFESSOR JESSYE NORMAN MANNER OF DEATH COMPLICATIONS AFTER SPINAL SURGERY

BRAVING THROUGH HEALTHCARE INJUSTICE

As a result, doctors in these areas are more likely to be flagged as high-risk, even if their prescribing practices are appropriate for their patients’ needs. The result is an AI-driven crackdown that disproportionately targets physicians serving marginalized populations, further limiting access to health care in already underserved areas.

Late Brizuella, Felix, DO., Neurologist

Dr. Craig Watkins has explored the alignment problem in AI—how technically efficient algorithms may still be misaligned with broader social values such as equity and justice.

The DEA’s reliance on AI to target doctors in urban communities exemplifies this problem.

Rather than promoting public safety, these algorithms amplify disparities in healthcare access and contribute to a broader public health crisis. One of the most alarming consequences of these closures is the rise in suicide rates among African Americans in urban areas.

Dr. Watkins, in collaboration with the University of Texas and Cornell’s School of Medicine, has been investigating the factors behind the rising suicide rates in the U.S., particularly among young African Americans. His research explores the complex interactions between demographics, social environments, and healthcare access.

Black and Brown Doctors vs. Blue Cross Blue Shield

For many African Americans living in urban centers, mental health care is already difficult to access. The criminalization of doctors in these communities only worsens the situation. Chronic pain sufferers, those with addiction issues, and individuals with mental health challenges are left without the medical guidance they need.

This void can lead to increased feelings of hopelessness, isolation, and despair, contributing to higher rates of suicide. Without adequate health care, people are often forced to turn to illicit substances or go without pain management entirely, further deepening their struggles.

The shutdown of these clinics also exacerbates social stigma around mental health and substance use in African American communities, where seeking help can already be fraught with cultural and institutional barriers.

Dr. Watkins’ work delves deep into the unintended consequences of AI in health care, focusing on the intersection of technology, race, and mental health. Funded by the National Institutes of Health, his research explores how demographic, social, and environmental factors contribute to rising suicide rates among African Americans.

AUSA GLENN LEON

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His team is developing algorithmic models to understand these interactions better, focusing on how AI and machine learning can be used ethically to improve mental health outcomes.

@thedailyremedy

Dr. David Lewis never received any acknowledgement of his innocence from the media or any accountability from the government. #pain #opioids #DOJ #DEA #crisis #injustice #criminal #justice #reform

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RADIO SILENCE

The role of AI in health care, particularly in addressing or worsening systemic inequalities, is a central theme in Dr. Watkins’ research. His efforts aim to challenge the unchecked use of AI in high-stakes environments like health care, where decisions have life-or-death consequences.

By combining the computational with the social and ethical aspects of AI, Dr. Watkins advocates for more humane, thoughtful implementations of technology that address the needs of marginalized communities rather than contributing to their marginalization.

The tragic consequences of the DEA’s reliance on predictive algorithms to target doctors in poor, urban communities highlight a larger issue: AI must be carefully aligned with social values like fairness and equity.

PANOPTICONThe Panopticon is a machine (computer) for dissociating the see/being seen dyad: in the peripheric ring, one is totally seen, without ever seeing; in the central tower, one sees everything without ever being seen.”

As Dr. Craig Watkins’ research demonstrates, the misuse of AI can perpetuate systemic healthcare inequalities, leaving vulnerable populations even more exposed to harm. The solution is not to abandon AI but to reform its use.

As the healthcare sector increasingly turns to technology, it must prioritize transparency, fairness, and inclusion in algorithmic and artificial intelligence design.

AI can be a tool for justice—identifying gaps in care, improving access, and providing support to those most in need—but only if it is developed with a deep understanding of the social contexts in which it operates.

DR. DAVID LEWIS, MD., ROLLS ROYCE HE REBUILT AND RESTORED (VICTIM OF MACHINES CONTAINING misaligned ALGORITHMS with BIAS broader social VALUES)

The DEA’s use of predictive algorithms should serve as a cautionary tale of how technology can cause more harm than good when misaligned with human values.

By incorporating insights from experts like Dr. Watkins and his research on the intersection of AI, health care, and systemic inequality, we can create a future where technology serves to heal, rather than harm, our most vulnerable communities.

We support Rep Ayana Presley’s Compassionate Release advocacy to release, commute sentence, or grant amnesty for inmates over age 60 due to the potentially fatal effects of the pandemic Coronavirus on elderly patients in the adverse living conditions imposed in the prison environment. In this regard, we request the immediate release of Dr Khadijah Askari, an inmate at Coleman Camp, Florida, because of her age and exemplary conduct as a model inmate.

Dr. Watkins’ ongoing work illuminates how technology can help or hinder progress in the fight for racial justice and mental health equity. His focus on using AI to understand the causes of rising suicide rates, combined with his advocacy for ethical AI practices, offers a path forward for a more just and compassionate healthcare system.

In a world where the line between machine and human decision-making is increasingly blurred, scholars like Dr. Watkins remind us of the importance of keeping human values at the center of technological progress.

CARL NELSON HAS STATED: “THIS NOT NEWS, AS IT INCREASINGLY APPEARS BLACK-MEDIA HAS SEEMINGLY LOST IT WAYAND ARE GOOD ON TWO THINGS “SPORT AND ENTERTAINMENT”

In closing, during the 2022 trial of a physician serving a predominantly minority population, the prosecutor helpfully reminded the jury that “[the young Black man] had a prior criminal history … He had been in prison.”

Because criminal records are the new gold standard for determining who does or doesn’t deserve medical care, the defense attorney, clearly not in on the logic, responded, “I’ve never heard the government argue that having a criminal record would disqualify someone from receiving medical care. But I guess that’s where we are now.”

FINALLY, THIS VIDEO BELOW DEMONSTRATES D.E.A.’s CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE WITH A LICENSED TO LIE & ABUSE

A glance at DOJ press release data reveals that a whopping one-third (33 percent) of all physician prosecutions just so happen to occur in areas where 90 percent of the population is minority.

DR. GAZELLE CRAIG,DO 35 YEARS FEDERAl prison
DR. GAZELLE CRAIG,DO

Meanwhile, in areas where the minority population drops to 25 percent, physician prosecutions magically drop to a mere 1.5 percent.

It seems that doctors are 20 times more likely to be prosecuted for prescribing controlled medications if they serve a minority community. Coincidence? We doubt it.

DEA Trafficking the World in Guns. Drugs and Human beings  The pride of our hard work is diminished by being called drug dealers and pushers. Pain care is about dignity. 

MOVING THE GOALPOST BACKWARD AND FORWARD

The DEA sets arbitrary parameter according to Pharmacist Association CEO Michael Jackson in the June 2017 Conference of the Florida A&M Alumni, New Orleans   (SEE BELOW VIDEO MICHAEL JACKSON RPH, CEO FLORIDA PHARMACIST ASSOCIATION CE PROGRAM WITH THE FLORIDA A&M UNIVERSITY PHARMACIST ALUMNI JUNE 2017, NEW ORLEANS, LA, NO CLEAR GUIDELINES)

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DRUG WAR IS TOTALLY ABOUT RACE, MATHEW FOGG

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