National Medical Association
Rachel Villanueva MD FACOG is an experienced OB/GYN currently serving at Maiden Lane Medical, PLLC since December 2023 and as a Medical Advisor for FemGevity since November 2023. Rachel holds prominent leadership roles within the National Medical Association, including President from 2021 to 2022 and various positions on the Board of Trustees. Since August 2001, Rachel has also contributed as a Clinical Assistant Professor at New York University School of Medicine. Previously, Rachel practiced at ROSH Maternal Fetal Medicine, PC from August 2013 to November 2023 and at Arcadi Ob/Gyn, PC from August 2001 to August 2013. Rachel earned a Doctor of Medicine degree, Cum Laude, from Yale School of Medicine and a Bachelor of Science in Biology from Yale University, with additional training at The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center.
This person is not in the org chart
This person is not in any teams
National Medical Association
The National Medical Association (NMA) is the nation’s oldest and largest organization representing African American physicians and health professionals in the United States. Established in 1895, the NMA is the collective voice of more than 35,000 African American physicians and the patients they serve. The NMA was founded in 1895, during an era in US history when the majority of African Americans were disenfranchised. The segregated policy of “separate but equal” dictated virtually every aspect of society. Racially exclusive “Jim Crow” laws dominated employment, housing, transportation, recreation, education, and medicine. Black Americans were subjected to all of the injustices inherent in a dual medical care system. Under the backdrop of racial exclusivity, membership in America’s professional organizations, including the American Medical Association (AMA), was restricted to whites only. The AMA determined medical policy for the country and played an influential role in broadening the expertise of physicians. When a group of black doctors sought membership into the AMA, they were repeatedly denied admission. Subsequently, the NMA was created for black doctors and health professionals who found it necessary to establish their own medical societies and hospitals.