Crystal R. Emery’s documentary The Deadliest Disease in America to premiere at NYC’s Cinema Village Sept. 10

Opening this week at New York City’s Cinema Village (22 East 12th Street) on September 10 and running through September 16 is Crystal R. Emery’s documentary The Deadliest Disease in America.

What makes COVID-19 even deadlier? Racism in medicine. Crystal R. Emery’s documentary The Deadliest Disease in America traces the history of racism in American health care from the brutal medical experimentation forced upon enslaved peoples to the modern-day inequity in fatality rates and access to treatment experienced by people of color during the pandemic. The timely film is written, directed and produced by Emery — a Connecticut filmmaker and American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS IF/THEN Ambassador, who is also triumphing over quadriplegia and two serious diseases.

Ten years in the making, The Deadliest Disease in America presents the sobering personal stories of patients who have been victimized by health care inequities, including Emery, who shares her own experiences as a quadriplegic African American woman. Lending their expertise to the film by way of commentary are Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, MD, MHS, senior adviser to the White House COVID-19 Response Team; Dr. Camara Jones, MD, MPH, PhD, epidemiologist, past president of American Public Health Association; Dr. Bert Petersen, MD, Director of Division of Breast Surgery at SBH Health System; Dr. Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, surgeon general of the United States; and others.

Emery is also the director of Black Women in Medicine, a documentary that reached more than 14 million people worldwide and the You Can’t Be What You Don’t See Virtual Reality Experience. She is the CEO & founder of URU, The Right to Be, Inc., the New Haven-based multimedia nonprofit dedicated to education through the arts, which is presenting the screening.

“I have always endeavored to tell stories that move us all toward a more equitable and humane world,” says Emery, who has Charcot-Marie-Tooth, a degenerative nerve disease, and diabetes. “It is vital that we call on our elected officials to create policy that uproots the systemic racism that is standing in the way of a health care system and a society that are equal for all.”

ABOUT CRYSTAL R. EMERY:

Crystal R. Emery is a dynamic producer, author and filmmaker known for producing socially conscious storytelling on a variety of platforms that celebrate the triumph of the human spirit, a cause close to her heart as a quadriplegic who works to ensure that physical limitations don’t define her potential. A graduate of the University of Connecticut, Emery began her career in entertainment working with acclaimed theater director Lloyd Richards and film industry titan Bill Duke and later went on to receive her master’s degree in Media Studies from The New School for Public Engagement. Her previous work includes the documentary Black Women in Medicine.

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