Duke Trent Semans Center, Durham, NC, April 18, 2018
• David Barton Smith is Research Professor at the Dornsife School of Public Health School at Drexel University and Professor Emeritus in Health Administration at Temple. He is the author of The Power to Heal: Civil Rights, Medicare, and the Struggle to Transform America's Health Care System, on which the documentary is based. Dr. Smith assisted in its production.
• C. Eileen Watts Welch is Executive Director of the Durham Colored Library, Inc., founded by Dr. Aaron McDuffie Moore in 1918. She is the daughter of Charles D. Watts, Sr., MD (1917-2004)
• Brenda Armstrong, MD, is Senior Associate Dean for Student Diversity, Recruitment & Retention, Duke School of Medicine and appears in the documentary. She is the daughter of Wiley "Army" Armstrong, M.D. (1931-1981)
• Jeffrey Baker, Professor of Pediatrics and History, and Director, Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities & History of Medicine moderated the session.
Drs. Charles Watts and Wiley Armstrong played central roles in the movement to desegregate hospitals in North Carolina and nationally.
Timepoints for informal audio recording created by Victor Schoenbach:
Jeffrey Baker begins his welcome and overview at 0:30
Documentary Power to Heal starts at 5:25 and ends at 1:00:45
Jeffrey Baker introduces the panel portion of the program at 1:01:00
David Barton Smith begins at 1:01:50
Eileen Watts Welch begins at 1:09:00
Brenda Armstrong begins at 1:22:45 and concludes at 1:38
Eileen Watts Welch speaks for several more minutes, ending at 1:41
Jeffrey Baker concludes the panel, which ends at 1:42.