Culture Redefining ‘flesh-colored’ bandages makes medicine more inclusive


When Linda Oyesiku was a child, she skinned her knee on her school’s playground. The school nurse cleaned her up and covered the wound with a peach-tinted bandage. On Oyesiku’s dark skin, the bandage stuck out, so Oyesiku colored it with a brown marker. Years later, Oyesiku, now a medical student at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, needed to conceal a wound on her face after undergoing surgery. Well aware that the surgeon’s office was unlikely to have a supply of brown bandages on hand, she came prepared with her own box. Those episodes left her wondering, though: Why were such bandages not more widely available?

The ubiquity of peach or “flesh” colored bandages provides a stark reminder that medicine remains centered on white patients, says Oyesiku, who calls for brown bandages to become mainstream. Brown bandages would symbolize that patients of color no longer represent “deviations from the norm,” she writes in an October commentary in Pediatric Dermatology.

Peach-tinted bandages, invented by pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson in the 1920s, have been the standard-bearer for a century. Normalizing peach as the default flesh color has had knock-on effects: The nicotine and birth control adhesive patches that have since appeared on the market are also tinted peach, Oyesiku reports. Over the last several decades, smaller companies have introduced bandages for multiple skin tones, but those remain harder to come by than peach-tinted ones.

The issue goes deeper than a bandage, Oyesiku says. Treating whiteness as the default in medicine contributes to Black and other minority groups’ distrust of medical professionals (SN: 4/10/20) and has led to biases in machine learning programs that U.S. hospitals use to prioritize patient care (SN: 10/24/19).

The field of dermatology represents an obvious starting point for dismantling structural racism in medicine, says dermatologist Jules Lipoff of the University of Pennsylvania. “Dermatology is racist only inasmuch as all of medicine and all of society is. But because we are at the surface, that racism is easier to recognize.”

Consider “COVID toes.” This condition, a symptom of COVID-19 infection, is characterized by swollen and discolored toes and occasionally fingers. When researchers reviewed 130 images of skin conditions associated with COVID-19, though, they found that almost all the images depicted people with white skin. Because COVID-19 has disproportionately impacted Black communities in the United States and the United Kingdom, photos depicting this population are crucial to proper diagnosis and care, researchers report in the September 2020 British Journal of Dermatology.

This scarcity of medical images for dark skin is pervasive. Only 4.5 percent of images in common medical textbooks depict dark skin, Lipoff and colleagues reported in the Jan. 1 Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

At least when it comes to bandages, change might be afoot. Last June, in response to civil rights protests, Johnson & Johnson pledged to roll out bandages for multiple skin tones. Whether health care providers and stores routinely stock such bandages remains to be seen.

Brown bandages won’t solve racism in dermatology, let alone medicine as a whole, but their presence would symbolize that everyone’s flesh color matters, Oyesiku says. “Inclusivity in dermatology and medicine [is] so much deeper than a Band-Aid. But small things like this are a gateway to … other changes.”
 
This was actually the original SJW issue, because I can remember it first being declared a problem when I was in college (1997) and everyone just laughed at the ridiculousness of it all.

"Just get a box of those Batman-themed bandaids if it bugs you that much" we said.

I miss those days.
 
This was actually the original SJW issue, because I can remember it first being declared a problem when I was in college (1997) and everyone just laughed at the ridiculousness of it all.

"Just get a box of those Batman-themed bandaids if it bugs you that much" we said.

I miss those days.
Berke Breathed was making fun of flesh colored crayons in Bloom County back in the 80's, and I increasingly suspect he was being serious instead of making Binkley out as a dork.
 
I just care about getting the heavy duty fabric ones. Don’t care if it’s dildo flesh colored, or shit brown.

Who uses the plastic ones anyway? I swear they fall off three seconds after being applied, regular fabric at least lasts long enough to wrap tape around it.
 
Berke Breathed was making fun of flesh colored crayons in Bloom County back in the 80's, and I increasingly suspect he was being serious instead of making Binkley out as a dork.
Flesh was changed several times leading up to the final name change to peach in '62. Not sure if it was a proto-SJW thing.

Indian Red survived until 1999. That was an early SJW tantrum.

I just care about getting the heavy duty fabric ones. Don’t care if it’s dildo flesh colored, or shit brown.

Who uses the plastic ones anyway? I swear they fall off three seconds after being applied, regular fabric at least lasts long enough to wrap tape around it.
I used some Japanese ones with bullet trains on them that were given to me as a funny present by a Japanese colleague for Christmas. I don't identify as a train, and I'm not colored like a train. It didn't cause an identity crisis.
 
Berke Breathed was making fun of flesh colored crayons in Bloom County back in the 80's, and I increasingly suspect he was being serious instead of making Binkley out as a dork.
Honestly, (and I know, slippery slopes) that one change actually made sense to me specifically because crayons are mostly marketed for kids, and at that age, kids shouldn’t be constrained in either their views of what ‘normal’ skin tones are or of what color they should make things when coloring.

Now, the removal of Prussian Blue, on the other hand...
 
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Well, it worked, didn't it? When was the last time a bunch of kids invaded Poland?
Why were there no invasions from the end of the war until 1958 when it was retired?

I doubt that was political, but most likely had to do with getting pigments, really. They've been retiring colors for over 100 years for various reasons.
 
When Linda Oyesiku was a child, she skinned her knee on her school’s playground. The school nurse cleaned her up and covered the wound with a peach-tinted bandage. On Oyesiku’s dark skin, the bandage stuck out, so Oyesiku colored it with a brown marker. Years later, Oyesiku, now a medical student at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, needed to conceal a wound on her face after undergoing surgery. Well aware that the surgeon’s office was unlikely to have a supply of brown bandages on hand, she came prepared with her own box. Those episodes left her wondering, though: Why were such bandages not more widely available?

None of this happened. None of it. It's all bullshit.

God fucking dammit. I hope the faggot that started the "and then everyone clapped" garbage in facebook and the stupid journo fuck that decided it'd make for easy "news" pieces, both get their balls bitten off by a rabid squirrell.
 
Honestly, (and I know, slippery slopes) that one change actually made sense to me specifically because crayons are mostly marketed for kids, and at that age, kids shouldn’t be constrained in either their views of what ‘normal’ skin tones are or of what color they should make things when coloring.

Now, the removal of Prussian Blue, on the other hand...
A parent friend of mine was complaining to me on discord the other day that their kindergarten daughter had several online at-home assignments about Black History Month and slavery/segregation. She thought it was a heavy subject for that age and I agreed, then told me that their kid had been making lego floorplans out of some connected plate pieces and was attaching furniture; one room had 'blankets' laid out(just the smooth pieces) for a sleepover "for the white people." She tried clarifying if that was excluding the normal yellow lego people(because modern girls sets have curvy human proportions) and she said "no, no brown people."

Good job SJWs, in trying to indoctrinate kids too early you're unironically making racists out of them by making them act out segregation in their toys/pretend roleplay to make sense of it.
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FWIW: Just because Crayola discontinue a "problematic" name doesn't mean much to the greater art world,

I got a pack of professional-grade colored pencils (with carrying case and sharpener) last month, both "Prussian Blue" and "Indian Red" are in it because the serious artists know those names refer to types of dyes not ethnic groups.

I've also noted that Lego sets these days have more specialized parts and pieces that can only be assembled a certain way, the "anything you want to build" versatility I remember as a kid is slowly but surely acquiescing to the social engineers and their "There is only ONE way to do it, the diverse way" thinking.

Can't let kids just build what they want, they might accidentally build Auschwitz and decide they like it! GASP!
 
What colour are bandages in Africa? And India? Are they black and brown?

This is a real question - I genuinely don't know. But I'm guessing they're white, and it's got nothing to do with "muh white supremacy".
 
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