Doing Great Harm: How DEI and Identity Politics Are Infecting American Healthcareand How We Are Fighting Back
By (Author) Stanley Goldfarb
Post Hill Press
Post Hill Press
11th November 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
272
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
464g
The doctor who leads the movement to restore sanity to American medicine explains why we must rid it of identity politics.
Wokeness has taken over the medical establishment of the United Statesand the future of healthcare hangs in the balance. So does the health of every American.
Dr. Stanley Goldfarb, a distinguished nephrologist and medical school dean, was cancelled for questioning the effect that DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) was having on medical schools and the wider world of medicine. But Dr. Goldfarb didnt stay cancelled. He founded Do No Harm, the nations leading organization in the fight to protect healthcare from the disastrous consequences of identity politics.
Dr. Goldfarb refused to accept the repurposing of medical schools as places to produce gun control and climate change activists rather than doctors whose job it is to heal the sick. In Doing Great Harm, he exposes the ways in which identity politics, DEI, and gender radicalism have infected medical schools and the practice of medicine.
Besides doing a disservice to the many outstanding physicians of color, identity politics have dismantled standards for admission to medical school, decreased the quality of medical students, increased the number of incompetent doctors throughout the land, and enabled the chemical and surgical mutilation of minors.
A radical, divisive, and discriminatory ideology has captured the commanding heights of the medical profession. But Americans dont want this in healthcare any more than they do in public safety or educationand neither do most physicians. Dr. Stanley Goldfarb calls woke medicine what it is: dangerous, un-Americanand profoundly harmful.
Dr. Stanley Goldfarb is board chairman of Do No Harm. A graduate of Princeton University and the University of Rochester School of Medicine, he has had a long career in academic medicine as a Professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania. During that career, Dr. Goldfarb was funded by the National Institutes of Health to conduct research in the mechanism of kidney disease. Dr. Goldfarb has published over 100 articles in peer-reviewed medical journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of Clinical Investigation. He has also published over 150 invited reviews and commentaries. He has served on a number of editorial boards of important medical journals such as the Journal of Clinical Investigation, the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, the journal Diabetes, and as editor in chief of the journal NephSAP, published by the American Society of Nephrology. Dr. Goldfarb has also been active in the world of medical education as the Associate Dean for Curriculum at the Perelman School of Medicine at Penn.
Dr. Goldfarb helped found Do No Harm after publication of his book, Take Two Aspirin and Call Me By My Pronouns, a call to action to eliminate discriminatory practices in healthcare including elevating diversity above meritocracy in the admission of students to medical school and the hiring of faculty members. As chairman of Do No Harm, Dr. Goldfarb has published widely in various periodicals including the Wall Street Journal, City Journal, the New York Post, and The Free Press on the threats to medical education and medical care in the United States posed by introduction of critical race theory into these enterprises. In addition, Do No Harm has been at the forefront of organizations combating the experimental treatment of children and adolescents with so-called gender-affirming care in the absence of scientific evidence showing its efficacy. Do No Harm is committed to the welfare and safety of these children by demanding that healthcare institutions follow the science and severely restrict this potentially harmful form of treatment.