When Caregiving Begins Too Early: Dr. Eugene Manley on Advocacy, Health Equity, and Surviving the System
What happens when caregiving begins before childhood is even finished?
In this deeply human and eye-opening conversation, Dr. Eugene Manley Jr. shares what it was like to become a caregiver as a child—and how those early responsibilities shaped his empathy, career, and lifelong commitment to health equity.
A biomedical scientist and founder of the STEM & Cancer Health Equity Foundation, Dr. Manley bridges lived experience and professional expertise as he reveals:
- How early caregiving forces children into adult roles
- What happens when even highly educated patients are failed by the healthcare system
- Why caregivers need real-time advocates, not just paperwork
- How burnout, income loss, and systemic bias disproportionately affect underserved families
- Why storytelling, information-sharing, and community are survival tools for caregivers.
Dr. Manley has actively turned lived caregiving into action through health equity work. Caregivers are not invisible—and their stories are not small. This episode is a reminder that advocacy begins with being seen, heard, and supported.
BIO:
Dr. Eugene Manley Jr. is a biomedical scientist, health equity advocate, and founder of the STEM & Cancer Health Equity Foundation. Raised in inner-city Detroit and shaped by early caregiving experiences, he now works to improve health literacy, diversify the STEM workforce, and reduce disparities in cancer care through education, advocacy, and community-centered programs.
Links:
- STEM & Cancer Health Equity Foundation: info@secchq.org
- Social Media: STEMCCHQ (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn)
- LinkedIn: Eugene Manley Jr., PhD
Hashtags:
#TheSharegivingSecret
#CaregivingStories
#HealthEquity
#CaregiverAdvocacy
#PatientRights
#HealthcareJustice