Michael Shadid

Michael Abraham Shadid (1882 August 13, 1966) was a Lebanese physician who founded the first medical cooperative in Elk City, Oklahoma in 1931.[1] He was the first president of the Cooperative Health Federation of America, and an advocate for cooperative health care and preventive medicine.

Michael Shadid

Early life

Shadid was born in 1882 in Marjayoun, a town in modern Lebanon then in the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate, the youngest of 12 children. He attended the American University's high school in Beirut. In 1898 he immigrated to the United States where he was a pack peddler and sold cheap jewelry and buttons door to door.

Shadid attended John Tarleton College in Stephenville, Texas in 1902 and received a degree in medicine from Washington University in St. Louis in 1907.

While in medical school, he joined the Socialist Party of America. He ran for Congress as a New Deal democrat but was defeated by Sam Massingale.

He married Adeeba Shadid and they had six children: Bess, Fred, Ethel, Alexander, Ruth, and Helen.[1]

Career

In 1923, Shadid left a successful practice in Carter, Oklahoma and settled in Elk City. He found that farmers of the region were not receiving adequate medical care and did not have a hospital they could afford. He called a meeting of his farmer patients and proposed a cooperatively owned clinic and hospital in Elk City. The Oklahoma Farmers' Union supported the measure and the hospital was opened by the Community Health Association, Inc. in August 1931. The reception from the medical community was icy. Although he had been a member of the Beckham County Medical Society for over 20 years, the society expelled him. The Oklahoma Board of Medical Examiners attempted to revoke Shadid's license, and the State Medical Association tried to get a bill passed against medical cooperatives in the Oklahoma Legislature. The bill was defeated with the help of the Oklahoma Farmers' Union.[1] The union took control of the hospital and the health plan in 1934. By 1939, Community Hospital served 15,000 farmers in the southwestern Oklahoma.

During the later years of his life, Shadid suffered from diabetes, resulting in having both legs amputated. He traveled to Russia alone in a wheelchair to speak about socialized medicine.

Later life

Shadid traveled throughout the United States and Europe and gave speeches advocating for cooperative health care. He helped launch a health co-op in Deer Park, Washington and assisted the organizing committee that led to the formation of Group Health Cooperative.[2] He helped found the Cooperative Health Federation of America in 1947. He served as the foundation's president from 1947 to 1949. In 1960 he built Hospital Haramoon in the Lebanese village where he was born.

Shadid died in Kansas on August 13, 1966, and is buried in Oklahoma City at Fairlawn Cemetery.[3] He was inducted into the Cooperative Development Foundation's Cooperative Hall of Fame in 1978.[4]

Bibliography

  • The Self-Physician: Or How to Get Well and Keep Well. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Pioneer. 1912.
  • A doctor for the people; the autobiography of the founder of America's first co-operative hospital. New York: The Vanguard press. 1939. LCCN 39027470.
  • Doctors of today and tomorrow ... New York: Cooperative League of the U.S.A. 1947.
  • Crusading Doctor: My Fight for Cooperative Medicine. Boston, Massachusetts: Meador Publishing Company. 1956. ISBN 0-8061-2344-3. LCCN 56001870.
  • Michael A. Shadid Papers, Western History Collections, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma.

References

  1. "Medicine: Cooperative Doctor". Time Magazine. 1939-05-01. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  2. Health care reformer Dr. Michael Shadid speaks to future founders of Group Health Cooperative in Seattle on August 14, 1945. History Link. 9 August 2005.
  3. Huls, Glenna L. Shadid, Michael Abraham (1882-1966). Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History & Culture.
  4. "Michael Shadid, M.D. (1882–1966)". Cooperative Hall of Fame.
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