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Health Care issues |
Wal-Mart joins union in calling for
universal health care coverage for all Americans by 2012.
[2-9-07]
Wal-Mart Watch, which is sponsored by
Wal-Mart labor unions, links to a variety of reports on this hopeful
development.
A quick sample:
Wal-Mart,
Union Join Forces on Health Care
[Washington Post]
At a news conference on Capitol Hill, Wal-Mart chief executive H. Lee Scott
sat at one end of a table and vowed to put aside differences to "drive this
debate forward." On the other end was Andy Stern, president of the Service
Employees International Union (SEIU) and frequent Wal-Mart critic, declaring
he had made a "tough choice" in the goal to improve coverage.
Wal-Mart, union push universal health care
[CNNMoney.com]
In a partnership of unlikely allies, Wal-Mart's CEO, other corporate
leaders and the head of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
called Wednesday for universal health care coverage for all Americans by
2012.
Wal-Mart Joins Health-Care Call
[Wall Street Journal]
The campaign -- which is also supported by AT&T Inc., Intel Corp.,
staffing firm Kelly Services Inc., the Communications Workers of America and
three public-policy groups -- comes amid a surge of interest in how to
extend health insurance to the 46 million Americans without it.
Healthcare reform calls get louder
[Los Angeles Times]
The proposal was short of specifics but had four broad themes: universal
health coverage by 2012, better preventive care and disease management; more
efficient healthcare delivery, and cost-sharing by workers, employers and
governments. |
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What’s happening to America’s middle class?
[12-21-06]
You may
have heard CNN’s Lou Dobbs declaim about this issue recently, in ways that
seem to make immigrants the main culprits in the decline of the middle
class.
The Campaign for America's Future is now recommending a
new book by Yale political science professor Jacob Hacker, entitled The
Great Risk Shift: The Assault On American Jobs,
Families, Health Care, And Retirement-And How You Can Fight Back.
Roger Hickey, co-director of the Campaign, writes, "The
book has extraordinary explanatory power – made all the more compelling by
Hacker's skillful use of short vignettes – stories of individuals and
families coping with sudden unemployment, the loss of a breadwinner, a
seriously sick child, or the mounting costs of education." He adds that
Hacker is setting forth a "plan for health care for all – a plan that would
guarantee choice of either traditional private insurance or a new cheaper
Medicare-style system – while rapidly getting all Americans covered."
See more
comments on the Campaign for America’s Future website >>
If anybody out there has read this book,
or can read it soon and give us some comments on it,
we’ll be happy to share it here.
Just send a note!
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Single-payer
healthcare is gaining support -- and needs more support
This comes from
Healthcare Now
[9-28-06]
Have you noticed? The national single payer healthcare movement is
growing in strength.
Therefore, not surprisingly, the healthcare insurance
industrial complex is scurrying about trying to find new ways to hang onto
their immense profits. They’ve devised plans for parents to keep paying for
their children’s healthcare into their late twenties or thirties in several
states and a plan to deliver a Medicare-type plan (for which they get a big
government subsidy, thanks to the Bush administration) that will provide for
full choice of doctors and, most importantly, more dollars for themselves.
The "Massachusettization"
of the debate is one of the ways the insurance companies are attempting to
gain more profits. They claim that providing state by state so-called
"universal" systems such as the Massachusetts plan extracting more
government money and our personal money to pay insurance companies bigger
bucks -- requiring middle class working people to purchase insurance from
those same insurance companies-- will provide some kind of minimal insurance
product that might be called "healthcare for all."
There are some politicians in Congress who want to see
this kind of "corporate universal health insurance" partly because they are
being called on to produce a healthcare plan and partly because a for-profit
system doesn’t jeopardize their campaign contributions from the health
insurance industry and its Washington lobbyists. Their mantra is "anything
but single payer." In other words, "keep our profits rolling in! Don’t
jeopardize the privatization agenda.
This callous (or perhaps misdirected) attempt at
"non-partisan" universal healthcare is constructed on the backs of millions
of suffering people in our country.
Here’s what you can do:
Most people are not fooled by
these corporations. Healthcare-NOW is supporting the birth of a movement for
a real 21st Century healthcare system in this country. Just
today, another person in yet another state called to get involved in
organizing a community campaign with Healthcare-NOW for a national single
payer healthcare system. You could do the same.
People are fed up with having the insurance companies and
Big Pharma dictate the terms of our healthcare.
We have a new project called "the Health Insurance Hall of Shame."
And you can help. As we began planning it, we realized that there are
hundreds of ways to focus national attention on the abuses of these
companies. They fight against and have destroyed every effort to win a
national non-profit healthcare system. People need to know this. We want to
encourage lawsuits against these companies that have been committing
"insurance company malpractice." Lawsuits should be filed against these
companies when they deny care to desperately sick people and cancel their
policies if the bill gets too large, charge ever growing premiums,
deductibles and co-pays. We can develop a brief bank and a team of lawyers
to take on these giants. And we should challenge their investments in Big
Tobacco and other harmful corporations – investments they profit from by
using our money. Watch for our new blog on the "Hall of Shame." And join us.
Your help is essential to this project.
We can elect a Congress that will support a truly national
single payer healthcare system and reject insurance lobbyists' bribes.
We can educate and organize the public and arm ourselves and our neighbors
against the parade of falsehoods and myths perpetrated by these companies.
Michael Moore is looking for people to appear in his new film, people
who are up against impossible odds if they don’t get the medicines and
treatment they must have if they are to survive "death by denial." You can
help find these people and participate in promoting the film.
You can help make national healthcare a reality by joining
Healthcare-NOW; send us your stories for Michael
Moore; form a Healthcare-NOW group in your own community (there are over one
hundred of these groups now); send us some financial support to keep this
movement rolling; get copies of our materials; call us up or send an email
and we will plug you in. Please check out the website today – right now --
www.healthcare-now.org.
Hit donate to join. Call: 1-800 453-1305; Write:
info@healthcare-now.org,
Just be in touch.
We want to hear from you!
There is no way we can win this without the mass movement
that is made up of you and you, and people like you.
Thank you for your support,
Marilyn Clement,
National Coordinator, Healthcare-NOW.
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Budget for FR 2007 would move health care costs further
onto the shoulders of individuals
FamiliesUSA provides an analysis
of the proposed budget [2-27-06]
On February 6, 2006,
President Bush released his FY2007 proposed budget. The budget provides
details about the Administration's health policy goals for this year, and
will shape the congressional budget process that will take place over the
next month.
In an effort to
clarify what this budget--if approved--would mean for American health care
consumers, Families USA has just released an analysis of the
Administration's health care proposals contained in the budget.
Read their FY2007 budget analysis >> |
| State medical care
program under attack in Tennessee from
Witherspoon Issues Analyst (and Nashville resident) Gene TeSelle
[7-18-05]
Governor Phil Bredesen of Tennessee has proposed that over
300,000 people be cut off TennCare (the state’s Medicaid program) and health
care for 700,000 others be severely restricted, A group of activists — many
of whom rely on TennCare themselves — has been occupying the Governor’s
office, using the best American traditions of civil disobedience to defend
the lives and welfare of their fellow Tennesseans.
Some background: TennCare was the most
innovative program in the country when it was developed ten years ago. But
it has been plagued by administrative problems and questionable practices by
contracting HMOs. And the state has never complied with a federal mandate to
monitor drug prescriptions.
Democratic Governor Phil Bredesen has made draconian cuts,
losing millions in federal funding. His motives are ideological – he told
the National Governors Conference last winter that Medicare is
"socialistic." He also happens to have made his own millions by selling
health care equipment to sick people.
The issue is currently being debated in federal court. In the meantime,
there is a sit-in in the Governor's office by TennCare recipients (including
some with serious disabilities) and their supporters. It has now broken the
record for sit-ins, at 28 days.
Many governors are bothered by increasing financial costs, largely the
result of federal restrictions. There is a bipartisan effort among the
governors to reform Medicare. But this is an example of a Democrat running
interference for what many Republicans want. Observers feel that this will
be a disaster for the Democratic Party in Tennessee after the effects of the
cuts become apparent in every county in the state, placing additional
burdens on doctors and hospitals. |
It's not Social Security
that's in crisis. It's the health care system!
[4-13-05]New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has pointed out
recently that our nation’s real crisis lies not in the area of Social
Security, or even Medicare, but the whole health care system.
Read this in the Times, or in the
Minneapolis
Star Tribune.
A new Health Care Bulletin from the
Presbyterian Washington Office, provides a very helpful survey of this
crisis, with a focus on current budget discussions in Congress, and on
efforts to slash funding for Medicare.
The bulletin includes a list of how Senators voted on the Smith-Bingaman
amendment to remove the Medicaid cuts from the Senate Budget Resolution.
They provide suggestions for letters to convey concerns to members of
Congress, along with a 1999 General Assembly policy statement on managed
health care, and a letter to the President and members of Congress from the
Washington Interreligious Staff Community Health Care Working Group. |
| The case of Terri
Schiavo Witherspoon member Dean Lindsey asks
for reflection on the tragic and conflict-laden case of Terri Schiavo --
and he offers some opening thoughts.
[3-21-05]
A political take on the situation:
It's a "midnight coup" in
Washington
The L. A. Times comments on the intervention of
Congress and the President as a "midnight coup," short-circuiting the
role of states and their courts, thus merely imposing a right-wing
interpretation of morality on the nation.
We welcome your comments!
Just send a note
to be shared here.
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Code Blue
- a national campaign to bring focus to the health care crisis in America.
The Peace
committee of Wabash Valley Presbytery has made a proposal for a national
campaign to reduce the cost of health care.
Their
statement says: "We believe our national health care system is in a state
of crisis. To call attention to that national emergency, we are asking
that "we
the people" of America begin wearing "Code
Blue" buttons on our lapels. This is a call for: (1) public awareness
of the issue, (2) increased legislator awareness of the need for health
care cost reform, and (3) help in repairing our unhealthy health care
system." [12-9-04] |
| New resource list on
health care issues [8-22-02]
Families USA's Health Action Network has collected
information on several new reports and other resources available on the
Web, relating to issues and policies in America's health care system. |
| PCUSA
works with many others in Coalition on Health Care, to deal with the
"downward death cycle" of the US health care system
[4-18-02]
The Rev. Bruce Gillette has pointed us to a
column by David Broder in the Washington Post, highlighting
recent statements from many sources agreeing that "the health care
system is in crisis."
"The warning takes the form of the announcement
by the largest purchaser of medical care in California that its
insurance premiums are going up this year at a staggering rate. By the
time this column is in print, CalPERS (the 1.2-million-member
California Public Employees' Retirement System) may have announced the
exact figure -- likely to be about 25 percent, almost twice that of
last year."
William Crist, the president of CalPERS, has joined
the National Coalition on Health Care, "a bipartisan organization
that has been pressing for comprehensive reform to install quality
measures, control costs and slash the numbers of uninsured."
Gillette notes that the PCUSA is a member of the
National Coalition on Health Care. |
| Assembly acts on abortion, other
health issues
by Nancy Rodman, PNS
[published here on 6-19-01]
LOUISVILLE -- June 15, 2001 -- The 213th General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Friday morning declined to
honor the request of the Bills and Overtures Committee to arrest the
report of the Health and Social Issues Committee and kept going until
nearly lunchtime, wrestling with issues related to abortion, mental
health benefits, and care for older adults.
Guidelines adopted for stem cell and fetal tissue
research
The Assembly adopted moral and ethical guidelines for
stem cell and fetal tissue research. Recognizing both the great progress
in stem cell and fetal tissue research and the complexity of the moral
issues involved, the guidelines offer moral and ethical guidance on the
use of tissue derived from fetuses, subjecting it to appropriate
limitations. Under the guidelines, the decision to have an abortion will
be separate from the decision to donate fetal tissue and the sale or
commercialization of fetal tissue will be legally prohibited. Research
with stem cells obtained from human embryos will be conducted only when
the goals to be accomplished are compelling and unreachable by other
means. As with the use of fetal tissue, sale or commercialization of
embryonic tissue will be legally prohibited.
Assembly refuses to take anti-choice actions
In other abortion-related business, the Assembly
 | declined to establish a special committee to
conduct a study of abortion in a biblical and theological context.
The last such study was completed in 1992. |
 | declined to direct the Board of Pensions to require
notification of a parent at least forty-eight hours in advance of
any abortion performed on a minor daughter. |
 | referred two abortion-related matters to the
Advisory Committee on Litigation and the Advisory Committee on
Social Witness Policy. Both concern late-term abortions, an issue
already before the two advisory committees which expect to report to
the 214th General Assembly next year. |
Equal benefits sought for mental health care
As a result of action taken during the Friday morning
business session, the General Assembly will advocate passage of
legislation requiring health insurance plans to provide mental health
benefits in full parity with medical and surgical benefits, directing
the Office of the Stated Clerk to advocate for passage of such
legislation in the 18 states lacking it. The Assembly also directed the
Office of the Stated Clerk to advocate for passage of the federal Mental
Health Equitable Treatment Act (S.796) co-sponsored by Senators Pete
Domenici (R-NM) and Paul Wellstone (D-MN).
Additionally, the Assembly urged the Board of Pensions
of the PC (U.S.A.) to evaluate annually issues of parity between
coverage for mental health and medical and surgical benefits under plans
offered by the Board of Pensions, and to include its evaluation in its
annual report to the General Assembly. In a statement during debate, the
Board said that it fully complies with the intentions of the
Domenici-Wellstone bill.
Caregiving with older adults is supported
By approving a Resolution on the Ministry of
Caregiving in Relation to Older Adults the Assembly enacted a number of
measures to strengthen the church's care of its older members including
the parish nursing program which would be affirmed as a model for
caregiving ministry and established or strengthened in partnership with
community agencies. Middle governing bodies would, among other measures,
offer ministries to retired pastors and education and training to meet
needs at the local level. Among the measures directed to congregations
are observation of Older Adult Week, development of support and other
programs, training of those responsible for visiting in spiritual
enrichment visiting, and expansion of their awareness of new ways of
caregiving, especially as found in the racial ethnic groups of the
church.
End-of-life issues to be studied
The Assembly recommended that the General Assembly
Council study the publication "A Message on Suicide
Prevention" of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and make
recommendations to the 214th General Assembly in 2002 for its potential
use in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). The Assembly commended the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America suicide prevention statement for
study.
The General Assembly deferred until 2006 any
end-of-life policy development, but it will organize and host a national
dialogue in 2002-2003 on the theological issues related to end-of-life
care. That dialogue will be followed over a two-year period by similar
presbytery-wide, or regional, dialogues and resources will be made
available.
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An index of
our reports
from
BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship
A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice
September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky |
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Check out our report from the
Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security |
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