From the Diaspora
This Ghanaian-American Medical Doctor Helped Expose A Flawed Kidney Test—And Changed Lives
When Dr. Joel Bervell walked onto the stage to accept the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award for Conviction, he did something unusual for a moment built for celebration: he used the spotlight to highlight a quiet injustice hidden inside modern medicine.
Bervell, a Peabody Award–winning Ghanaian-American physician and widely known online as the “Medical Mythbuster,” told the audience about the formula that once determined kidney function in the United States—the estimated glomerular filtration rate, or GFR. For decades, the equation included a race-based adjustment that automatically increased the kidney scores of Black patients.
That adjustment, he explained, was built on a long-standing assumption that Black bodies were inherently “stronger” or “tougher.” In reality, it meant Black patients were less likely to be diagnosed with chronic kidney disease, less likely to be referred to specialists, and less likely to be placed on the kidney transplant list in time.
“It was a single assumption,” he said, “but one that changed lives.”

A Student With a Phone and a Conviction
Bervell first learned about the GFR race adjustment in medical school in 2019. He had no institutional power—just curiosity, unease, and a smartphone. He began posting short explanatory videos online to expose how racism had been designed quietly into medical systems.
He was not trying to go viral. But he did.
Today, his social media platforms reach over 10 million people each month and have accumulated more than half a billion impressions. His work has been featured by the White House, The New York Times, NPR, Al Jazeera, Today.com, Good Morning America and many more. He hosts *The Dose* podcast with The Commonwealth Fund and created the YouTube animated series *The Doctor Is In*, which demystifies medical issues for global audiences.
Real Lives Shifted by a Single Video
In his speech, Bervell shared a story that captured the stakes behind his digital advocacy. Two years ago, a woman messaged him after showing her sister—who had waited years for a transplant—one of his videos explaining the GFR equation. Her doctor reviewed the new standards, realized the old formula had artificially lowered her priority, and moved her **five years up** the transplant list.
Bervell has heard similar stories from families across the country. “It’s a reminder,” he said, “that amplifying the truth can move change forward, and that when we speak up together, lives are transformed.”
Driving Change at Scale
The activism he helped ignite coincided with a nationwide push led by Black physicians and researchers to eliminate the race adjustment. By 2021, a new, race-free GFR equation was adopted. By 2023, kidney transplant waiting times for Black patients were being corrected nationwide.
Experts have called the shift one of the most significant equity reversals in modern U.S. medicine.
A Career Built on Advocacy, Accuracy, and Access
Long before his online fame, Bervell’s career reflected the same ethos. A graduate of Yale University, Boston University, and Washington State University’s Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, he has held leadership roles at every stage of his training. He co-founded programs to support underrepresented medical students, conducted clinical research, and published in leading journals.
Beyond medicine, he co-founded Hugs for, a global youth nonprofit that has raised more than $500,000 and organized service trips across Africa.
Recognition has followed.
- He is a TIME100 honoree (Creators),
- A 2025 Forbes 30 Under 30 awardee,
- A Smithsonian Channel “Cyclebreaker,”
- A 2025 Peabody and Webby Award winner, and
- A frequent speaker at institutions including the White House, FDA, TED, SXSW, Google, Meta, and the Congressional Black Caucus.
Mashable once called him “your next must-follow creator.” The medical establishment has been similarly emphatic: the National Medical Association awarded him its Emerging Scholar Award, its highest academic honor for a student.
A Moment That Echoes Across Medicine
In his acceptance speech, Bervell invoked Muhammad Ali’s legacy—not as an athlete, but as a man who challenged unjust systems with clarity and courage.
“Fairness isn’t abstract,” Bervell said. “It’s actionable.”
In that spirit, he continues using the tools of his time—data, storytelling, and social media—to confront inequity and expand access to accurate medical knowledge.
For the families whose transplant journeys shifted because of his videos, the impact is not symbolic. It is life-changing.
And for the global health community, his message is clear: bias isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s written quietly into the equations. But so is the opportunity to rewrite them.
From the Diaspora
Black American Expats and Investors Take Legal Action Against Portugal Over Sudden Citizenship Law Change
A legal battle is brewing in Portugal as Black American expat community prepares to take legal action against the Portuguese government over sudden changes to the country’s citizenship laws.
Reports say over 500 Golden Visa investors are involved in the upcoming legal process.
The controversy erupted after Portugal signed a new nationality law on May 3, 2026, that doubles the pathway to citizenship from 5 years to 10 years for many applicants, according to influencer and global mobility commentator American Mom Global Citizen.
In a viral Instagram video, the creator warned followers considering relocation or second residency options abroad that governments can abruptly alter immigration programs after investors have already committed substantial money and years of waiting.
“They just basically changed the rules and said, ‘Y’all got to deal with it,’” she said.
The influencer explained that many of the affected investors are Americans who entered Portugal’s Golden Visa program believing they were working toward citizenship eligibility under the previous five-year timeline.
Now, applicants allegedly face an additional five years before becoming eligible for Portuguese passports, with no transition period or grandfather clause for people already in the system.
“What they’re saying is we waited, we invested, we followed all of the rules to your game and you’ve just moved the goalpost,” she said.
The situation has sparked intense debate among Black American expats and diaspora communities who increasingly view overseas residency and dual citizenship options as part of long-term economic and political security planning.
Portugal has long been marketed as a top destination for Americans seeking relocation opportunities because of its relative affordability, healthcare access, safety rankings, and residency pathways through investment.
But critics now argue the legal dispute highlights the risks of relying too heavily on residency-by-investment programs that can change with shifting political priorities.
“This is exactly why I talk about having legal stability and legal protections and a Plan A, Plan B, Plan C in place,” the influencer said. “A visa program, a CBI program is only as good as it lasts and it’s only as good as a government plans to honor it.”
The creator also connected the Portugal dispute to her own experience in Turkey, where she said immigration policy changes affected property-based residency rights after she purchased real estate there in 2020.
According to the video, attorneys representing Golden Visa investors may pursue challenges through Portugal’s court system and potentially escalate the matter before the European Union if necessary.
One attorney involved in the matter reportedly argued that the Portuguese state benefited financially from investor participation while simultaneously delaying applications and later changing the eligibility rules.
The controversy arrives amid broader global conversations around “Plan B” migration strategies among Black Americans, particularly families seeking international options tied to economic mobility, education, healthcare access, or concerns about political instability in the United States.
Social media discussions following the video reflected growing anxiety among aspiring expats who fear that citizenship-by-investment and residency programs across Europe could become increasingly restrictive.
Despite the backlash, the influencer urged viewers not to completely abandon Portugal but to approach international residency planning with caution and legal guidance.
“If you had Portugal on your list, this doesn’t mean walk away,” she said, “but it does mean go in with eyes wide open.”
From the Diaspora
Ghana High Commissioner Assures UK Scholarship Students of Structured Payment Plan to Clear £32 Million Debt
London, United Kingdom – Ghana’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Zita Sabah Benson, has reassured Ghanaian students on government scholarships that a structured payment plan is being implemented to settle outstanding tuition fees and stipends, following the recent release of first-quarter funds by the Ghana Scholarships Secretariat.
The assurance was given during a meeting with student representatives on April 16, 2026, after the Secretariat disbursed funds aimed at addressing an estimated £32 million debt. The timely release helped avert a planned protest scheduled for April 17.
Students had earlier threatened to demonstrate over prolonged delays, with some reporting unpaid stipends for periods ranging from 15 to 40 months. Many faced financial hardship, including warnings from universities and potential immigration issues due to unpaid tuition and missing renewal letters.
High Commissioner Benson clarified that the fund release was part of the Secretariat’s regular quarterly schedule and not a reaction to the protest threat. She emphasised the government’s commitment to establishing a more predictable and sustainable payment mechanism to prevent future disruptions.
The Ghana Mission in the UK has also begun engaging with individuals, churches, and Ghanaian organisations to provide interim support for affected students while discussions continue with authorities in Accra for a lasting resolution.
Students had raised concerns about new scholarships being awarded to beneficiaries in countries such as Canada, the United States, Germany, and China, while longstanding obligations to UK-based scholars remained unresolved.
The High Commissioner’s intervention is seen as a positive step toward restoring confidence and ensuring Ghanaian scholars can focus on their studies without financial distress.
From the Diaspora
Fresh Allegations Emerge in 2015 Death of Scottish Woman Married to Ghanaian Prophet
Accra, Ghana – A new BBC documentary has cast fresh doubt on the 2015 death of Scottish national Charmain Speirs, who was found dead in a hotel bathroom in Ghana just months after marrying Ghanaian prophet Eric Adusah, prompting renewed calls from her family for a full investigation.
Speirs, aged 41 at the time, died under circumstances that have long troubled her relatives.
The BBC report, aired recently, uncovers serious allegations against Adusah, including claims that he used multiple identities.
In Ghana, he is known as Eric Adu Brefo, while in the United States (Maryland), he reportedly goes by Eric Isaiah Kusi Boateng.
Former partners have also alleged he used different names and ages across relationships.
Charmain’s 19-year-old son, Isaac, told the documentary that Adusah was physically and psychologically abusive toward both him and his mother.
He claimed Adusah once punched his mother in the face and exerted extreme control over her life, including her phone, money, clothes, and eating habits. Charmain’s mother, Linda, said she noticed bald patches on her daughter’s scalp, which Charmain attributed to Adusah pulling her hair.
The documentary also raised questions about an alibi Adusah reportedly gave police, claiming he left the hotel during the night to meet a reverend in Accra at 6 am — an account the reverend allegedly did not confirm.
Charmain Speirs’ family has called for justice and urged Ghanaian authorities to reopen the case in light of the new evidence and allegations presented in the BBC investigation.
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