Alvin F. Poussaint, Pioneering Expert on Black Mental Health, Dies at 90

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U.S.|Alvin F. Poussaint, Pioneering Expert on Black Mental Health, Dies at 90

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/24/us/alvin-poussaint-dead.html

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A psychiatrist at Harvard and an adviser to Jesse Jackson and Bill Cosby, he challenged Black Americans to stand up to systemic racism.

A black-and-white photograph looking up at a young Alvin Poussaint, wearing aviator glasses, a light striped jacket, white shirt and plaid tie, standing in front of a large neo-Classical building with monumental columns.
Dr. Alvin F. Poussaint in 1979 at Harvard Medical School, where he spent most of his career.Credit...Neal Menschel for The New York Times

Clay Risen

Feb. 24, 2025, 6:17 p.m. ET

Alvin F. Poussaint, a psychiatrist who, after providing medical care to the civil rights movement in 1960s Mississippi, went on to play a leading role in debates about Black culture and politics in the 1980s and ’90s through his research on the effects of racism on Black mental health, died on Monday at his home in Chestnut Hill, Mass. He was 90.

His wife, Tina Young Poussaint, confirmed the death.

Dr. Poussaint, who spent most of his career as a professor and associate dean at Harvard Medical School, first came to public prominence in the late 1970s, as the energy and optimism of the civil rights movement were giving way to white backlash and a skepticism about the possibility of Black progress in a white-dominated society.

In books like “Why Blacks Kill Blacks” (1972) and “Black Child Care” (1975), he walked a line between those on the left who blamed persistent racism for the ills confronting Black America and those on the right who said that, after the civil rights era, it was up to Black people to take responsibility for their own lives.

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In books like “Why Blacks Kill Blacks” (1972) Dr. Poussaint balanced the views of those on the left who blamed persistent racism for the ills confronting Black America and those on the right who believed Black people should take responsibility for their own lives.Credit...Emerson Hall Publishers

Through extensive research and jargon-free prose, Dr. Poussaint (pronounced pooh-SAHNT) recognized the continued impact of systemic racism while also calling for Black Americans to embrace personal responsibility and traditional family structures.

That position, as well as his polished charisma, made him a force in Black politics and culture. He served as Massachusetts co-chairman for Reverend Jackson’s 1984 presidential campaign and was reportedly the model for Dr. Cliff Huxtable on Mr. Cosby’s sitcom “The Cosby Show.”


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