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RNs from Six States Rally for Single Payer Outside White House Healthcare Forum in Vermont
BURLINGTON, VT - The White House may have hoped for a carefully structured discussion with a predictable and prescribed outcome that would fit smoothly into its desired agenda, but during the second regional forum on healthcare reform, the White House heard once again that other options are not only available but are also strongly supported by many Americans. Nurses from Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey and New Hampshire joined doctors, patients, faith and community-based leaders, healthcare reform activists and students to rally in support of single payer health reform outside the White House regional healthcare forum held in Burlington, VT, yesterday.
As the invited speakers and guests entered the Davis Student Center of the University of Vermont, more than 400 people gathered on the lawn outside to call on President Obama and other national leaders to include single payer reform in the plans seriously considered as the options to rebuild the nation's broken healthcare system.
The Maine State Nurses Association, the Massachusetts Nurses Association and the National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Association all had RN leaders and members speaking to rally attendees and members of the press about what they see every day as they fight to advocate for patients struggling to get needed care while many either have no health coverage at all or are not adequately covered.
"We don't need more insurance, we need healthcare for all," said RN Tammy Farwell of Maine as protestors chanted, "Everybody in, nobody out," over and over again to send a resounding message to the forum participants inside the building. Some of the nurses were able to go inside and listen to the forum as in began, but others were only able to sit in an overflow ballroom where the forum discussion was being shown on a large movie screen.
But outside the energy in support of a publicly funded, privately delivered healthcare system was punctuated with cheers and chants. Every time one of the speakers said, "healthcare is a basic human right," the crowd erupted in support of the statement that also was made by then candidate Barack Obama during the fall Presidential debates. Many of the protestors expressed their anger that President Obama has not given as much attention to the single payer plan, as crafted in HR676, "The National Health Care Act," as they believe he has done with the hybrid plans that allow for-profit, private insurance plans to stay prominently in the picture.
Unless and until the Obama administration gives serious attention and consideration to single payer reform, many of the protestors said they expect similar or even larger actions as forums convene in Iowa, North Carolina and California. Many of the member groups of the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care had a presence at the rally, including Physicians for a National Health Program, Progressive Democrats of America, and HealthCare-Now.
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11 Comments so far
Show All"...to call on President Obama and other national leaders to include single payer reform in the plans seriously considered as the options to rebuild the nation's broken healthcare system."
Doesn't exactly sound like a demand for a basic human right does it?
And the phrase: "include single payer reform in the plans" seems to imply a two tiered approach based on "competition."
Curious wording. And getting curiouser and curiouser...
While single-payer is the only system that will solve any of the healthcare system's problems, the nurses should also call for Obama to rescind the 2003 Medicare Act that forbid negotiating drug prices.
Obama's healthcare policy to date has only focussed on helping the pharma industry, and insurance industry.
As regards this list, I would say:
Yes
Yes
Yes
Maybe
Maybe
No (elective, and so private payment)
No (elective, and so private payment)
Procedures such as bypass and transplant have a predictable range of outcomes based upon the patient's age and general health condiditions, so decisions on these should follow best practices guidelines determined by a health policy board with thorough and conscientious input from the medical community.
This is not rocket science, so long as people (both patients and doctors) accept the fact that they cannot have everything, that longer life is not necessarily a good thing, and that sooner or later, we all die.
A mature democracy can make these choices.
Oops, I forgot, we're talking about America.
You are too sensible!
Of course there are always choices. Everyone cannot have everything they want right away all the time. But we can make decisions based on the common good and public health rather than the current method in which the dollar rules.
Joe
Who decides? Right now someone paid to deny claims decides. An insurance agency that pays its management millions to make as much money as possible decides. They practice medicine without a license. If we get them out of the system, doctors and patients will decide. Of course, Obama could have appointed Dr. Kitzhaber to HHS. He started Oregon's system which prioritized care and had a cutoff point for what couldn't be afforded. For example, you might not be able to get that quadruple organ transplant you wanted. It recognized that not everything was affordable, but what was available was to be shared. We already have rationing of care, and those types of decisions are already being decided. It's not only an issue for single-payer.
basic human rights call for treatment first - pay later / with public hospitals holding 800-1200 patients a day at cost $50 each plus treatment /
edweg
Easy. The choice is between you and your doctor. Everyone else butt out!
Thank you to all the nurses, doctors and other health care providers who see every day the need for real change.
"We don't need more insurance, we need healthcare for all."
An end to socialized insurance. An end to taxation to keep up the client base of insurance companies. That's the real socialization here. Our money is being poorly spent because corporations are gaming the health care system the same as the banking system. We need health care to be a public good, a public utility, and for the taxes already alloted to health to be better spent. The way to do that is to get the profiteers out of the system, cut out the middlemen making millions on their stock options. What we need is a "publicly funded, privately delivered healthcare system" that works better for providers and patients.
Thank you, Donna!
I am 100% pro-union and 100% single payer health care.... but good lord, keep the CNA out of VT!
independent data is needed / presumably six out of ten are for single payer system / the army yet awaits to be recruited /
edweg