The Genius of Black People
Created by Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III, TheHub.news presents its Black History Month series celebrating the genius of Black people—stories of courage, faith and creativity forged in struggle. Inspired by ancestors like Walter Francis White, this series honors sacred memory and lifts up the divine brilliance shaping justice and resilience today.
Dr. Patricia Bath (November 4, 1942 – May 30, 2019) was a visionary physician, inventor, and public health advocate whose work revolutionized ophthalmology while advancing equity in medical care. Born in Harlem in 1942, Dr. Bath demonstrated early academic brilliance and a commitment to service that would define her life’s work. Her educational journey laid a powerful foundation for innovation at the intersection of science and justice.
Dr. Bath earned her undergraduate degree from Hunter College, where she excelled in science and research. She went on to receive her medical degree from Howard University College of Medicine (now Howard University College of Medicine), an HBCU that shaped her understanding of medicine as both clinical practice and social responsibility. She completed her internship at Harlem Hospital Center, followed by ophthalmology residency training at Columbia University, becoming the first Black woman to complete an ophthalmology residency.
Dr. Bath joined the faculty at UCLA, where she became the first Black woman physician on staff at the Jules Stein Eye Institute. There, she identified stark racial and economic disparities in preventable blindness, prompting her to co-found the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness and pioneer community ophthalmology—a public health approach that delivers eye care to underserved communities.
Dr. Bath’s most celebrated scientific achievement came in 1986 with the invention of the Laserphaco Probe, which uses laser technology to remove cataracts with unprecedented precision and safety. In 1988, she became the first Black woman physician to receive a medical patent, and her device restored sight to patients around the world, including individuals blind for decades.
Dr. Patricia Bath’s legacy unites rigorous education, groundbreaking science, and moral clarity. She demonstrated that Black genius in medicine thrives when excellence is paired with equity—and that innovation guided by justice can change how the world sees, literally and figuratively.
Sources: www.britannica.org; www.acs.org; www. womensinnovations.org



