This is the November 2013 issue of Healthcare-NOW!'s quarterly "Everybody In" newsletter, reporting on important developments in the movement for single-payer healthcare.
Direct Relief’s annual report on Fiscal Year 2014: During this period—July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2014—Direct Relief responded to more requests for assistance, fulfilled its humanitarian mission more expansively, and provided more assistance to more people in need than ever before in the organization’s 66-year history.
Combating service member, veteran and military family suicides: Using a comm...Duane France
A presentation to the American Counseling Association of Georgia. Proposed citation: France, D., (2019, November) Combating service member, veteran and military family suicides: Using a community-based public health approach. Presentation at the American Counseling Association of Georgia.
Direct Relief’s annual report on Fiscal Year 2014: During this period—July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2014—Direct Relief responded to more requests for assistance, fulfilled its humanitarian mission more expansively, and provided more assistance to more people in need than ever before in the organization’s 66-year history.
Combating service member, veteran and military family suicides: Using a comm...Duane France
A presentation to the American Counseling Association of Georgia. Proposed citation: France, D., (2019, November) Combating service member, veteran and military family suicides: Using a community-based public health approach. Presentation at the American Counseling Association of Georgia.
Thank you to our Diversity & Inclusion Committee for sharing these important organizations and activists at the forefront of raising awareness for racial justice in maternal/infant health and HIV/AIDS management. As #BHM comes to a close, it’s important that we continue to prioritize our actions toward progress in the ongoing fight for racial equity in our health systems.
Thank you to our Diversity & Inclusion Committee for sharing these important organizations and activists at the forefront of raising awareness in the fight for racial justice in maternal/infant health and HIV/AIDS management. As #BHM comes to a close, it’s important that we continue to prioritize our actions toward progress in the ongoing fight for racial equity in our health systems.
Michael O Leavitt:
I call these speeches The Prologue Series. There is a statue behind the National
Archives that I look at nearly every day as I drive between HHS and the White
House. The statue, the work of Robert Aitken, is called “The Future.” It depicts a
woman looking up to the horizon from a book as if to ponder what she has just
read. At the base of the statue are the words from Shakespeare’s The Tempest
“What is past is prologue.”
Promoting health and preventing illness among African American men, who die disproportionately from preventable diseases, is a challenging health disparity that has seen limited progress. However, focusing our efforts in places outside of traditional clinical and community settings such as the barbershop has shown promise for ameliorating these disparities.
Zero Hunger Partnership: From Service to Systemic ChangeBonner Foundation
Launched by the Congressional Hunger Center in consultation with leading anti-hunger organizations, Zero Hunger Academy is an online course containing four distinct learning modules designed to provide useful information to users to strengthen their understanding of hunger and food insecurity in America and introduce them to an array of perspectives on what are the most effective community and policy solutions. During this session, we'll preview some of the modules and learning content now available to the Bonner network and highlight other ways Bonners are getting involved in this partnership between the Congressional Hunger Center and Bonner Foundation including the Zero Hunger Internship Program and Zero Hunger Campus Network. Competencies: creates a broader place-based strategy for capacity building and sustained partnerships that contribute to community impacts.
The 2014 Health Insurance Exchanges Summit features a timely agenda focused on leveraging current “knowns” and progress to derive practical strategies for successful future participation in HIXs. Health plan executives, state and federal exchange officials, providers, and other policy experts convene to discuss business and operational considerations in a changing marketplace.
http://www.worldcongress.com/events/HL14022/
Social Justice, Social Media, and Family MedicineMike Sevilla
Mike Sevilla, MD & Jay Lee, MD, MPH presentation on July 26, 2012 at the American Academy of Family Physicians National Conference of Family Medicine Residents and Medical Students
Medical Technology Tackles New Health Care Demand - Research Report - March 2...pchutichetpong
M Capital Group (“MCG”) predicts that with, against, despite, and even without the global pandemic, the medical technology (MedTech) industry shows signs of continuous healthy growth, driven by smaller, faster, and cheaper devices, growing demand for home-based applications, technological innovation, strategic acquisitions, investments, and SPAC listings. MCG predicts that this should reflects itself in annual growth of over 6%, well beyond 2028.
According to Chris Mouchabhani, Managing Partner at M Capital Group, “Despite all economic scenarios that one may consider, beyond overall economic shocks, medical technology should remain one of the most promising and robust sectors over the short to medium term and well beyond 2028.”
There is a movement towards home-based care for the elderly, next generation scanning and MRI devices, wearable technology, artificial intelligence incorporation, and online connectivity. Experts also see a focus on predictive, preventive, personalized, participatory, and precision medicine, with rising levels of integration of home care and technological innovation.
The average cost of treatment has been rising across the board, creating additional financial burdens to governments, healthcare providers and insurance companies. According to MCG, cost-per-inpatient-stay in the United States alone rose on average annually by over 13% between 2014 to 2021, leading MedTech to focus research efforts on optimized medical equipment at lower price points, whilst emphasizing portability and ease of use. Namely, 46% of the 1,008 medical technology companies in the 2021 MedTech Innovator (“MTI”) database are focusing on prevention, wellness, detection, or diagnosis, signaling a clear push for preventive care to also tackle costs.
In addition, there has also been a lasting impact on consumer and medical demand for home care, supported by the pandemic. Lockdowns, closure of care facilities, and healthcare systems subjected to capacity pressure, accelerated demand away from traditional inpatient care. Now, outpatient care solutions are driving industry production, with nearly 70% of recent diagnostics start-up companies producing products in areas such as ambulatory clinics, at-home care, and self-administered diagnostics.
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Thank you to our Diversity & Inclusion Committee for sharing these important organizations and activists at the forefront of raising awareness for racial justice in maternal/infant health and HIV/AIDS management. As #BHM comes to a close, it’s important that we continue to prioritize our actions toward progress in the ongoing fight for racial equity in our health systems.
Thank you to our Diversity & Inclusion Committee for sharing these important organizations and activists at the forefront of raising awareness in the fight for racial justice in maternal/infant health and HIV/AIDS management. As #BHM comes to a close, it’s important that we continue to prioritize our actions toward progress in the ongoing fight for racial equity in our health systems.
Michael O Leavitt:
I call these speeches The Prologue Series. There is a statue behind the National
Archives that I look at nearly every day as I drive between HHS and the White
House. The statue, the work of Robert Aitken, is called “The Future.” It depicts a
woman looking up to the horizon from a book as if to ponder what she has just
read. At the base of the statue are the words from Shakespeare’s The Tempest
“What is past is prologue.”
Promoting health and preventing illness among African American men, who die disproportionately from preventable diseases, is a challenging health disparity that has seen limited progress. However, focusing our efforts in places outside of traditional clinical and community settings such as the barbershop has shown promise for ameliorating these disparities.
Zero Hunger Partnership: From Service to Systemic ChangeBonner Foundation
Launched by the Congressional Hunger Center in consultation with leading anti-hunger organizations, Zero Hunger Academy is an online course containing four distinct learning modules designed to provide useful information to users to strengthen their understanding of hunger and food insecurity in America and introduce them to an array of perspectives on what are the most effective community and policy solutions. During this session, we'll preview some of the modules and learning content now available to the Bonner network and highlight other ways Bonners are getting involved in this partnership between the Congressional Hunger Center and Bonner Foundation including the Zero Hunger Internship Program and Zero Hunger Campus Network. Competencies: creates a broader place-based strategy for capacity building and sustained partnerships that contribute to community impacts.
The 2014 Health Insurance Exchanges Summit features a timely agenda focused on leveraging current “knowns” and progress to derive practical strategies for successful future participation in HIXs. Health plan executives, state and federal exchange officials, providers, and other policy experts convene to discuss business and operational considerations in a changing marketplace.
http://www.worldcongress.com/events/HL14022/
Social Justice, Social Media, and Family MedicineMike Sevilla
Mike Sevilla, MD & Jay Lee, MD, MPH presentation on July 26, 2012 at the American Academy of Family Physicians National Conference of Family Medicine Residents and Medical Students
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M Capital Group (“MCG”) predicts that with, against, despite, and even without the global pandemic, the medical technology (MedTech) industry shows signs of continuous healthy growth, driven by smaller, faster, and cheaper devices, growing demand for home-based applications, technological innovation, strategic acquisitions, investments, and SPAC listings. MCG predicts that this should reflects itself in annual growth of over 6%, well beyond 2028.
According to Chris Mouchabhani, Managing Partner at M Capital Group, “Despite all economic scenarios that one may consider, beyond overall economic shocks, medical technology should remain one of the most promising and robust sectors over the short to medium term and well beyond 2028.”
There is a movement towards home-based care for the elderly, next generation scanning and MRI devices, wearable technology, artificial intelligence incorporation, and online connectivity. Experts also see a focus on predictive, preventive, personalized, participatory, and precision medicine, with rising levels of integration of home care and technological innovation.
The average cost of treatment has been rising across the board, creating additional financial burdens to governments, healthcare providers and insurance companies. According to MCG, cost-per-inpatient-stay in the United States alone rose on average annually by over 13% between 2014 to 2021, leading MedTech to focus research efforts on optimized medical equipment at lower price points, whilst emphasizing portability and ease of use. Namely, 46% of the 1,008 medical technology companies in the 2021 MedTech Innovator (“MTI”) database are focusing on prevention, wellness, detection, or diagnosis, signaling a clear push for preventive care to also tackle costs.
In addition, there has also been a lasting impact on consumer and medical demand for home care, supported by the pandemic. Lockdowns, closure of care facilities, and healthcare systems subjected to capacity pressure, accelerated demand away from traditional inpatient care. Now, outpatient care solutions are driving industry production, with nearly 70% of recent diagnostics start-up companies producing products in areas such as ambulatory clinics, at-home care, and self-administered diagnostics.
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Trauma Outpatient Center is a comprehensive facility dedicated to addressing mental health challenges and providing medication-assisted treatment. We offer a diverse range of services aimed at assisting individuals in overcoming addiction, mental health disorders, and related obstacles. Our team consists of seasoned professionals who are both experienced and compassionate, committed to delivering the highest standard of care to our clients. By utilizing evidence-based treatment methods, we strive to help our clients achieve their goals and lead healthier, more fulfilling lives.
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1. H E A L T H C A R E - N O W !
Healthcare-NOW! - 215-732-2131 - info@healthcare-now.org - 1315 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19107 - www.Healthcare-Now.org! 1
Everybody In
Healthcare-‐NOW!
held
its
annual
Strategy
Conference
this
year
on
October
5
and
6
in
Nashville,
Tennessee
at
the
beautiful
Scarritt-‐
Bennett
Center
near
Vanderbilt
University.
Over
110
activists
converged
from
more
than
23
states
to
discuss
organizing
strategy,
network,
and
share
skill-‐
building.
The
conference
featured
four
plenary
panels,
fourteen
workshops,
and
a
keynote
speech
by
Frances
Fox
Piven,
the
renowned
sociologist
and
historian
of
social
movements
in
the
U.S.
The
Conference
kicked
off
with
a
workshop
on
“Southern
States
Strategy:
Growing
Together.”
Margaret
(“Peg”)
Nosek,
PhD
of
Healthcare
for
All
Texas
kicked
this
off
with
a
presentation
on
the
unique
political
history
facing
single-‐payer
activists
in
the
South,
the
importance
to
our
movement
of
succeeding
in
southern
states,
and
the
demographic
and
political
changes
that
are
creating
hope
and
new
opportunities
to
succeed
there.
This
was
followed
by
a
plenary
of
Tennessee
organizers
introducing
attendees
to
the
fascinating
history
of
health
reform
in
our
host
state,
and
looking
at
the
Affordable
Care
Act
through
the
lens
of
Tennesseans.
Gordon
Bonnyman
of
the
Tennessee
Justice
Center
and
Tony
Garr,
formerly
of
the
Tennessee
Health
Movement,
described
the
rise
and
fall
of
TennCare,
one
of
the
first
attempts
by
a
state
to
use
Medicaid
waivers
to
expand
health
insurance
to
everyone
in
the
early
1990s.
TennCare
was
dismantled
in
2005,
dropping
170,000
residents
from
the
rolls
in
one
of
the
most
catastrophic
losses
of
access
to
care
in
the
history
of
the
country.
Mary
Bufwack,
CEO
at
a
series
of
community
health
centers
in
Nashville,
reported
that
only
about
10%
of
uninsured
patients
at
her
health
centers
were
projected
to
receive
coverage
under
the
ACA,
leaving
the
health
centers
to
continue
treating
non-‐paying
and
low-‐payment
patients.
TN
is
one
of
many
states
not
planning
to
expand
its
Medicaid
program,
and
currently
has
extremely
limited
Medicaid
eligibility.
Dr.
Art
Sutherland,
the
coordinator
of
Tennessee
Physicians
for
a
National
Health
Program,
reported
on
the
inspiring
organizing
work
he
has
accomplished
in
the
state,
setting
up
regional
PNHP
chapters
in
western,
middle,
and
northeastern
TN.
Sunday
morning
kicked
off
with
a
plenary
of
Physicians
for
a
National
Health
Program
speakers
on
“The
ACA:
Challenges
and
Opportunities
for
the
Single-‐Payer
Movement,”
including
Dr.
Jim
Powers
of
Middle
Tennessee
PNHP,
Dr.
Art
Sutherland
of
Tennessee
PNHP,
and
Dr.
Garrett
Adams
of
Kentucky
PNHP,
who
gave
an
outline
of
what
the
ACA
does
and
does
not
accomplish,
and
how
to
message
for
single-‐payer
during
implementation.
Emily
Henkels,
National
Coordinator
for
PNHP,
organized
an
exercise
for
attendees
to
identify
the
strengths
and
skills
they
bring
to
the
single-‐payer
movement,
and
think
about
the
underutilized
resources
at
our
disposal
collectively
going
into
the
organizing
workshops.
Find
out
more
about
the
conference
workshops,
along
with
videos
of
all
the
plenaries
and
Frances
Fox
Piven’s
keynote
address
at
Healthcare-‐Now.org.
Healthcare-NOW!’s Quarterly Newsletter on the Single-Payer Healthcare Justice Movement
www.Healthcare-Now.org! Issue No. 3 - Fall 2013
Single-‐Payer
Activists
Gather
in
Nashville
for
Healthcare-‐NOW!
National
Strategy
Conference
Michael
Lighty
of
National
Nurses
United
presented
Tim
Carpenter
of
Progressive
Democrats
of
America
with
the
Marilyn
Clement
Award
for
the
Pursuit
of
Healthcare
Justice
Attendees
of
the
Strategy
Conference
2. H E A L T H C A R E - N O W !
Healthcare-NOW! - 215-732-2131 - info@healthcare-now.org - 1315 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19107 - www.Healthcare-Now.org! 2
Does
the
Single-‐Payer
Movement
Need
a
Southern
Strategy?
To
answer
this
important
question,
Healthcare-‐NOW!
interviewed
Margaret
(Peg)
Nosek,
PhD,
who
is
President
of
Health
Care
for
All
Texas
(HealthCareForAllTexas.org),
our
affiliate
single-‐payer
group
in
TX.
Peg
serves
as
the
Executive
Director
of
the
Center
for
Research
on
Women
with
Disabilities,
and
is
a
Professor
at
the
Department
of
Physical
Medicine
and
Rehabilitation
at
Baylor
College
of
Medicine
in
Houston,
Texas.
Peg
gave
a
presentation
on
this
topic
at
Healthcare-‐NOW!'s
annual
Strategy
Conference
in
Nashville,
TN,
which
is
available
at
Healthcare-‐Now.org.
You
made
the
case
at
Healthcare-‐NOW!'s
national
strategy
conference
in
Nashville
that
it's
important
for
the
single-‐payer
movement
to
have
a
unique
strategy
for
organizing
the
southern
states.
What's
different
about
the
South?
The
South
is
where
the
resistance
to
progressive
reform
started
and
now
it
has
spread
throughout
the
country.
If
we
can
formulate
a
strategy
that
works
in
the
South
we
will
be
much
more
likely
to
score
a
victory
na<onwide.
I’ve
always
had
the
stereotype
about
how
the
demographics
of
the
South
are
so
different
from
the
rest
of
the
country,
but
when
I
tried
to
pull
out
sta<s<cs
to
document
that
I
was
surprised
to
find
that
those
differences
are
breaking
down.
In
educa<on,
the
lowest
rates
are
s<ll
in
the
Deep
South,
but
the
Southwest
is
trying
hard
to
catch
up.
Poverty
has
spread
all
across
the
southern
half
of
the
country
from
coast
to
coast
and
also
throughout
the
Rust
Belt.
Health
insurance
rates
(read:
access
to
healthcare)
follows
the
same
paIern.
Third
World
living
condi<ons
are
no
longer
exclusively
from
Texas
to
South
Carolina.
I
guess
one
thing
you
can
safely
say
that
dis<nguishes
the
South
is
how
miserably
it
treats
labor
unions.
That
aMtude
is
spreading
fast,
but
states
with
the
lowest
union
membership
are
s<ll
all
below
the
Mason
Dixon
line.
Can
you
tell
us
a
bit
more
about
the
unique
lived
history
of
the
South,
and
why
the
poli@cs
of
health
reform
appear
to
be
playing
out
differently
in
southern
states?
Ken
Harris
wrote
that
we
are
s<ll
on
the
planta<on
aPer
320
years.
In
1712,
a
Bri<sh
slave
owner
from
the
West
Indies
named
Willie
Lynch
was
invited
to
the
colony
of
Virginia
to
teach
his
methods
to
slave
owners
there.
He
commented
that
they
didn’t
need
to
lose
valuable
“stock”
by
hangings;
all
they
had
to
use
was
fear,
distrust,
and
envy
for
control
purposes.
Make
a
list
of
differences,
he
advised,
make
them
bigger,
then
pitch
one
against
the
other.
“I
shall
assure
you
that
distrust
is
stronger
than
trust,
and
envy
is
stronger
than
adula<on,
respect,
or
admira<on.”
Isn’t
that
exactly
what
the
Tea
Party
is
doing
today?
They
are
using
the
ancient
strategies
of
fear,
distrust,
and
envy
to
control
our
na<on
and
we
are
slaves
to
them.
Their
shameless
ac<ons
during
the
recent
government
shutdown
gave
us
all
the
evidence
we
need
that
they
are
neo-‐confederates,
not
neo-‐conserva<ves.
Some
other
characteris<cs
of
this
aMtude
include
class
dis<nc<ons
and
the
perceived
legi<macy
of
extreme
inequality
in
income,
opportunity,
and
privilege.
The
patriarchal
aMtude
that
planta<on
whites
showed
toward
their
slaves
is
now
being
turned
on
women
and
immigrants.
The
new
Jim
Crow
is
manifes<ng
in
redistric<ng,
discriminatory
voter
ID
laws,
and
cuts
in
funding
for
food
stamps.
The
whole
Medicaid
system
is
designed
to
“keep
‘em
poor
and
keep
’em
sick.”
People
think
Medicaid
expansion
is
a
good
thing,
and
it
certainly
will
save
lives,
but
it
reinforces
poverty
and
underlies
a
system
of
healthcare
apartheid.
Just
like
in
the
Civil
War,
states’
rights
are
being
used
as
a
cover
for
bigotry
in
the
healthcare
wars.
If
people
with
disabili<es,
women,
people
from
minority
backgrounds,
and
immigrants
truly
had
equal
access
to
health
care
that
wasn’t
<ed
to
their
employer
or
their
income
status
they
might
actually
have
an
equal
chance
to
rise
up
in
this
world!
Arguments
against
the
Medicaid
expansion
by
the
southern
states
have
been
framed
in
terms
of
states’
rights,
but
it’s
really
thinly
veiled
bigotry.
Are
the
obstacles
to
single-‐payer
organizing
in
the
South
too
daun@ng,
or
are
there
reasons
for
hope?
Paradoxically,
in
the
midst
of
this
atmosphere
of
oppression
the
seed
of
Gandhi’s
nonviolent
resistance
has
germinated
and
borne
fruit
in
the
civil
rights
movement
and
all
the
other
progressive
social
movements
that
have
been
influenced
by
it.
The
single-‐payer
movement
now
has
the
chance
to
work
in
solidarity
with
all
the
other
angry
people
who
are
working
for
social
jus<ce.
The
planta<on
mentality
is
unsustainable
socially,
morally,
and
economically.
The
bigots
are
dying
out,
and
their
children
who
share
their
aMtude
will
be
irrelevant
in
the
21st
century.
The
massive
waves
of
immigrants
that
brought
progressive
thinking
to
the
east
and
west
coasts
in
the
early
20th
century
are
now
coming
up
through
the
southern
border.
La<nos
are
becoming
the
most
powerful
vo<ng
bloc.
They
are
the
new
force
of
change
and
hope
for
the
future.
As
whites
become
the
new
minority
I
expect
that
class
dis<nc<on
will
diminish
in
importance
as
well.
This
will
open
the
way
for
single-‐payer
as
the
only
reasonable
alterna<ve
in
a
democra<c
society.
How
can
single-‐payer
supporters
get
involved
if
they
want
to
help?
My
mentor,
Jus<n
W.
Dart,
Jr.,
the
moving
force
behind
the
Americans
with
Disabili<es
Act,
taught
me
that
every
social
movement
needs
every
single
person
working
every
single
minute
of
every
single
day.
He
wasn’t
much
for
leMng
anyone
off
the
hook!
His
point
was
that
the
person
who
makes
the
phone
calls
to
encourage
people
to
come
out
for
mee<ngs
and
rallies
is
just
as
important
as
the
person
who
does
the
TV
interviews.
That
even
when
we
are
sleeping
we
are
re-‐energizing
for
the
next
baIle
or
argument
or
chance
to
promote
our
cause.
That
every
one
of
us
is
the
ambassador
of
the
message,
from
the
elevator
pitch
to
choosing
the
speaker
at
the
next
Kiwanis
Club
mee<ng.
We
can’t
all
make
a
$100
dona<on
to
support
a
campaign,
but
we
all
have
a
circle
of
influence.
We
can
be
very
crea<ve
in
using
our
power
to
inform
others
and
influence
how
they
think
about
single-‐payer.
The
opportuni<es
for
joining
in
coali<on
with
others
are
at
our
doorstep
and
at
our
finger<ps
through
cell
phones
and
social
media.
All
we
have
to
do
is
talk,
type,
and
show
up!
Peg
Nosek
(right)
celebrating
Medicare’s
48th
Anniversary
with
HCN
intern
Leeyah
Rassu
3. H E A L T H C A R E - N O W !
Healthcare-NOW! - 215-732-2131 - info@healthcare-now.org - 1315 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19107 - www.Healthcare-Now.org! 3
By
Healthcare-‐NOW!
New
York
City
-‐
The
Goal:
A
petition
drive
where
100
volunteers
collect
100
signatures
each
for
a
combined
10,000
signatures.
The
Process:
We
wanted
to
provide
our
volunteers
with
everything
they
needed
right
off
the
bat.
So,
we
put
together
a
packet
of
materials
which
included:
• a
clipboard
• pens
• 10
pages
of
petitions
(with
ten
lines
each)
• a
stack
of
fliers
that
had
information
on
the
state
single-‐payer
bill
• guidelines
for
petitioning
• a
sheet
explaining
how
to
do
data
entry
We
asked
that
each
petitioner
manually
enter
in
the
information
on
the
signatures
they
gather
into
an
excel
spreadsheet.
We
explained
how
we
wanted
the
data
laid
out,
and
asked
them
to
email
the
excel
sheet
and
send
us
the
originals.
We
also
had
data
entry
volunteers
so
that
we
could
use
the
information
from
any
petitioners
who
didn’t
get
around
to
the
data
entry.
While
not
everyone
did
their
own
data
entry,
those
who
did
were
a
big
help.
For
a
little
incentive,
we
also
included
a
Healthcare
is
a
Human
Right
t-‐shirt,
buttons,
bumper
sticker,
and
tote
bag
to
the
people
who
initially
signed
up.
As
new
people
were
recruited,
we
offered
to
give
them
a
free
t-‐shirt
when
they
turned
in
their
100
signatures,
which
we
also
found
successful.
Fundraising:
We
estimated
the
costs
of
the
materials
to
be
$2,500
and
set
up
a
page
on
a
crowdsourcing
website
to
raise
money.
We
chose
a
2
month
Indiegogo
campaign.
Please
Note:
Crowdsourcing
websites
require
making
a
video,
frequent
posts
to
the
page,
numerous
announcements
to
your
list
and
calls
to
donors
and
organizations
to
donate
to
reach
your
goal.
Recruiting
Volunteers:
We
had
a
100x100
volunteer
signup
sheet
and
created
a
Google
Form
so
that
people
could
sign
up
online.
The
Google
Form
automatically
downloaded
the
information
provided
into
a
Google
Doc
spreadsheet.
Six
of
us
broke
up
the
list
to
make
follow
up
by
phone
and
email
more
manageable.
We
set
up
a
page
on
our
website
dedicated
to
the
campaign,
organized
a
Petitioner
Training
session,
and
had
point
people
who
petitioned
every
weekend
throughout
the
summer
at
multiple
locations
around
the
city
and
at
local
events
–
to
encourage
people
to
join
us
and
make
it
easier
for
people
to
drop
petitions
off.
We
also
made
frequent
announcements
to
our
lists
and
google
groups
and
enlisted
the
help
of
fellow
organizations.
Web:
we
made
an
online
petition
page
on
our
website,
although
this
was
only
meant
to
complement
not
replace
the
paper
petitions
which
were
the
focus
on
the
campaign.
We
also
wrote
and
posted
an
FAQ
about
the
state
bill
that
both
volunteers
and
the
general
public
could
reference
for
a
layman’s
guide
to
how
healthcare
would
change
under
the
bill.
Culmination:
After
we
met
our
target
number
of
10,000
signatures,
we
scheduled
a
lobby
day
where
we
delivered
copies
of
the
petition
pages
(an
impressive
stack
of
1000
pages)
to
the
governor
and
state
legislative
leaders.
Find
out
more
at
HCN-‐NYC.org.
Building
Your
Group
With
the
100
x
100
Campaign
On
September
3,
the
first
journey
of
the
Drive
for
Universal
Healthcare
(DUH,
as
in
"Does
America
need
a
new
healthcare
system?
DUH!")
began
in
Augusta,
Maine.
After
a
very
successful
press
conference,
Laurie
Simons
and
Terry
Sterrenberg,
makers
of
The
Healthcare
Movie,
set
up
their
cameras
for
"Street
Talk,"
the
filming
of
man-‐on-‐the-‐
street
interviews
about
healthcare
that
will
form
the
basis
of
a
new
documentary.
Filming
was
done
in
almost
every
city
and
support
for
true
universal
healthcare
was
overwhelming,
with
only
two
people
out
of
over
50
opposing
it.
From
Maine,
DUH
proceeded
to
Vermont,
New
York,
Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania,
Maryland,
Ohio,
and
ended
in
Springfield,
Illinois
on
September
12.
Along
the
way,
the
DUH
travelers,
including
founder
Sue
Saltmarsh,
activist
filmmakers
Simons
and
Sterrenberg,
healthcare
advocacy
and
social
media
maven
Donna
Ellington
from
South
Carolina,
Detroit
labor
activists
Bob
Sisler
and
Doris
Wojtala,
and
singer/songwriter
Bob
Wickline
and
his
wife
Lynda,
met
single-‐payer
advocates
in
each
city
—members
of
PNHP,
state
single-‐payer
organizations,
and
Healthcare-‐NOW!—who
helped
arrange
movie
screenings,
discussions,
press
coverage,
and
housing.
Their
help
was
invaluable
and
Saltmarsh
says,
“One
of
the
goals
of
DUH
is
to
provide
healthcare
advocates
with
a
single,
unifying
event
that
will
bring
individuals
and
organizations
together
in
common
purpose,
no
matter
their
different
approaches
or
philosophies.
The
many
dedicated
people
we
met
on
the
first
trip
proved
this
is
possible
and
encourages
us
to
continue
on.”
Plans
for
the
next
trips
to
California
and
points
west
are
in
progress.
To
keep
up
with
the
latest
news,
volunteer
to
help
in
your
town,
or
make
a
much-‐needed
donation,
visit
DUH4All.org.
(Summary
provided
by
Sue
Saltmarsh.)
The
Drive
for
Universal
Healthcare
Tours
the
East
Coast
4. H E A L T H C A R E - N O W !
Healthcare-NOW! - 215-732-2131 - info@healthcare-now.org - 1315 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19107 - www.Healthcare-Now.org! 4
Healthcare-‐NOW!
2013
Summer
Internship
Program
Healthcare-‐NOW!
would
like
to
thank
our
2013
summer
interns:
Michael
Broder,
Samira
Islam,
Leeyah
Rassu,
and
Rebecca
Suval.
Michael
Broder
is
completing
a
BA
in
Health
and
Societies,
with
a
concentration
in
Global
Health,
at
the
University
of
Pennsylvania.
He
conducted
his
internship
in
the
Boston
area,
where
he’s
from.
Samira
Islam
is
completing
a
Masters
in
Public
Health
at
Drexel
University
in
Philadelphia,
PA,
with
a
concentration
in
Health
Management
and
Policy.
Leeyah
Rassu
is
completing
a
BA
in
Sociology
and
the
Study
of
Women,
Gender,
and
Sexuality
at
Rice
University
in
Houston,
TX.
Rebecca
Suval
is
a
Licensed
Vocational
Nurse
(LVN),
who
is
shifting
careers
towards
health
policy,
and
is
completing
an
MS
in
Health
Care
Administration
at
California
State
University
East
Bay.
Each
one
of
them
helped
to
bring
the
Single-‐Payer
Activist
Guide
to
the
Affordable
Care
Act
to
completion,
writing
early
drafts
for
the
project.
In
addition,
they
worked
with
their
local
affiliates
to
organize
Medicare’s
Anniversary
actions
on
July
30th.
In
addition,
Rebecca
Suval
reached
out
to
college
student
organizations
in
California
to
organize
appearances
of
Michael
Milligan’s
Mercy
Killers
play,
and
Michael
Broder
co-‐authored
a
paper
with
Director
of
Organizing
Benjamin
Day,
and
PNHP’s
David
Himmelstein
and
Steffie
Woolhandler,
on
the
ACA’s
lack
of
impact
on
medical
loss
ratios.
PNHP
Annual
Meeting
Benjamin
Day,
HCN's
Director
of
Organizing,
spoke
at
Physicians
for
a
National
Health
Program's
Annual
Meeting
on
November
2
in
Boston.
He
joined
an
afternoon
panel
discussing
the
use
of
single-‐payer
ballot
initiatives
by
state
organizations,
pooling
activists'
experiences
from
Massachusetts,
Colorado,
California,
and
Maine.
Ben
spoke
about
his
experience
with
a
statewide
binding
ballot
campaign
from
2003
to
2006,
and
the
twenty-‐four
non-‐binding
ballot
initiatives
he
coordinate
in
2008
and
2010.
Donna
Smith,
Executive
Director
of
Health
Care
for
All
Colorado,
gave
a
compelling
presentation
on
the
public
education
and
outreach
impact
of
the
ballot
initiative
HCFAC
ran
this
year.
Dr.
Hank
Abrons
and
Dr.
Philip
Caper
reported
on
the
history
of
ballot
initiatives
in
California,
and
a
planned
ballot
initiative
in
Maine.
Rebellious
Nursing!
Conference
Benjamin
Day,
HCN's
Director
of
Organizing,
joined
the
first
annual
Rebellious
Nursing!
conference
on
September
29
in
Philadelphia.
The
RN!
conference
was
devoted
to
addressing
the
politics
of
nursing
for
advocates
of
social
justice
and
equity.
Ben
gave
a
workshop
titled
"A
Social
Justice
Guide
to
the
Affordable
Care
Act"
focused
on
how
the
ACA
will
affect
nurses
and
their
patients,
engaging
in
a
wide-‐ranging
discussion
with
almost
100
participants
covering
the
ACA's
impacts
on
immigrants
and
the
safety
net,
and
how
we
can
build
the
single-‐payer
movement
as
the
ACA
is
being
implemented.
Affiliate
Updates
Unions
for
Single
Payer
Health
Care
continues
to
add
labor
endorsements
for
HR
676
including
the
New
York
City
Labor
Council,
Northern
Illinois
Jobs
with
Justice,
Central
Illinois
Jobs
with
Justice,
and
the
New
Mexico
AFL-‐CIO.
Find
out
more
at
UnionsForSinglePayer.org.
Single
Payer
Now
organized
dozens
of
events
and
outreach
for
single-‐payer
healthcare
including
a
panel
discussion
on
Medicare,
rally
at
Anthem
Blue
Cross,
and
rally
at
a
Nancy
Pelosi
fundraiser.
Find
our
more
at
SinglePayerNow.net.
Healthcare-‐NOW!
New
York
City
joined
the
Rally
and
March
to
Restore
and
Expand
Vital
Public
Services
for
the
99%
in
September
and
organized
a
performance
of
Mercy
Killers
in
October.
Mass-‐Care,
the
Massachusetts
Campaign
for
Single
Payer
Health
Care,
organized
a
powerhouse
Fall
Benefit
on
October
30th.
The
event
featured
Noam
Chomsky
as
a
keynote
speaker,
who
was
joined
by
Massachusetts
AFL-‐
CIO
President
Steve
Tolman,
recent
Commissioner
of
Public
Health
John
Auerbach,
and
former
editor-‐in-‐chief
of
the
New
England
Journal
of
Medicine
Arnold
Relman,
MD.
The
Benefit
came
just
one
week
after
Mass-‐Care
organized
over
five
panels
of
testimony
on
behalf
of
the
state
single-‐payer
bill.
Your
state
update
not
included
here?
Email
us
at
jeff@healthcare-‐now.org!
Healthcare
is
a
Human
Right
Rally
in
Maryland
Shows
Movement
is
Growing
By
Healthcare
is
a
Human
Right
Maryland
-‐
On
October
26,
2013,
residents
from
across
the
state
of
Maryland
marched
for
the
human
right
to
healthcare
(see
photo
above).
It
was
the
first
state-‐wide
action
of
the
Healthcare
Is
a
Human
Right
-‐
Maryland
campaign.
It
was
a
huge
success
and
it
was
a
powerful
testament
to
the
grassroots
movement
that
is
growing
across
the
state
to
demand
universal
healthcare.
Find
out
more
about
this
action
at
HealthcareIsAHumanRightMaryland.org.
Don’t
See
Your
Rep.
On
This
List
of
HR
676
Cosponsors?
Call
Them!
866-‐220-‐0044
Reps
Brady
[PA-‐1],
Capuno
[MA-‐7],
Christensen
[VI],
Chu
[CA-‐27],
Clarke
[NY-‐9],
Clay
[MO-‐1],
Cohen
[TN-‐9],
Cummings
[MD-‐7],
Doyle
[PA-‐14],
Edwards
[MD-‐4],
Ellison
[MN-‐5],
Engel
[NY-‐16],
Farr
[CA-‐20],
Fattah
[PA-‐2],
Green
[TX-‐9],
Grijalva
[AZ-‐3],
Gutierrez
[IL-‐4],
Holt
[NJ-‐12],
Honda
[CA-‐17],
Huffman
[CA-‐2],
Johnson
[TX-‐30],
Johnson
[GA-‐4],
Lee
[CA-‐13],
Lewis
[GA-‐5],
Lofgren
[CA-‐19],
Lowenthal
[CA-‐47],
McDermott
[WA-‐7],
McGovern
[MA-‐2],
Miller
[CA-‐11],
Moore
[WI-‐4],
Nadler
[NY-‐10],
Nolan
[MN-‐8],
Norton
[DC],
Pingree
[ME-‐1],
Pocan
[WI-‐2],
Rangel
[NY-‐13],
Roybal-‐Allard
[CA-‐40],
Rush
[IL-‐1],
Schakowsky
[IL-‐9],
Scott
[VA-‐3],
Takano
[CA-‐41],
Welch
[VT],
Wilson
[FL-‐24],
and
Yarmuth
[KY-‐3].
Single
Payer
the
Cure
for
What
Ails
Obamacare
“While
partisan
bickering
has
shut
down
the
government,
the
populace
of
the
United
States
is
still
straitjacketed
into
a
system
of
expensive,
for-‐
profit
health
insurance.
We
pay
twice
as
much
per
capita
as
other
industrialized
countries,
and
have
poorer
health
and
lower
life
expectancy.
The
economic
logic
of
single-‐payer
is
inescapable.
Whether
Obamacare
is
a
pathway
to
get
there
is
uncertain.
As
Dr.
Woolhandler
summed
up,
‘It’s
only
a
road
to
single-‐payer
if
we
fight
for
single-‐
payer.’”
-‐
Amy
Goodman