Keith C. Ferdinand, MD

Professor, Gerald S. Berenson Endowed Chair in Preventive Cardiology

  • New Orleans LA UNITED STATES
  • School of Medicine
kferdina@tulane.edu

Dr. Ferdinand focuses on cardiac risk factor evaluation and control, including communities of racial and ethnic minorities.

Contact

Biography

Keith C. Ferdinand, MD, FACC, FAHA, FASH, FNLA began his medical career with a BA in biology from the University of New Orleans. He then went on to earn an MD from Howard University College of Medicine in Washington, DC, an internship at the US Public Health Hospital in New Orleans, an internal medicine residency and cardiology fellowship at LSU Medical Center and a cardiology fellowship at Howard University Hospital, Washington,D.C. After years of doing clinical work, research and teaching at Xavier University, LSU, Baylor College of Medicine, and Emory University, Dr. Ferdinand returned to New Orleans as a Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Tulane University Heart and Vascular Institute.

Dr. Ferdinand has been heavily involved in many national organizations concerned with public health, including the Association of Black Cardiologists, of which he was the former Chair and Chief Science Officer, the American Society of Hypertension, of which he was a board member, and the Healthy Heart Community Prevention Program, a cardiovascular risk program targeting African American and other high-risk populations. He is the immediate-past Chair of the National Forum for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, which provides the leadership and encouragement for collaboration among over 65 organizations. Dr. Ferdinand focuses largely on cardiac risk factor evaluation and control, especially hypertension and hyperlipidemia, including communities of racial and ethnic minorities. He has had over 100 manuscripts published and has a strong media presence. His passion for patient-care is highlighted in his commitment to non-profit work and community service. In 2015 he was inducted into the Association of University Cardiologists.

Areas of Expertise

COVID-10 (Coronavirus)
Nuclear Cardiology
Hypertension
Cardiology
Hyperlipidemia
Cardiovascular Diseases

Accomplishments

Inductee, Association of University Cardiologists

2015

Education

Howard University College of Medicine

M.D.

Medicine

University of New Orleans

B.A.

Biology

Media Appearances

African Americans struggle with disproportionate COVID death toll

National Geographic  online

2020-04-24

Coronavirus is ravaging every part of Warren Bell’s life in New Orleans. His 81-year-old cousin was hospitalized with COVID-19. His youngest daughter is furloughed from her culinary job at a major hotel because of the pandemic. His oldest daughter, a nurse, is doing 12-hour shifts at New Orleans East Hospital “where COVID-19 patients started dying weeks ago.”

View More

Gov. Edwards announces co-chairs, members of COVID-19 task force

KATC (ABC) Lafayette  online

2020-04-21

Today, Gov. John Bel Edwards announced two co-chairs and appointed members to the Louisiana COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force and several subcommittees.

View More

Coronavirus hitting River Parishes hard with some of the highest death rates in the country

WWL-TV (CBS) New Orleans  online

2020-04-08

The surge of COVID-19 cases that has ravaged Orleans and Jefferson parishes is now hitting upriver.

Following the early mortality that placed New Orleans’ urban center among the highest per capita death rates in the country, a new wave has hit the river parishes of St. John, St. Charles and St. James, statistics show.

View More

Show All +

Articles

Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease in Women: Risk Factors and Noninvasive Diagnostic Assessment

Ingenta Connect

Keith C. Ferdinand, et al.

2019

Sex-specific differences in the epidemiology and pathophysiology of coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease are now well recognized. Women with angina more often have nonobstructive coronary artery disease ( NOCAD) compared with men. This patient population carries a significant risk of future cardiovascular events that is not commonly appreciated, often leading to delayed diagnosis and treatment.

View more

Disparities in hypertension and cardiovascular disease in blacks: The critical role of medication adherence

Journal of Clinical Hypertension

Keith C. Ferdinand, et al.

2017

Blacks are two to three times as likely as whites to die of preventable heart disease and stroke. Declines in mortality from heart disease have not eliminated racial disparities. Control and effective treatment of hypertension, a leading cause of cardiovascular disease, among blacks is less than in whites and remains a challenge. One of the driving forces behind this racial/ethnic disparity is medication nonadherence whose cause is embedded in social determinants.

View more

Improving Medication Adherence in Cardiometabolic Disease

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Keith C. Ferdinand, et al.

2017

Improve patient health literacy: label highlights and conveyance of literacy-sensitive information to patients. Engage the patient for greater health care provider-patient interaction: follow-up communication with the patient (e.g., cardiac rehabilitation), clinical reminders, phone calls, communication with the pharmacist, medical education, and use of patient web portals.

View more

Show All +