Editor's note: Dr. Bassett's bio was updated in January 2026.
We all know that having access to wealth is crucial to leading healthier, more prosperous lives. Yet the enduring legacy of slavery in America has created vast disparities in wealth and opportunity for Black people. Can reparations for this destructive legacy serve as an important step toward supporting the health and healing of Black people in America?
I turned to Mary T. Bassett, M.D., to discuss this question. Dr. Bassett is an American physician and public health researcher, who directed the Harvard FXB Center for Health and Human Rights and, prior to that, served as New York State's health commissioner. Her answer to my question is that she believes reparations can help.
To achieve health equity, “what really needs fixing is access to resources,” she wrote in a thought-provoking 2021 New England Journal of Medicine Perspective with Sandro Galea, M.D. And that’s where reparations come in. By closing the racial wealth gap, reparations can help close the gap in racial health outcomes and life expectancy, which, for Dr. Bassett, is the ultimate goal.
I recently spoke with Dr. Bassett about the RWJF-funded research project at the FXB Center that she is leading, Making the Public Health Case for Reparations, which explores Black reparations as a public health strategy for achieving health equity. This is the first installment of our two-part conversation.
You’re a leading national thinker on the intersection of race, wealth, and health, but you haven’t previously focused on reparations and, more specifically, exploring the public health case for this type of approach. What led you to undertake this project, Making the Public Health Case for Reparations?
Dr. Bassett: First, the idea of reparations is not new. It’s literally centuries old, but it returned to public awareness only 10 years ago when Ta-Nehisi Coates published an article in The Atlantic. Obviously, I had heard of reparations, and, as I trained in medicine, I witnessed vast racial inequities in health.
At the time of that article, though, I considered reparations a sort of fringe idea—morally sound but politically impossible, and therefore not worth pursuing. Only recently did I come to the idea that reparations are important to public health.
I’ve been thinking about the health of Black people for a long time. Since colonial times, Black people have been sicker and died younger than White people. Yes, we’ve made progress, but the gap persists, and it is much too large. And, of course, the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted how fragile these gains are.
Whatever has been done is not enough. We must be bolder if we want to save lives. People think of reparations as a political project. I’d like to think of them more as a humanitarian effort important to saving lives.