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Will A Heart Go Out to These
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On this page we  provide links to various resources. The following words are from a lady at Diaryland .com:

right now i'm half-way through the mandatory book for smith... it's called Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By In America. it's surprisingly VERY good. i was a bit doubtful about it at first, but it's completley sucked me in. Barbara Ehrenreicht (i think thsat's how you spell her last name... too lazy to look it p) is a great writer and she really knows how to spill the goop. also there's a lot of commentary and funny/dirty humor. there was even an event where she had to figure out how to get traces of mary jane out of her system in 2 days for a stupid mandatory drug test at wal-marts. drink LOTS of water. consume no salt. ;) it's a very depressing book, because the life of the poor seems to pretty much be that. veyr hopeless. there's like no way to escape it and it's just crap. everyone is out to screw them and even the things set up to supposedly help them really are completley useless.... the whole imbalance between rich and poor is really going to cause some shit to happen in the next couple of years, i'm thinking. if anyone believes that america is the land where anyone can arrive off the "boat" and earn themselves, through hard work, a decent life, you are COMPLETELY clueless. even if people work 2 jobs it's still barely enough to make rent and feed themselves... and shitty food at that. no health care, nothing. it's just shit. there's sooo much i could say about this, but really you ought to just read the book....

it's also made me realize how very fortunate i am. my parents are really well off compared to the people i'm readnig about in this book... wow... yeah. i'm really lucky to be able to go to college, and a college like smith, at that. i'm also glad smith is the school that required us to read it.

Links to the Issues

Barbara Ehrenreicht

Center for Social and Economic Rights

2004 Presidential Candidates

Young Republicans

Campaign Links

The Center for Rural Strategies

Physicians for a National Health Care Program: "Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) believes that access to high-quality health care is a right of all people and should be provided equitably as a public service rather than bought and sold as a commodity. The mission of PNHP is therefore to educate physicians, other health workers, and the general public on the need for a comprehensive, high-quality, publicly-funded health care program, equitably-accessible to all residents of the United States.

More Links

Faith Communities Working for Health Care Justice

Health Care Justice Efforts by State

Other Nations' Health Care Systems Reviewed

Has anyone asked you the voter for your input on Medicaid/Medicare decisions? NO!

The Medical Monopoly:
Your Tax Dollars Limit the Competition

by Richard Leviton

Medical licensing laws and federal reimbursement programs severely limit open competition among medical modalities and keep the cost of American health care exorbitant, states medical analyst Sue Blevins in a policy analysis from the Cato Institute of Washington, D.C.

Ever since their introduction in the 1870s, licensing laws have limited the supply of health care providers, thereby limiting competition and increasing doctor's incomes, Blevins explains. Government policies, which strongly favor (and reward) conventional medicine, are largely responsible for the escalation of health care costs and the lack of a wide range of choices in medical services. In addition, there is "little actual evidence that medical licensing improves quality [of care] or protects the public," says Blevins. The result is a "government-imposed medical monopoly," supported by the tax dollars of all Americans, including the 33% who consult alternative practitioners.

Consider how licensing regulations restrict the public's access to nonphysician health care providers, such as midwives. There are 10,000 [lay] midwives in the U.S., but 36 states either restrict or prohibit their activities. "American's low usage of midwifery does not correlate with high quality birth outcomes," Blevins says, because the U.S. has the fifth highest infant mortality rate among industrialized nations. Midwife-assisted births could save Americans $2.4 billion annually if only 20% of women used them.

Nurse practitioners are another case in point. These are registered nurses (R.N.s) with advanced training. Research indicates that almost 80% of adult primary care and about 90% of child care services could be safely provided by nurse practitioners. A 1993 Gallup poll reported that 86% of consumers would willingly use nurse practitioners for all their basic medical services.

Further, we could be saving between $6.4 and $8.75 billion a year if nurse practitioners were more widely used. But they're not because "many states impose scope-of-practice regulations that prevent nurses from practicing independently as primary care providers," says Blevins. This action suppresses the full potential demand for them because they are not legally free to compete.

Whether you like it or not, your tax dollars directly subsidize conventional medical schools, but not alternative schools such as chiropractic or naturopathic colleges, says Blevins. Today, only 5% of medical school income comes from tuition and fees; the [majority of ] the rest comes from state and federal government subsidies. Of the $23 billion U.S. medical schools received in 1992, $2.7 billion came from state and local governments, and $10.3 billion came from the federal government.

Your tax dollars support the medical monopoly through other means, too, such as research, training, and teaching grants from agencies such as the National Institutes of Health, and Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, which cover only conventional medicine, Blevins says.

The time for reform is at hand, urges Blevins. Even if you do not particularly favor alternative medicine, she argues, the medical monopoly goes against the capitalist grain of free, unrestricted, nonmonopolistic competition in the marketplace. We haven't seen that for over 125 years when it comes to medicine in this country. "Breaking the anti-competitive barriers of licensing laws and federal reimbursement regulations will provide meaningful health reform, increase consumer choice, and reduce health care costs," states Blevins.

"We will not leave our neighbor on the side of the road (we are samaritans)": Who passed this thing while leaving American families dying in the road?

Bill Number: HR 1298
Issue: Health
Date: 05/01/2003
Sponsor: Resolution sponsored by Hyde, R-IL



Roll Call Number: 0158
Bill passed
Full Member List


Vote to pass a bill that would authorize $3 billion annually over the next five years to prevent and treat HIV and AIDS in Africa.

HR 1298 United States Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act of 2003

Vote to pass a bill that would authorize $3 billion annually, for the next five years to prevent and treat HIV and AIDS in Africa. The President, would be required to establish a five-year plan to combat AIDS. It would make available funds for anti-retroviral therapy for individuals infected with HIV, and encourage a strategy that extends palliative care for AIDS patients. The bill would also support the research and development of vaccines for HIV/AIDS and malaria. It would approve a multi-prong approach to containing AIDS that promotes abstinence, monogamy, and condom use. It would create an AIDS coordinator position within the State Department that would have control over the distribution of funds. In Fiscal 2004, the bill would authorize up to $ 1 billion in funds, for the group, Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

(Resolution sponsored by Hyde, R-IL)
Bill passed 375-41: R 183-40; D 191-1; I 1-0 on 05/01/2003.

National Coalition on Health Care: Did you know, 45 million Americans have no health insurance at all?

http://www.nchc.org/ 

And then I read an article in the February 2004 Natural History by Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University and Special Advisor to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on the Millenium Development Goals and I realized how excited I would be that our President seems to get it about world health, if he only got it about American health and I had an income of $30,000 a year to raise my two children on instead of $9,000.
The article is called "Why Must the Poor be Sick?" It's a review of a book by Paul Farmer called Pathologies of Power:Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor.
It says Farmer has saved countless destitute patients lives in Haiti, Peru, and Russia, and has shown that effective health services, even complex medical regimens, can be put in place in impoverished communiities."His accomplishments have forcefully undercut the flimsy excuses that the rich countries have routinely offered for their inaction, as millions of people die unnecessarily each year in poor countries...farmer has 3 themes..that the poor are not the victims of their sins but of their circumstances,; instead of sitting in judgement on the sick and dying, rich countries should be helping to save them. 2. The poor can be successfully treated and cured of disease, even in the most unlikely and impoverished circumstances. 3, the human rights community should be defending the rights of the poor to health, for without the right to health, all other human rights are likely to proove empty. Nothing, farmer argues, b except practical, physical resources--in ample supply throughout the rich world--is keeping the poor world from undergoing a revolution in health.
"Farmer's moral stance is grounded in what the liberation theology movement calls a " preferential option for the poor", a principle of Roman catholic social teaching that enjoins the rich to offer dignity and material support to the poor...
But he goes on to suggest..structural violence is the key barrier to escape from poverty. In essence, he occassionally comes close to espousing a neo-Marxist theory, according to which extremem poverty persists mainly because of exploitation by the rich and powerful. (That the rich become steadily richer and the poor steadily poorer) is not true--"Haiti aside--the Haitian experience does not shed much light on the massive reduction of poverty in Asia in the past quarter century, particularly in China and India. ..or even the Dominican Republic....
contrary to the steroetypes prevalent within the bureaucraceis of rich countries and international development agencies, the destitute adn vulnerable patients that farmer comes into contact with are smart, resourceful, and absolutely intent on staying alive. They adhere even to complicated drug regimens,...Farmer's genius was to treat his HIV/AIDS and MDR-TB patients without asking permission from the official aid agencies. They would surely have said no. (using donated drugs and pilfered supplies) Farmer and his colleague Jim Kim of the Harvard medical School demonstrated clinical efficacy in treating  those 2 diseases and that drug prices could be sharply reduced through aggressive negotiations.
As their successes have become apparant, Farmer, Kim, and their colleagues have increasingly focused on persuading policy makers to make a bold commitment to improved health among the world's poor. Hence, the third theme--that human rights are indivisible--that so-called social and economic rights must accompany civil and political rights. Making such a shift of emphasis would be a sea of change for a community that has traditionally been organized around the defense of civil and political rights alone.
'''"Again and again he shows that when poor people are abandoned to their economic fate, merely defending their civil rights will not keep them alive--muc less give them a chance for a dignified and prosperous life....the rich have an obligation to the poor, to help the poor stay alive in the face of structural impediments of lethal dimensions..."
And here I am, all for this , all against it an hour ago. Not understanding. I still think America should give dignity and health care to its own and then to others too but not to others while people like me go around without dental and our ears so swollen from dental caries they are llike donkey ears....
And so it is with other situations in our lives. Those who want to be successful must help their neighbors, friends, relatives be successful. Those who choose to live well must help others live well, for the value of a life is measured by the lives it touches. And those who choose to be happy must help others find happiness, for the welfare of each is bound up with the welfare of all.Incidently, the only U.S. Presidential candidate I heard talking like this is Dennis Kucinich.