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Claim this listingChantale Branson , MD
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About Chantale Branson
Chantale Branson, MD is a Black neurology practicing in ATLANTA, GA. Chantale offers in-person visits and is currently accepting new patients.
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Black patients and Neurology
Black neurologists: stroke, epilepsy, MS, migraine, dementia. Black adults have twice the stroke mortality, and early neuro care matters.
Stroke kills Black Americans at roughly twice the rate of white Americans, and Black adults are more likely to have a first stroke before age 55 (AHA/ASA, 2023). Black Americans are also nearly 3 times more likely to have an undiagnosed stroke and 40 percent more likely to die from one. Neurologists handle stroke recovery and prevention, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, migraine, Parkinson's, neuropathy, and dementia.
Multiple sclerosis was long thought to primarily affect white patients, but recent research shows Black patients often have more aggressive disease courses and disability progression (Langer-Gould, Neurology, 2013).
Conditions we cover
- Stroke prevention and recovery
- Epilepsy and seizure disorders
- Multiple sclerosis and neuromyelitis optica
- Migraine and chronic headache
- Dementia, Parkinson's disease, peripheral neuropathy
When to book
- New or changed headache pattern
- Numbness, tingling, or weakness on one side
- Memory loss affecting daily function
- Transient vision loss or speech changes
Advocacy prompts
- Given my family history, what's my stroke risk score?
- Do I need an MRI, and with or without contrast?
- Are there preventive migraine treatments I qualify for?
Frequently asked questions
Is Chantale Branson accepting new patients? ▾
Yes, Chantale Branson is accepting new patients.
Where is Chantale Branson's practice located? ▾
Chantale Branson practices at 80 JESSE HILL JR DR SE, ATLANTA, GA 30303. Phone: 404-616-5800.
Does Chantale Branson offer telehealth? ▾
Chantale Branson sees patients in person at their listed office.
What does a Neurology treat? ▾
Black neurologists: stroke, epilepsy, MS, migraine, dementia. Black adults have twice the stroke mortality, and early neuro care matters.
Articles about Neurology
Auvelity is the first non-antipsychotic FDA approval for Alzheimer's agitation. The Black-dementia question is whether the underdiagnosis pattern in US Medicare data suppresses access to the new on-label option.
Sixteen percent of Black women report keloids. The treatment evidence is mixed, but a 2024 meta-analysis points to combination intralesional therapy.
A 2023 prospective ultrasound study of 1,610 Black and African American women in Detroit reported that 16 percent had ever had keloids and 47 percent had ever had keloids or hypertrophic scars. The 2013 Cochrane review of silicone gel sheeting found a benefit but the authors warned that the poor quality of research means a great deal of uncertainty prevails....
Tina Knowles disclosed her stage 1 breast cancer in 2025. The mammogram she almost skipped is exactly the screening conversation Black women need.
Tina Knowles published her memoir Matriarch in April 2025 (Knopf, Oprah's Book Club 2.0). In the press tour she disclosed her late-2024 stage 1 breast cancer diagnosis, caught by a mammogram she had postponed. The disclosure landed for so many Black women because the underlying disparity is real: per the American Cancer Society, Black women are 38 percent more likely...
Dr. Ala Stanford built the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium during the pandemic. Five years later her structural-health work is still the template.
Dr. Ala Stanford rented a van in April 2020 and started showing up in Philadelphia church parking lots with COVID-19 nasal swabs. The Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium she founded became one of the most-replicated community-health-response models of the pandemic. She has since served as HHS Region 3 Director (2021 to 2024) and now directs community outreach at the Penn Institute...