Patricia Bath (born November 4, 1942, Manhattan, New York, U.S.—died May 30, 2019, San Francisco, California) was an American ophthalmologist and humanitarian who invented the laserphaco probe, a device for cataract surgery, and who advocated for greater access to basic eye care for persons in underserved communities. Bath’s laserphaco device was patented in 1988, making her the first African American woman physician to receive a medical patent in the United States.
Bath developed a curiosity for science at a young age. Her interest in biology in particular expanded during her time at Charles Evans Hughes High School in Manhattan. In 1959, at a high-school summer program sponsored by the National Science Foundation, she came up with a way to mathematically predict cancer cell growth. One of the program’s mentors, Robert O. Bernard, included her research in a paper presented in 1960 at a major conference on nutrition. Bath’s contributions garnered such widespread attention that she was recognized in 1960 with a Merit Award from Mademoiselle magazine. She subsequently studied chemistry and physics at Hunter College in New York City, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in 1964, and then studied medicine at Howard University in Washington, D.C. She earned a medical degree from there in 1968.
From 1968 to 1969, Bath worked as an intern at Harlem Hospital, located in a mostly African American neighborhood in New York City. She then completed a residency at New York University and in the early 1970s was a fellow in ophthalmology at nearby Columbia University, located in a mostly white neighborhood. At Columbia, her work centered on corneal transplantation and keratoprosthesis surgery (a procedure to replace a damaged cornea with an artificial cornea). In the course of her transition to Columbia, she noticed that Black patients at Harlem Hospital had suffered much more often than white patients at Columbia from preventable blindness and visual impairments. She attributed the disparity to differences in access to eye care, which inspired her to develop a new field: community ophthalmology. Community ophthalmology offers clinical eye care to patients who face challenges in accessing routine eye care. The success of the field led Bath and two colleagues, psychiatrist Alfred Cannon and pediatrician Aaron Ifekwunigwe, to found the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness in 1976.
In 1974 Bath took positions as an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the Jules Stein Eye Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and as an assistant professor of surgery at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, also in Los Angeles. The following year she joined the faculty of the department of ophthalmology at the Jules Stein Eye Institute, becoming the first woman faculty member there. Bath was named head of the ophthalmology residency training program at Drew-UCLA in 1983; the promotion made her the first woman to lead an ophthalmology residency program in the United States.
Bath’s work with patients diagnosed with cataracts—cloudy or opaque areas in the lens of the eye that, if left untreated, lead to blindness—inspired her to develop a new surgical technique. She realized that laser technology could be used to remove cataracts. Beginning in 1981, she spent almost five years researching and developing the laserphaco probe and technique. She filed a patent for the device in 1986; the patent was awarded two years later. Since then, her approach has been used to improve or restore the vision of millions of cataract patients worldwide.
Bath earned numerous awards and honors during her career. She was inducted into the Hunter College Hall of Fame in 1988. In 1993 she was named a Howard University Pioneer in Academic Medicine. That year Bath retired from the UCLA Medical Center and was the first woman elected to the center’s honorary medical staff. Following her retirement, she became interested in telemedicine and promoted its use in remote areas with limited health care resources.