America’s best weekly
Pittsburgh teens honored at 2022 SHYNE Awards Page B8
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 113 No. 32 Two Sections
AUGUST 10-16, 2022
thenewpittsburghcourier Published Weekly $1.00
Blacks ‘significantly’ less likely to receive essential procedures for heart attacks by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
If you’re Black and diagnosed with a heart attack referred to as “N-STEMI,” you’re less likely to receive two essential procedures, the New Pittsburgh Courier has learned.
COURIER EXCLUSIVE New research published in July in the Journal of the American Heart Association revealed that “significant differences” in initial heart attack diagnosis and treatment were found among Black and Hispanic adults compared to White adults. Researchers examined the health claims of more than 87,000 people diagnosed with non-ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (N-STEMI), a type of heart attack in which an artery is partially blocked and severely reduces blood flow. The investigators analyzed racial and ethnic differences in the use of two common, essential procedures: coronary angiography and percutaneous intervention (PCI). According to a release from the American Heart Association, coronary angiography is a diagnostic procedure
that uses a dye and x-rays to visualize blood flowing through the coronary arteries to determine if a blockage in one or more arteries is causing the heart attack. PCI is a minimally invasive method of threading a slim hollow tube from a blood vessel in the arm or thigh until it reaches the blockage and opening the artery by inflating a balloon at the tube’s tip. The artery may be held open with a small, permanent tube called a stent. The data came from claims made in the years 2017-2019. The data revealed that Black adults were 7 percent less likely to undergo coronary angiography and 14 percent less likely to have PCI compared to White adults in the study. “It’s pretty alarming,” Tarryn Tertulien, M.D., M.Sc., lead author of the study and a resident in internal medicine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, told the Courier in an exclusive interview, Aug. 2. The report studied those who had some type of insurance (private or Medicare Advantage). Those who were uninsured altogether were not part of the study. The study found that those who had lower annuSEE HEART ATTACKS A3
“These biases are very real and we just need to start addressing them.”
- Tarryn Tertulien, M.D., M.Sc.
A man of many talents Second Baptist Church in Homestead to hold memorial for beloved pastor by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Norma Jean Turner believes that it was legendary musician Fats Domino who performed on top of a police station that had all the young people flocking to her hometown of McDonald, Pa., 18 miles southwest of Pittsburgh. But she knows for sure that whomever was the headliner, it didn’t really matter, for she met the man who would play the starring role in her life for over 60 years. “That’s where I first met him,” Norma Jean Turner told the New Pittsburgh Courier. “Him” was Donald Page Turner. Originally from Wellsburg, W.Va., he came up to McDonald for the performance, and the rest, they say, is history. Donald Page Turner and
Norma Jean Turner later married in 1958 and moved to Canonsburg, where Rev. Turner pastored Mount Olive Baptist Church for five years. Then the couple moved closer to Pittsburgh, where Rev. Turner became pastor of Second Baptist Church in Homestead in 1971. He was the pastor there for 48 years until his retirement in 2019. “He loved people,” Norma Jean told the Courier of her late husband, “so that’s why he loved his job as being the pastor. He always wanted to be among them doing whatever they were doing; painting the building, washing it down, making the garden...he just loved people.” Reverend Turner passed away on May 29, at 11 a.m., according to his family, surSEE REV. TURNER A7
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
To subscribe, call 412-481-8302 ext. 136
THE LATE REV. DONALD TURNER, WITH WIFE, NORMA JEAN, IN THIS PHOTO FROM 2017. SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH, IN HOMESTEAD, WILL HOLD A MEMORIAL FOR REV. TURNER ON SATURDAY, AUG. 13, AT 4 P.M., AT THE CHURCH, 108 W. 12TH AVE.