Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HR800 Enrolled / Bill

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                    H.R. No. 800


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, Dr. Edith Irby Jones has devoted her life to serving
 others, and the achievements of this trailblazing physician, civil
 rights advocate, and humanitarian are truly deserving of
 recognition; and
 WHEREAS, Born in 1927 to an Arkansas sharecropper and a
 domestic worker, Dr. Jones was inspired to become a physician after
 her older sister died during a typhoid epidemic in the 1930s; she
 realized then that medical care was essential to the survival of
 sick children and that poverty adversely affected the ability of
 many families, including her own, to pay for lifesaving treatment;
 and
 WHEREAS, Dr. Jones's overwhelming desire to prevent similar
 tragedies eventually led her to the University of Arkansas College
 of Medicine, where she became the first African American woman to be
 admitted; she later became the first African American woman
 resident at Baylor College of Medicine and the first female elected
 president of the National Medical Association; and
 WHEREAS, After earning her degree in 1952, Dr. Jones
 established a successful career in Arkansas; she also took up the
 cause of civil rights and worked with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
 and other leaders of the movement; as a member of the "Freedom
 Four," she traveled the Deep South, speaking at homes and churches,
 urging people to join the struggle for justice and equality; and
 WHEREAS, In 1962, Dr. Jones set up a private practice in
 Houston's Third Ward, a practice she maintained for six decades;
 later in the 1960s, she joined other African American physicians in
 founding Mercy Hospital, which served impoverished patients in the
 southeast part of the city; during the course of her career,
 Dr. Jones held privileges at a number of Houston hospitals, served
 as chief of staff at Riverside General Hospital, and served as a
 clinical assistant professor of medicine at Baylor College of
 Medicine and at The University of Texas Health Science Center at
 Houston; she has also established medical clinics in Haiti and
 Mexico and consulted on health care in numerous other countries;
 and
 WHEREAS, Admired and respected by her peers, Dr. Jones has
 received many prestigious accolades; the American Society of
 Internal Medicine named her Internist of the Year in 1988, and in
 2001, she was presented with the Oscar E. Edwards Memorial Award for
 Volunteerism and Community Service by the ASIM and the American
 College of Physicians; she has been inducted into the Hall of Fame
 at the University of Arkansas College of Medicine, and she is the
 recipient of honorary doctoral degrees from Missouri Valley
 College, Mary Holmes College, Lindenwood University, and Knoxville
 College; the City of Houston honored her in 1986 with Edith Irby
 Jones Day, and the former Southeast Memorial Hospital named its
 ambulatory center in her honor; a charter member of Physicians for
 Human Rights, Dr. Jones was nominated as a Local Legend by U.S.
 Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, in conjunction with a National
 Library of Medicine program highlighting women who have made
 enduring contributions to the medical profession; and
 WHEREAS, Dr. Edith Jones is a skilled and compassionate
 healer who demonstrated exemplary courage in breaking through
 racial and gender barriers, and her unwavering commitment to
 providing health care to those in need has had a positive impact on
 the lives of countless individuals; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 83rd Texas
 Legislature hereby commend Dr. Edith Irby Jones for her exceptional
 contributions to medicine and the advancement of racial equality
 and extend to her sincere best wishes for the future; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be
 prepared for Dr. Jones as an expression of high regard by the Texas
 House of Representatives.
 Miles
 ______________________________
 Speaker of the House
 I certify that H.R. No. 800 was adopted by the House on March
 27, 2013, by a non-record vote.
 ______________________________
 Chief Clerk of the House