Dr. Kimberly Manning Bio

Hide Video Transcript

Video Transcript

: She's here for a follow up visit. Last visit was in October 2009.

Narrator
Dr. Kimberly Manning became a physician – in part – because her father could not.

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
His college counselor told him, in 1961, that he couldn't go to medical school. That he was a black man in Birmingham, Alabama, and that the likelihood of him getting a job and getting into medical school was very low. He told me that story when I was maybe a junior in high school. Maybe as a bit of an homage him, I really started wanting to go to medical school.

: Why don't you wait and see what her wet prep shows first.

Narrator
Today, she leads rounds, overseeing Emory University residents at Grady Hospital in inner city Atlanta. Board certified both as a pediatrician and an internist.

: Who is her support system at home?

Narrator
She strongly believes in a humanist approach to medicine.

: Sounds like at 19 you have a lot of stuff going on right now.

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
I'm not here just treating patients like they're mannequins.

: You've probably felt us do this to you before.

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
I am living out my passion in terms of being a teaching physician.

: Go ahead and see what you feel here.

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
…being a role model, but also just having this opportunity to walk in and humanize our patients.

Newscast
The Good Doctor Is In — Today Dr. Kimberly Manning shares some of her favorite things for a healthy lifestyle.

Narrator
Dr. Manning offers guidance outside the hospital and over the airwaves – making weekly Morning House Calls on local TV.

: Ok. Do you want to try to do the whole thing?

Narrator
But above all – family comes first.

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
I know that the balance that I have in getting home to my kids, to pick them up from school every day,

: …The sky began to glow

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
...reading them stories at night...

: …before the sun rises too high…

Kimberly D. Manning, MD
Hanging out with them and my husband every day, those are things that, I think, make me a better doctor. What she sees at home – she enthusiastically shares with new parents. Now I sort of know that each little step, they just change so fast. I mean, what you see at the newborn period, next three months, to four months, to six months, it is dramatic. And I often do tell moms, look, no one knows your baby like you. Cut yourself some slack, but also enjoy your baby. Just enjoy your baby.