Callender, Clive O. 1936–
Clive O. Callender 1936–
Transplant surgeon
“Most of the highly intelligent blacks are going into other fields and that’s disappointing, but to be a doctor you don’t have to be brilliant. You have to care, be kind and you have to have common sense,” Dr. Clive O. Callender, one of the foremost transplant surgeons and the only top-rated black transplant surgeon in the United States, was quoted as saying in Black Enterprise. Director of Howard University Hospital Transplant Center in Washington, D.C., Callender is also professor and vice-chair of Howard University Hospital’s department of surgery. As a transplant surgeon, he found much resistance to organ donor programs among minorities and has since written more than 50 articles and given numerous presentations to explain organ transplantation throughout the Caribbean, Europe, and the United States.
“When commitment really counts, people can count on Dr. Clive O. Callender,” declared a Jet correspondent about the surgeon who is the only black among 18 distinguished scientists appointed to the National Organ Transplant Task Force. “He has put his whole heart and soul into re-educating Black America about an issue of growing importance—organ and tissue transplantation.”
Born on November 16, 1936, in New York City, Callender had ambitions to be a doctor from the time he was a young child. A sermon he heard while seated with his aunt in the Ebenezer Gospel Tabernacle prompted his decision to become a medical missionary. Callender recalled in Black Enterprise, “I was listening to the minister who spoke about the two greatest occupations in the world: ministering to the souls of mankind and to the bodies of mankind.”
After graduating with degrees in chemistry and physiology from Hunter College in New York in 1959, Callender entered Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1963 he graduated first in his class. Intending to specialize in internal medicine, Callender took his internship at the University of Cincinnati. He was preparing a patient for gastrointestinal surgery when he determined he wanted to change fields. “As an internist, all I could do was get the patient ready for surgery,” he related in Black Enterprise. “That wasn’t fulfilling enough, so I finished my training in surgery.”
Callender’s desire to become a medical missionary was fulfilled when he finished his residency work at Howard
At a Glance…
Born Clive Orville Callender, November 16, 1936, in New York, NY; son of Joseph and Ida Burke; married Fern Irene Marshall; children: Joseph, Ealena, Arianne. Education : Hunter College, A.B., 1959; Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN, M.D., 1963.
Transplant surgeon. University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, intern, 1963-64; Harlem Hospital, resident, 1964-65; Howard University and Freedmen’s Hospital, Washington, DC, assistant resident, 1965-66; Memorial Hospital for Cancer & Allied Diseases, assistant resident, 1966-67; Howard University and Freedmen’s Hospital, chief resident, 1968-69, instructor, 1969-70; Washington, DC General Hospital, medical officer, 1970-71; Port Harcourt General Hospital, Nigeria, consultant, 1970-71; Howard University Medical College, assistant professor, 1973-76, director of transplant center, 1974—, professor and vice-chair of department of surgery, 1982—;has held numerous workshops.
Member: American Society of Transplant Surgeons (chair of membership committee), Society of Academic Surgeons, National Kidney Foundation (president of national capital area, 1979—).
Awards: Hoffman LaRoche Award, 1961; Joseph Collins Scholarship Award, 1961-63; National Medical Association Scholarship Award, 1963; Charles Nelson Gold Medal, Meharry Medical College, 1963; Daniel Hale Williams Award, Howard University and Freedmen’s Hospital, 1969; American Cancer Society fellow, 1965-66; Hall of Fame, Hunter College Alumni, 1989.
Addresses: Office— Howard University Medical College, 2041 Georgia Avenue, Washington, DC 20060.
University Hospital. Shortly after he became an instructor in surgery at Howard, Callender was asked to join the surgery staff of Fort Harcourt General Hospital in Nigeria during the Biafran Civil War. Upon his return to the United States in 1971, he investigated transplant surgery. Receiving a transplant fellowship, Callender studied for two years under the first black transplant surgeon, Dr. Samuel Kountz, at the University of Minnesota Hospital. When he came back to Howard University in June of 1973, Callender established Howard’s transplant center. Interested in advancing transplant surgery around the globe, Callender later founded the transplant center named in his honor at St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands, in 1983.
During the 1980s, Callender became puzzled by black opposition to organ donations. His research led to several conclusions. Blacks, he felt, mistrusted the medical establishment, assuming discrimination played a role in organ distribution. Secondly, religious beliefs about maintaining the body intact for life after death also determined the attitudes of some blacks. And finally, many feared white doctors would declare them dead prematurely to obtain organs for whites.
Overall, Callender found, minorities lacked the information essential to judge the benefits of organ donations. Since Callender had noted that blacks suffer higher incidences of kidney failure and hypertension as well as lower success rates after organ transplants, he sought programs to recruit more minority donors. The surgeon observed in Jet, “Increasing the pool of Black organ donors and obtaining antibodies that better define unique antigens in Blacks, brightens the future of organ transplantation in Blacks, so that what was once a dilemma is now a national commitment.”
Funded by Dow Chemical Company, Callender and his racially integrated team composed of a doctor, a transplant recipient, a donor or a member of a donor’s family, and a person waiting for a transplant present programs at workshops. Designed to confront potential donors’ doubts, dialogue among participants outlines the difficulty and necessity of organ transplants. After the team finishes, donor cards are distributed among the audience. Callender divulged to Paul Delany in the New York Times, “The response is immediate. People sign cards pledging to donate.”
During Callender’s campaign to increase donor participation, the percentage of blacks signing donor cards rose from 7 percent in 1985 to 24 percent in 1990. The percentage of blacks who were willing to donate relatives’ organs also increased, climbing from 55 percent in 1985 to 70 percent in 1990. Acknowledged in the New York Times as “the father and leader of the effort to educate minorities and enlist more as donors,” Dr. Callender expressed in Jet that education is the key to increasing the organ donor pool. “If you take the problem to the Black community and give them an opportunity to become sensitive and give them the knowledge to open the door…they will rally behind the issue.”
Sources
Black Enterprise, October 1988.
Jet, November 2, 1987; May 15, 1989; June 19, 1989; February 5, 1990.
New York Times, November 6, 1991.
—Marjorie Burgess
Clive Orville Callender
Clive Orville Callender
Clive Callender (born 1936) is one of the foremost specialists in organ transplant medicine in the United States. The Howard University Hospital surgeon has focused much of his career on transplant medicine among minority segments of the population, along with the unique health and social issues relevant to them as potential donors.
Callender was born in New York City on November 16, 1936. As a child, he dreamed of becoming a missionary doctor as a result of one sermon he witnessed at Ebenezer Gospel Tabernacle: "I was listening to the minister who spoke about the two greatest occupations in the world: ministering to the souls of mankind and to the bodies of mankind," he told Black Enterprise in 1988. Callender enrolled in New York City's Hunter College, and had earned degrees in chemistry and physiology by 1959. From there, he entered Nashville's Meharry Medical College, a prestigious school that had long been an important training ground for African-American doctors and medical professionals. Callender graduated first in his class there in 1963.
Originally intending to practice internal medicine, Callender's first internship was at the University of Cincinnati. Yet he realized how little opportunity there was for him as an internist to actually heal patients, and so switched to surgery as his area of interest. From 1964 to 1965 he was a resident at Harlem Hospital, and then was awarded an American Cancer Society fellowship for the following academic year. That was also Callender's first year at Howard University and Freedmen's Hospital, where he was an assistant resident. Another residency at Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Disease was completed, and then Callender returned to Howard University Hospital to become chief resident in 1968. He became an instructor there the following year.
Biafran Civil War
Callender spent part of 1970 and 1971 at D.C. General Hospital as a medical officer, and then was invited to Nigeria's Port Harcourt General Hospital just as the Biafran Civil War was ending in the country; this helped Callender fulfill his childhood goal to work in an altruistic capacity. Biafra was an independent state that seceded from Nigeria in 1967, and the internal strife brought suffering, starvation, and death to the region. After his return to the United States in 1971, the young physician grew increasingly interested in transplant surgery as a specialty; only four years before, South African surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard shocked the world with his first successful human heart transplant surgery. Medical professionals were growing increasingly proficient in transplanting kidneys and livers successfully, especially with advances being made in the science of human immune response systems.
In 1971 Callender received a special postdoctoral fellowship at the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. government agency that serves as a research hub for ground breaking medical technology. He spent much of his two years at various medical centers that were making great strides in organ transplant medicine, including the University of Minnesota, where Callender studied under Dr. John Najaraian; he was also able to work with Dr. Samuel Kountz, the first African-American doctor to specialize in the field. Callender went on to the University of Pittsburgh, where he trained with Dr. Thomas Starz, a liver transplant specialist. Returning to the Washington, D.C. area in 1973, he was awarded an assistant professorship at Howard University Hospital's medical school and founded the Howard University Hospital Transplant Center. It was the first such minority-operated center in the United States. He also founded a transplant center in the Virgin Island city of St. Thomas, which bears his name.
Over the next decade, Callender strove to make his Howard University Hospital Kidney and Liver Transplant Center one of the leading sites for minority transplant medicine. Part of his work has involved research into antigens, which are carried by the donor organ into the recipient's blood system and then stimulate an immune response in the recipient; this natural way that the body rejects a foreign presence is one of the major obstacles to successful organ transplants. Callender's Transplant Center has conducted important research into antigen-matching and immunogenetics to help correct this problem. In 1983 he testified about organ donor programs and the minority community in Senate hearings on the matter.
Cultural Taboos
Still, Callender realized that perhaps the greatest obstacle in the organ-transplant field was the scarcity of donor organs, and he became increasingly aware that African Americans registered as organ donors at a far lower rate than white Americans. There were several reasons for this discrepancy, which Callender learned by conducting extensive research into the matter among the African American populace: some held fears that blacks who needed organs would be neglected in favor of white patients; there were also conflicts about organ donations because of deep-seated religious beliefs-the idea that it is disrespectful to enter or otherwise disturb a body after death; and finally, there was a concern that a white physician might be too quick to declare an African American legally dead in order to make his or her organs available for transplant. "When I first got started in this, I didn't realize what an emotional issue it was for blacks," Callender told Paul Delaney in the New York Times in 1991. "We're dealing with myths, but to the people who believe them, the myths are real."
Callender set out to solve this problem and increase minority awareness and support of organ donor programs. African Americans suffer from higher rates of kidney failure and hypertension, while in many cases a donor organ from their own ethnic group yields the best match for a minority patient. In order to take his ideas to the general public, Callender courted funding from the Dow Chemical Company for his "Take Initiative" program. For this awareness campaign, Callender led seminars in which he, a transplant recipient, a donor or member of the donor's family, and someone on a waiting list for an organ share their views with African-American audiences. Callender then passed out organ donor cards, which many enthusiastically signed. As reported in Contemporary Black Biography, he told Jet magazine, "If you take the problem to the Black community and give them an opportunity to become sensitive and give them the knowledge to open the door … they will rally behind the issue."
A Marked Gain in Donors
By 1990 Callender's efforts had yielded impressive results: there was an increase of nearly threefold in the registered number of African-American organ and tissue donors in just five years. As the leading medical professional on minority organ-transplant medicine, Callender has also been an active player in a $6 million program launched by National Institutes of Health in 1991 to found the Minority Organ Tissue Transplant Education Program (MOTTEP), a program that aims to increase the number of donors among all minority groups in the United States. He has also campaigned for an increase in federal funding for community education programs for organ donor awareness programs. From 1990 to 1991, the Bush Administration increased spending for such programs threefold, to $1.5 million, but Callender told the New York Times that more was needed. "This country spent billions of dollars to fight a war in the Persian Gulf and surely it can spare a few million for such an important task," Callender told Delaney.
In 1994, Callender spoke at the United Network for Organ Sharing symposium about the number of African Americans on waiting lists for donor kidneys, a number higher than that of other ethnic groups in the United States. Callender has argued that the antigen-matching guidelines then in place discriminated against African-Americans, forcing members of this minority group on the list for kidney transplants to wait almost twice as long as whites. Since then, the parameters for antigen-matching have been revised, and Callender has since used his prominent position to speak out for reforming the way in which available organs are allocated at the national and local levels.
Controversy in D.C.
In the spring of 1996 Callender's MOTTEP teamed with the American Medical Association and two other professional organizations to launch a campaign to increase registered organ donors in the United States; basketball star Michael Jordan served as the focal point of an advertising campaign for this. Callender has also defended the practice of using organ-preserving drugs on near-death patients, which in some cases accelerates the process of dying. In 1997 this procedure was legal in Washington, D.C., where Callender's transplant center at Howard University Hospital is located. "We're giving families the option to say 'yes' or 'no,"' Callender told Washington Post reporter Rick Weiss. "If you don't preserve, you have taken away that option." Furthermore, Callender noted that the District of Columbia city council had not passed the law in 1996 without first gleaning the opinion of local citizens through an outreach and education program.
In 1996 Callender became the Lasalle D. Leffall Professor at Howard University, named after the first African-American president of the American College of Surgeons. that same year, Callender also succeeded the actual Dr. Leffall as chair of surgery for Howard University's Medical School. He has been inducted into the Hunter College Alumni Hall of Fame, and is the author of over 70 scientific papers. He married Fern Marshall in 1968, with whom he is parent to three children: Joseph, Ealena, and Arianne.
Further Reading
Contemporary Black Biography, volume 3, Gale, 1993.
Hawkins, Walter L. African American Biographies 2: Profiles of 332 Current Men and Women, McFarland & Co., 1994.
Notable Twentieth-Century Scientists, Gale, 1995.
New York Times, November 6, 1991.
Washington Post, December 19, 1997.